120. athumeo
Lexicon
athumeo: To be disheartened, to lose heart, to be discouraged.

Original Word: ἀθυμέω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: athumeo
Pronunciation: ath-oo-meh'-o
Phonetic Spelling: (ath-oo-meh'-o)
KJV: be dismayed
Word Origin: [from a compound of G1 (α - Alpha) (as a negative particle) and G2372 (θυμός - wrath)]

1. to be spiritless, i.e. disheartened

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
be dismayed.

From a compound of a (as a negative particle) and thumos; to be spiritless, i.e. Disheartened -- be dismayed.

see GREEK a

see GREEK thumos

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 120: ἀθυμέω

ἀθυμέω, (ῶ; common among the Greeks from (Aeschylus) Thucydides down; to be ἄθυμος (θυμός, spirit, courage), to be disheartened, dispirited, broken in spirit: Colossians 3:21. (the Sept. 1 Samuel 1:6f, etc.; Judith 7:22; 1 Macc. 4:27).

Forms and Transliterations
αθυμήσασι αθυμία αθυμίας αθυμούσαν αθυμωσιν αθυμώσιν ἀθυμῶσιν άθυτόν ηθύμει ηθύμησε μὴ athumosin athumōsin athymosin athymôsin athymōsin athymō̂sin me mē
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Englishman's Concordance
Colossians 3:21 V-PSA-3P
GRK: ἵνα μὴ ἀθυμῶσιν
NAS: so that they will not lose heart.
KJV: [to anger], lest they be discouraged.
INT: that not they be disheartened

Strong's Greek 120
1 Occurrence


ἀθυμῶσιν — 1 Occ.

119
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