Word Summary
aetos: an eagle
Original Word: ἀετόςTransliteration: aetos
Phonetic Spelling: (ah-et-os')
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: an eagle
Meaning: an eagle
Strong's Concordance
eagle.
From the same as aer; an eagle (from its wind-like flight) -- eagle.
see GREEK aer
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 105: ἀετόςἀετός,
(οῦ,
ὁ (like Latin
avis, from
ἄημι on account of its wind-like flight (cf.
Curtius, § 596)) (from
Homer down), in the
Sept. for
נֶשֶׁר,
an eagle:
Revelation 4:7;
Revelation 8:13 (
Rec. ἀγγέλου);
Revelation 12:14. In
Matthew 24:28;
Luke 17:37 (as in
Job 39:30;
Proverbs 30:17) it is better, since eagles are said seldom or never to go in quest of carrion, to understand with many interpreters either the
vultur percnopterus, which resembles an eagle (
Pliny, h. n. 10, 3 "
quarti generis — viz.
aquilarum — est percnopterus), or the
vultur barbatus. Cf.
Winers RWB under the word Adler; (Tristram, Nat. Hist. of the Bible, p. 172ff). The meaning of the proverb (cf. examples in
Wetstein (1752) on Matthew, the passage cited) quoted in both passages is, 'where there are sinners (cf.
πτῶμα), there judgments from heaven will not be wanting'.