Greek · G1492

εἴδω

To perceive: see

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εἴδω G1492
Pronunciation eídō

What does εἴδω (eídō) mean in the Bible?

G1492 names knowing, perceiving, or recognizing, and John uses it to expose the difference between information and true recognition of Jesus. People can know facts, locations, customs, and rumors while still not knowing the One who stands among them.

Reader summary

Full entry for εἴδω (G1492) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does εἴδω (eídō) mean in the Bible?

G1492 names knowing, perceiving, or recognizing, and John uses it to expose the difference between information and true recognition of Jesus. People can know facts, locations, customs, and rumors while still not knowing the One who stands among them.

How does the BSB render G1492?

The BSB source-word alignment has 320 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include know (36), I know (29), we know (28), You know (25), I do not know (16).

Where does εἴδω (eídō) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 6:8. Its strongest book concentrations include John (85), 1 Corinthians (25), Luke (25), Matthew (25).

Are there verse guides for εἴδω (eídō)?

This entry includes 4 verse guides that explain exact original-language forms in context.

What This Word Actually Means

G1492 names knowing, perceiving, or recognizing, and John uses it to expose the difference between information and true recognition of Jesus. People can know facts, locations, customs, and rumors while still not knowing the One who stands among them. John the Baptist says Israel did not know Him, Nicodemus says that the rulers know Jesus is a teacher from God, and Jesus tells the Samaritan woman that if she knew the gift of God, she would ask for living water.

The word therefore helps readers distinguish visible evidence from saving recognition. In John, real knowing is accountable to revelation, testimony, the Father-Son relationship, and obedient trust. It is not bare awareness, secret insight, or mastery over God.

Sources