ἐξεληλυθυῖαν

exérchomai

having gone out

To go or come out from a place, to depart or leave a location. In extended usage: to proceed, emerge, or originate from a source; used of literal movement (individuals or groups physically exiting a space), as well as more figurative senses such as something originating or developing from a source, or an event coming to pass. In some contexts, denotes public appearance or declaration.

G1831

Luke 8:46 · Word #12

Lexicon G1831

Lemmaἐξέρχομαι
Transliterationexérchomai
Strong'sG1831
DefinitionTo go or come out from a place, to depart or leave a location. In extended usage: to proceed, emerge, or originate from a source; used of literal movement (individuals or groups physically exiting a space), as well as more figurative senses such as something originating or developing from a source, or an event coming to pass. In some contexts, denotes public appearance or declaration.

Morphology V PRF ACT PTCP ACC F SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRF — Perfect — Completed action with ongoing results
Voice ACT — Active — The subject performs the action
Mood PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent
Gender F — Feminine — Grammatical feminine
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phrasehaving gone out
Literalhaving gone out

Lexical Info

Lemmaἐξέρχομαι
Strong'sG1831

SIBI-P1 Translation G1831-06

having gone out

Morphological NotesVerb, perfect active participle, accusative feminine singular (Gr,V,PEA,AFS) — completed action with ongoing result, modifying a feminine singular accusative noun.
Rendering RationaleThe rendering reflects ἐκ + ἔρχομαι, expressing movement outward from a source. The perfect active participle conveys a completed act of going out with continuing result, here in feminine accusative singular form.

View full lexicon entry for G1831 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

having gone out

Same as P1Yes
RationaleP1 'having gone out' correctly translates the perfect participle; appropriate in context.