G3925 – parembole – παρεμβολή army, camp, castle

Strong’s ID:
G3925
Greek Word:
παρεμβολή
Transliteration:
parembole
Pronunciation:
par-em-bol-ay’
Part of Speech:
noun feminine
Usage Count:
10
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Find “parembole” in the Bible (New Testament)

Strong’s Greek Lexicon

from a compound of G3844 and G1685; a throwing in beside (juxtaposition), i.e. (specifically) battle-array, encampment or barracks (tower Antonia):—army, camp, castle.

Owing to changes in the enumeration while in progress, there were no words left for numbers 2717 and 3203–3302, which were therefore silently dropped out of the vocabulary and references as redundant.

Thayer’s Greek Definitions

1) an encampment
1a) the camp of Israel in the desert
1a1) used for the city of Jerusalem, inasmuch as that was to the Israelites what formerly the encampment had been in the desert
1a2) of the sacred congregation or assembly of Israel, as it had been gathered formerly in camps in the wilderness
1b) the barracks of the Roman soldiers, which at Jerusalem were in the castle of Antonia
2) an army in a line of battle

Thayer’s Definitions are as edited by the Online Bible of Winterbourne, Ontario. They removed the etymology, cross-references, and Greek phrases and changed some of Thayer’s Unitarian doctrinal positions concerning the work and person of Christ.