σὸν
sós
yours
Second-person singular possessive adjective, meaning 'your' or 'yours', used to indicate possession or relationship pertaining to the person addressed. Functions as an attributive possessive (e.g., 'your house'), predicative possessive (e.g., 'it is yours'), or substantivally (e.g., 'that which is yours'). Emphasizes personal or intimate possession, often with a tone of familiarity or affection, sometimes distinguished from the more general possessive σου.
Luke 22:42 · Word #18
Lexicon G4674
| Lemma | σός |
| Transliteration | sós |
| Strong's | G4674 |
| Definition | Second-person singular possessive adjective, meaning 'your' or 'yours', used to indicate possession or relationship pertaining to the person addressed. Functions as an attributive possessive (e.g., 'your house'), predicative possessive (e.g., 'it is yours'), or substantivally (e.g., 'that which is yours'). Emphasizes personal or intimate possession, often with a tone of familiarity or affection, sometimes distinguished from the more general possessive σου. |
Morphology PRO.P 2P NOM N SG
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | PRO.P — Personal Pronoun — Refers to persons |
| Person | 2P — 2nd person — The one spoken to ("you") |
| Case | NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence |
| Gender | N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter |
| Number | SG — Singular — One |
Common Translation
| Phrase | yours |
| Literal | your |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | σός |
| Strong's | G4674 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G4674-07
what is yours
| Morphological Notes | Second-person singular possessive adjective (σός); neuter singular accusative; used substantivally or attributively to denote possession. |
| Rendering Rationale | The neuter singular accusative form σὸν functions substantivally, denoting that which belongs to the person addressed. "What is yours" preserves the emphatic possessive force of σός and reflects the neuter singular object form. |
View full lexicon entry for G4674 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
what is yours
| Same as P1 | Yes |
| Rationale | 'what is yours' reflects the substantival possessive use of σόν per the SILEX definition; correct as in P1. |