παραδῷ
paradídōmi
he might betray
To give over or hand over someone or something, either voluntarily or by force; to deliver, entrust, transfer control or possession. In different contexts, refers to the act of delivering a person (e.g., to authorities, as in arrest or judicial transfer), handing over objects or teachings, committing someone to custody, or even the act of betrayal by delivery to an adversarial party. The semantic range includes both neutral transfers and transfers under compulsion or with negative consequences.
Luke 22:4 · Word #11
Lexicon G3860
| Lemma | παραδίδωμι |
| Transliteration | paradídōmi |
| Strong's | G3860 |
| Definition | To give over or hand over someone or something, either voluntarily or by force; to deliver, entrust, transfer control or possession. In different contexts, refers to the act of delivering a person (e.g., to authorities, as in arrest or judicial transfer), handing over objects or teachings, committing someone to custody, or even the act of betrayal by delivery to an adversarial party. The semantic range includes both neutral transfers and transfers under compulsion or with negative consequences. |
Morphology V AOR ACT SUBJ 3P SG
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | V — Verb — An action or state of being |
| Tense | AOR — Aorist — Simple occurrence, often past |
| Voice | ACT — Active — The subject performs the action |
| Mood | SUBJ — Subjunctive — Expresses possibility or purpose |
| Person | 3P — 3rd person — The one spoken about ("he/she/it/they") |
| Number | SG — Singular — One |
Common Translation
| Phrase | he might betray |
| Literal | he-might-hand-over |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | παραδίδωμι |
| Strong's | G3860 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G3860-15
he might hand over
| Morphological Notes | Verb; aorist tense (simple/completed aspect), active voice, subjunctive mood, 3rd person singular. |
| Rendering Rationale | The aorist active subjunctive (3rd singular) expresses a simple, undefined act viewed as a whole, here rendered as "might hand over" to reflect subjunctive contingency. "Hand over" preserves the core etymological sense of giving from one’s side and transferring control or responsibility. |
View full lexicon entry for G3860 →
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