Word Summary
diegeirō: to arouse completely
Original Word: διεγείρωTransliteration: diegeirō
Phonetic Spelling: (dee-eg-i'-ro)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to arouse completely
Meaning: to arouse completely
Strong's Concordance
awake, raise, stir up.
From dia and egeiro; to wake fully; i.e. Arouse (literally or figuratively) -- arise, awake, raise, stir up.
see GREEK dia
see GREEK egeiro
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1326: διεγείρωδιεγείρω; 1 aorist
διηγειρα; passive, imperfect
διηγειρομην (but
Tr WH (
T editions 2, 7)
διεγείρετο in
John 6:18, cf.
Buttmann, 34 (30);
WH's Appendix, p. 161); 1 aorist preposition
διεγερθείς;
to wake up, awaken, arouse (from repose; differing from the simple
ἐγείρω, which has a wider meaning); from sleep:
τινα,
Mark 4:38 (here
T Tr WH ἐγείρουσιν);
Luke 8:24; passive,
Luke 8:24 T Tr text
WH;
Mark 4:39; with the addition
ἀπό τοῦ ὕπνου,
Matthew 1:24 (
L T Tr WH ἐγερθείς); from repose, quiet: in passage of the sea, which begins to be agitated,
to rise, John 6:18. Metaphorically,
to arouse the mind;
stir up, render active:
2 Peter 1:13;
2 Peter 3:1, as in 2 Macc. 15:10,
τινα τοῖς θυμοῖς. (Several times in the O. T. Apocrypha (cf.
Winers Grammar, 102 (97)); Hipper. (
Aristotle), Herodian; occasionally in
Anthol.)
STRONGS NT 1326a: διεξέρχομαιδιεξέρχομαι: (2 aorist διεξηλθον); to go out through something: διεξελθοῦσα, namely, διά φρυγάνων, Acts 28:3 Tdf editions 2, 7. (the Sept.; in Greek writings from (Sophicles, Herodotus), Euripides down.)