Greek · G417

ἄνεμος

Wind; (plural) by implication, (the four) quarters (of the earth)

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ἄνεμος G417
Pronunciation ánemos

What does ἄνεμος (ánemos) mean in the Bible?

Ἄνεμος means wind, the moving air that can refresh, resist travel, batter structures, or serve as an image of direction and worldwide extent. Jesus' house parable includes winds striking both houses, so the decisive difference is the foundation of obedient hearing rather than exemption from storms.

Reader summary

Full entry for ἄνεμος (G417) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does ἄνεμος (ánemos) mean in the Bible?

Ἄνεμος means wind, the moving air that can refresh, resist travel, batter structures, or serve as an image of direction and worldwide extent. Jesus' house parable includes winds striking both houses, so the decisive difference is the foundation of obedient hearing rather than exemption from storms.

How does the BSB render G417?

The BSB source-word alignment has 31 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include wind (14), winds (10), . . . (3), [the] wind (3), of the wind (1).

Where does ἄνεμος (ánemos) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 7:25. Its strongest book concentrations include Matthew (9), Mark (7), Acts (4), Luke (4).

What This Word Actually Means

Ἄνεμος means wind, the moving air that can refresh, resist travel, batter structures, or serve as an image of direction and worldwide extent. Jesus' house parable includes winds striking both houses, so the decisive difference is the foundation of obedient hearing rather than exemption from storms. The wind ceases when Jesus enters the boat, contributing to the disciples' worshipful recognition.

The four winds can designate every direction from which the Son of Man gathers His elect, while Acts records wind as a practical obstacle to sailing and Revelation pictures winds held back under angelic restraint. The noun names created force; context determines literal weather, geographic breadth, judgment imagery, or a test of stability.

Sources