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From Textus Receptus
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'''1''' ἄλφα ''alpha al’-fah'' | '''1''' ἄλφα ''alpha al’-fah'' | ||
- | of [[Hebrew]] origin a [[א]]; | + | of [[Hebrew]] origin a [[א]]; Indeclinable Letter; [[Noun]] |
[[AV]]-[[Alpha (letter)|Alpha]] 4; 4 | [[AV]]-[[Alpha (letter)|Alpha]] 4; 4 | ||
- | :'''1)''' first letter of [[Greek alphabet]] | + | :'''1)''' first letter of the [[Greek alphabet]] |
+ | |||
+ | The Greek letter [[A]], [[α]] (alpha) is used as a prefix in compound words indicating: | ||
+ | :a) Negation | ||
+ | :b) Increacing intensity | ||
+ | :c) Copulative | ||
:'''2)''' Christ is the [[Alpha (letter)|Alpha]] to indicate that he is the beginning and the end | :'''2)''' Christ is the [[Alpha (letter)|Alpha]] to indicate that he is the beginning and the end | ||
+ | |||
< [[6090|Previous Strong's 6090]] - [[2|Next Strong's 2]] > | < [[6090|Previous Strong's 6090]] - [[2|Next Strong's 2]] > |
Revision as of 06:04, 30 December 2011
Greek Concordance |
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1 ἄλφα alpha al’-fah
of Hebrew origin a א; Indeclinable Letter; Noun
- 1) first letter of the Greek alphabet
The Greek letter A, α (alpha) is used as a prefix in compound words indicating:
- a) Negation
- b) Increacing intensity
- c) Copulative
- 2) Christ is the Alpha to indicate that he is the beginning and the end
< Previous Strong's 6090 - Next Strong's 2 >