Word Summary
thērion: a wild beast
Original Word: θηρίονTransliteration: thērion
Phonetic Spelling: (thay-ree'-on)
Part of Speech: Noun, Neuter
Short Definition: a wild beast
Meaning: a wild beast
Strong's Concordance
venomous, wild beast.
Diminutive from the same as thera; a dangerous animal -- (venomous, wild) beast.
see GREEK thera
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 2342: θηρίονθηρίον,
θηρίου,
τό (diminutive of
θήρ; hence,
a little beast, little animal;
Plato, Theact., p. 171 e.; of bees,
Theocritus, 19, 6; but in usage it had almost always the force of its primitive; the later diminutive is
θηριδιον (cf.
Epictetus diss. 2, 9, 6)); (from
Homer down); the
Sept. for
חַיָה and
בְּהֵמָה,
an animal; a wild animal, wild beast, beast: properly,
Mark 1:13;
Acts 10:12 Rec.;
; Hebrews 12:20; (James 3:7); Revelation 6:8; in Revelation 11:7 and Revelation 13-20, under the figurative of a 'beast' is depicted Antichrist, both his person and his kingdom and power (see ἀντίχριστος); metaphorically, a brutal, bestial man, savage, ferocious, Titus 1:12 (colloquial, 'ugly dogs') (so in Aristophanes eqq. 273; Plutarch, 439; nub. 184; (cf. Schmidt, chapter 70, 2; apparently never with allusion to the stupidity of beasts); still other examples are given by Kypke, Observations, ii., p. 379; θηρία ἀνθρωπομορφα, Ignatius Smyrn. 4 [ET], cf. ad Ephes. 7 [ET]). (Synonym: see ζοων.)