Word Summary
kamēlos: camel
Original Word: κάμηλοςTransliteration: kamēlos
Phonetic Spelling: (kam'-ay-los)
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Short Definition: camel
Meaning: camel
Strong's Concordance
camel.
Of Hebrew origin (gamal); a "camel" -- camel.
see HEBREW gamal
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 2574: κάμηλοςκάμηλος,
καμήλου,
ὁ,
ὁ, Hebrew
גָּמָל (from
Herodotus down),
a camel (
BB. DD. under the word; Tristram, Nat. Hist. etc., p. 58ff):
Matthew 3:4;
Mark 1:6; in proverbs,
Matthew 19:24;
Mark 10:25;
Luke 18:25, (meaning, 'something almost or altogether impossible' (cf. Farrar in The Expositor for 1876 i., p. 369ff; especially Wetzstein in the Sitzungsberichte d. Akad. d. Wissensch. zu München, 1873, pp. 581-596));
Matthew 23:24 (of one who is careful not to sin in trivial matters, but pays no heed to the more important matters).
STRONGS NT 2574: κάμιλοςκάμιλος, καμιλου, ὁ, a cable; the reading of certain manuscripts in Matthew 19:24 and Luke 18:25 (see Tdf.s notes). The word is found only in Suidas (1967 c.) and the Schol. on Aristophanes reap. (1030): "κάμιλος τό παχύ σχοινίον διά τοῦ ἰ." Cf. Passow (or Liddell and Scott), under the word; (WH's Appendix, p. 151b).