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Pocket Dictionary for the Study of New Testament Greek is unavailable, but you can change that!

Whether you are beginning your study of New Testament Greek or Greek exegesis, or you simply need a refresher, this book is for you. From ablative to zeugma, it defines the tangled terms that infest Greek textbooks, grammars and lexicons. Here is a book that will deliver you from late-night ponderings of the predicate and fumings over the fricative. It is the indispensable lexicon to that third...

. n. A rhetorical feature involving a statement that is or seems self-contradictory or contrary to reason. See Matthew 5:3–12; Mark 8:35; Luke 18:14; 1 Corinthians 1:25; 7:22; 2 Corinthians 4:8–11; 6:8–10; 12:10; Philippians 3:7. . n. Biblical material that involves instruction, exhortation or commands. Also paranesis or parenesis.—adj. Paraenetic/parenetic. . adj. Pertaining to instruction, exhortation or command. . n. A unit of writing, usually more than one
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