1) a crowd
1a) a casual collection of people
1a1) a multitude of men who have flocked together in some place
1a2) a throng
1b) a multitude
1b1) the common people, as opposed to the rulers and leading men
1b2) with contempt: the ignorant multitude, the populace
1c) a multitude
1c1) the multitudes, seems to denote troops of people gathered together without order
Part of Speech: noun masculine
Citing in TDNT: 5:582, 750
G3793
From a derivative of G2192 (meaning a vehicle); a throng (as borne along); by implication the rabble; by extension a class of people; figuratively a riot: - company, multitude, number (of people), people, press.
Gloss | Section |
---|---|
a crowd | 11.1 |
b common people | 87.64 |
These two sites give similar information, with the definition from several dictionaries and statistics on the use of the word.
University of Chicago's Logion lexicon
Thayer's dictionary plus other information.
From this site's dictionary (in Italian)
27 | ||
11 | ||
34 | ||
46 | ||
25 | ||
18 | ||
12 | ||
1 | ||
Total | 174 |
---|
Click on the first column to search for that word as a form of the root ὄχλος; click on the second column to search for that grammatical form of the root ὄχλος; click on the third column to search for that word and grammatical form; click on the total to search for the root ὄχλος.