Word Summary
autocheir: the very act
Original Word: αὐτόχειρTransliteration: autocheir
Phonetic Spelling: (ow-tokh'-ire)
Part of Speech: Adjective
Short Definition: the very act
Meaning: the very act
Strong's Concordance
with one's own hands.
From autos and cheir; self-handed, i.e. Doing personally -- with... Own hands.
see GREEK autos
see GREEK cheir
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 849: αὐτόχειραὐτόχειρ,
ἀυτοχειρος,
ὁ (
αὐτός and
χείρ, cf.
μακρόχειρ,
ἀδικοχειρ), doing a thing
with one's own hand:
Acts 27:19. (Often in the tragedians and Attic orators.)
STRONGS NT 849a: αὐχέωαὐχέω; (in present and imperfect from Aeschylus and Herodotus down, but rare in prose); properly, to lift up the neck, hence, to boast: μεγάλα αὐχεῖ, James 3:5 L T Tr WH for R G μεγάλαυχεῖ which see