G5352 – phthinoporinos – φθινοπωρινός whose fruit withereth

Strong’s ID:
G5352
Greek Word:
φθινοπωρινός
Transliteration:
phthinoporinos
Pronunciation:
fthin-op-o-ree-nos’
Part of Speech:
adjective
Usage Count:
1
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Find “phthinoporinos” in the Bible (New Testament)

Strong’s Greek Lexicon

from derivative of φθινω phthino (to wane; akin to the base of ) and (meaning late autumn); autumnal (as stripped of leaves):—whose fruit withereth.

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) autumn trees
1a) trees such as they are at the close of autumn, dry, leafless and without fruit
1b) metaphorically of unfruitful, worthless men

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.