ἐξερχομένων

exérchomai

going 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

Matthew 9:32 · Word #3

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 PRS MID PTCP GEN M PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRS — Present — Ongoing or repeated action
Voice MID — Middle — The subject acts on itself or in its own interest
Mood PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case GEN — Genitive — Possession, source, or separation
Gender M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Common Translation

Phrasegoing out
Literalgoing-out

Lexical Info

Lemmaἐξέρχομαι
Strong'sG1831

SIBI-P1 Translation G1831-31

of those going out

Morphological NotesVerb; present tense, middle voice, participle; genitive masculine plural (Gr,V,PPM,GMP).
Rendering RationaleThe present middle participle conveys ongoing movement outward from a source. The genitive masculine plural form is reflected by "of those," preserving both the participial and case force while maintaining the root sense of exiting or emerging.

View full lexicon entry for G1831 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

of those going out

Same as P1Yes
Rationale'of those going out' accurately reflects the genitive plural participle in context, referring to the people who were leaving; P1 is correct.