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Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
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Acts 2:15

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Textus Receptus (Stephanus 1550)

G3756 are not ου
G1063 For γαρ
G5613 as ως
G5210 ye υμεις
G5274 suppose υπολαμβανετε
G3778 these ουτοι
G3184 drunken μεθυουσιν
G1510   εστιν
G1063 seeing γαρ
G5610 hour ωρα
G5154 third τριτη
G3588 but the της
G2250 day ημερας

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

G3778 these
  are
G3184 drunken
G5274 suppose
G1063 seeing
  it
  but
G5154 third
G5610 hour
  of

Textus Receptus Support:

Stephanus:
Beza:
Scrivener:

Greek-English Dictionary

Strongs: G2250
Greek: ἡμέρα
Transliteration: hēmera
Pronunciation: hay-mer'-ah
Part of Speech: Noun Feminine
Bible Usage: age + alway (mid-) day (by day [-ly]) + for ever judgment (day) time while years.
Definition:  

akin to the base of G1476) meaning tame that is gentle; day that is (literally) the time space between dawn and dark or the whole 24 hours (but several days were usually reckoned by the Jews as inclusive of the parts of both extremes); figuratively a period (always defined more or less clearly by the context)

1. the day, used of the natural day, or the interval between sunrise and sunset, as distinguished from and contrasted with the night

a. in the daytime

b. metaph., "the day" is regarded as the time for abstaining from indulgence, vice, crime, because acts of the sort are perpetrated at night and in darkness

2. of the civil day, or the space of twenty four hours (thus including the night)

a. Eastern usage of this term differs from our western usage. Any part of a day is counted as a whole day, hence the expression "three days and three nights" does not mean literally three whole days, but at least one whole day plus part of two other days.

3. of the last day of this present age, the day Christ will return from heaven, raise the dead, hold the final judgment, and perfect his kingdom

4. used of time in general, i.e. the days of his life.

Thayer's Greek–English Lexicon
of the New Testament 1889
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.