Word Summary
skēnos: a tent, for the body
Original Word: σκῆνοςTransliteration: skēnos
Phonetic Spelling: (skay'-nos)
Part of Speech: Noun, Neuter
Short Definition: a tent, for the body
Meaning: a tent, for the body
Strong's Concordance
tabernacle.
From skene; a hut or temporary residence, i.e. (figuratively) the human body (as the abode of the spirit) -- tabernacle.
see GREEK skene
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 4636: σκῆνοςσκῆνος,
σκήνους,
τό (
Hippocrates,
Plato, others),
a tabernacle, a tent, everywhere (except Boeckh, Corpus inscriptions vol. ii., no. 3071) used metaphorically, of
the human body, in which the soul dwells as in a tent, and which is taken down at death:
2 Corinthians 5:4;
ἡ ἐπίγειος ἡμῶν οἰκία τοῦ σκήνους, i. e. ho esti
τό σκῆνος (
Winers Grammar, § 59, 7 d., 8 a.), which is the well-known tent, ibid. 1 (
R. V. the earthly house of our tabernacle). Cf. Wis. 9:15 and Grimm at the passage; in the same sense in (
Plato) Tim. Locr., p. 100ff and often in other philosophic writings; cf. Fischer, Index to
Aeschines dial.
Socrates;
Passow, under the word; (Field, Otium Norv. pars iii., p. 113 (on
2 Corinthians 5:1)).