Word Summary
Dioskouroi: the Dioscuri, twin sons of Zeus (Castor and Pollux)
Original Word: ΔιόσκουροιTransliteration: Dioskouroi
Phonetic Spelling: (dee-os'-koo-roy)
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: the Dioscuri, twin sons of Zeus (Castor and Pollux)
Meaning: the Dioscuri -- twin sons of Zeus (Castor and Pollux)
Strong's Concordance
Castor and Pollux.
From the alternate of Zeus and a form of the base of korasion; sons of Jupiter, i.e. The twins Dioscuri -- Castor and Pollux.
see GREEK Zeus
see GREEK korasion
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1359: ΔιόσκουροιΔιόσκουροι (
Phrynichus prefers the form
Διόσκοροι; in earlier Attic the dual
τῷ Διοσκόρω was more usual, cf.
Lob. ad Phryn., p. 235),
Διοσκορων,
οἱ (from
Διός of Zeus, and
κοῦρος; or
κόρος, boy, as
κόρη, girl), Dioscuri, the name given to Castor and ((Polydeuces, the Roman))
Pollux, the twin sons of Zeus and Leda, tutelary deities of sailors:
Acts 28:11 (
R. V. The Twin Brothers; cf.
B. D. under the word
).