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  2. What does και εγώ (kai egó) mean in Greek? English Translation. me too. More meanings for και εγώ (kai egó) and I. και εγώ. and me. και εγώ. Find more words! See Also in Greek. και conjunction. kai and. See Also in English. too adverb. πολύ, πάρα πολύ, επίσης. me pronoun. μου, με, εμένα, Εγώ. Nearby Translations. Translate from Greek.

  3. Transliteration: kagó. Phonetic Spelling: (kag-o') Definition: and, even so, me also. Usage: I also, I too, but I. NAS Exhaustive Concordance. Word Origin. see kai and egó. NAS Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible with Hebrew-Aramaic and Greek Dictionaries. Copyright © 1981, 1998 by The Lockman Foundation. All rights reserved Lockman.org.

    • Usage of Ego Eimi in The Gospel of John
    • Translation of Ego Eimi
    • Johannine Usage of Ego Eimi – Interpretation

    The specific phrase ego eimi occurs twenty four times in the Gospel of John. Seventeen of these times it is followed by a clear predicate. 1 Some of these instances would be John 6:35, “I am the living bread” (ego eimi ho artos tes zoes) or John 10:11, “I am the good shepherd” (ego eimi ho poimen ho kalos). Three times the usage does not fall into ...

    Before the exact meaning or significance of ego eimi in John’s gospel can be adequately addressed, the proper translation of the phrase must be determined. There are a very small number of translations that avoid a direct translation of the present indicative ego eimi. Moffat renders it, “I have existed before Abraham was born!” The Twentieth Centu...

    It is not hard to understand why there have been many who have not wished to make the connection that John makes between Jesus and Yahweh. One cannot make this identification outside of a trinitarian understanding of the Gospel itself, as one can certainly not identify Jesus as the Father in John’s Gospel, hence, if Jesus is identified as ego eimi ...

  4. Phonetic Spelling: (kahee) Definition: and, even, also. Usage: and, even, also, namely. HELPS Word-studies. 2532 kaí (the most common NT conjunction, used over 9,000 times) – and ( also ), very often, moreover, even, indeed (the context determines the exact sense).

  5. Jun 5, 2011 · He is not just saying, “I am hungry” or “I am thirsty.”. He is making people sit up and take notice about who he really is. The most obvious significance of Jesus making these “I am” statements is the direct connection to Exodus 3:14, where God reveals his name to Moses.

  6. The Greek word ἐγώ – “ego” – Strong’s Greek Number, 1473, appears 367 times in the New Testament. It is translated as “I” – 362x; “me” – 2x; “my” – 2x; “trust ” - once.

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