Word Summary
apokoptō: to cut off
Original Word: ἀποκόπτωTransliteration: apokoptō
Phonetic Spelling: (ap-ok-op'-to)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to cut off
Meaning: to cut off
Strong's Concordance
cut off.
From apo and kopto; to amputate; reflexively (by irony) to mutilate (the privy parts) -- cut off. Compare katatome.
see GREEK apo
see GREEK kopto
see GREEK katatome
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 609: ἀποκόπτωἀποκόπτω: 1 aorist
ἀπεκοψα; future middle
ἀποκόψομαι;
to cut off, amputate:
Mark 9:43 (45);
John 18:10, 26;
Acts 27:32;
ὄφελον καί ἀποκόψονται I would that they (who urge the necessity of circumcision would not only circumcise themselves, but) would even mutilate themselves (or cut off their privy parts),
Galatians 5:12.
ἀποκόπτεσθαι occurs in this sense in
Deuteronomy 23:1; (
Philo de alleg. leg. 3:3; de vict. off. § 13; cf. de spec. legg. i. § 7);
Epictetus diss. 2, 20, 19;
Lucian, Eun. 8; (Dion Cass. 79, 11;
Diodorus Siculus 3, 31), and other passages quoted by
Wetstein (1752) at the passage (and
Sophocles Lexicon under the word). Others incorrectly: I would that they would cut themselves off from the society of Christians, quit it altogether; (cf. Meyer and
Lightfoot at the passage).