σχῶμεν

échō

To have or possess, to hold in one's possession or grasp something tangible or intangible. The verb broadly expresses the idea of physical possession, but also extends to conceptual or abstract possession (such as qualities, states, or relationships). By extension, it means to experience (e.g., 'to have fear'), to maintain (a state or condition), to be in a particular state (e.g., 'to be sick'), or to relate or pertain to something (e.g., 'to bear relation to'). Depending on context, it can mean to be able (i.e., 'to have power/ability'), to keep or retain, to bear, to concern, or to be connected or joined with.

G2192

Matthew 21:38 · Word #18

Lexicon G2192

Lemmaἔχω
Transliterationéchō
Strong'sG2192
DefinitionTo have or possess, to hold in one's possession or grasp something tangible or intangible. The verb broadly expresses the idea of physical possession, but also extends to conceptual or abstract possession (such as qualities, states, or relationships). By extension, it means to experience (e.g., 'to have fear'), to maintain (a state or condition), to be in a particular state (e.g., 'to be sick'), or to relate or pertain to something (e.g., 'to bear relation to'). Depending on context, it can mean to be able (i.e., 'to have power/ability'), to keep or retain, to bear, to concern, or to be connected or joined with.

Morphology V AOR ACT SUBJ 1P PL 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 1P — 1st person — The speaker ("I" / "we")
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Lexical Info

Lemmaἔχω
Strong'sG2192

SIBI-P1 Translation G2192-53

let us have

Morphological NotesVerb; aorist tense (simple/complete aspect), active voice, subjunctive mood, first person plural.
Rendering RationaleThe aorist active subjunctive, first person plural, naturally expresses a hortatory or potential action—"let us have" or "that we may have." "Let us have" preserves the subjunctive force while keeping the root sense of possessing or holding.

View full lexicon entry for G2192 →

SILEX v2