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  2. 1. Air; gas: pneumatolysis. 2. Breath; respiration: pneumatometer. [From Greek pneuma, pneumat-, wind, breath; see pneu- in Indo-European roots .] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

    • The Idea in Brief
    • Discussion
    • Conclusion

    The soul is the very life that all living creatures appear to share. (Thus no cadaver, whether man or animal, possesses the "nephesh.") However, only human beings possess the spirit, which appears to be the "Image of God."

    The passage of Hebrews 4:12 appears to discriminate between the material and immaterial aspects of the person that are similar (appear in close relation) but are in fact separate and distinct. That is, in this passage the joints and marrow are similar (appear in close relation) but in fact are separate and distinct material parts of the person. The...

    Man is not dichotomous like the animal kingdom (nephesh + body), but trichotomous (nephesh + body + spirit). This spirit of man appears to be the Image of God, since God created man as cohost to rule in creation on the earth. This glory (Ps 8:5-6) was broken by disobedience, and thus while the Image of God remains in all men (James 3:9), that glory...

  3. May 4, 2023 · From Proto-Indo-European *pnéwmn̥, equivalent to πνευ-(pneu-), the root of πνέω (pnéō, “ I blow ”), +‎ -μα (-ma, result noun suffix).

  4. Jul 19, 2020 · pneumonia (n.)"inflammation of the tissues of the lungs" (as distinct from the bronchial tubes or the serous covering of the lungs), c. 1600, from Modern Latin, from Greek pneumonia "inflammation of the lungs," from pneumōn "lung" (see pneumo-).

  5. Jul 10, 2013 · Essentially, the suffix -ικόν is added to the root to form the adjective. Hence, ψυχ- + -ικόν = ψυχικόν. Likewise, πνεῦματ- ( pneumat -) is the actual root of πνεῦμα. πνεῦματ- + -ικόν = πνευματικόν.

  6. Mar 5, 2014 · Strong's Number G4151 matches the Greek πνεῦμα (pneuma), which occurs 385 times in 350 verses in the TR Greek. Page 1 / 7 (Mat 1:18–Luk 2:26)

  7. Sep 28, 2017 · pneumato-. before vowels pneumat-, word-forming element meaning "wind, air, spirit, presence of air," from Greek pneuma (genitive pneumatos) "the wind," also "breath" (see pneuma ).

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