Lexical Summary
phruassó: To rage, to be insolent, to be tumultuous
Original Word: φρυάσσω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: phruassó
Pronunciation: froo-as'-so
Phonetic Spelling: (froo-as'-so)
KJV: rage
NASB: rage
Word Origin: [akin to G1032 (βρύω - send), G1031 (βρύχω - gnashing)]
1. to snort (as a spirited horse)
2. (figuratively) to make a tumult
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
rage.
Akin to bruo, brucho; to snort (as a spirited horse), i.e. (figuratively) to make a tumult -- rage.
see GREEK brucho
see GREEK bruo
HELPS Word-studies
5433 phryássō – properly, to snort, "vehemently neigh" (like a horse, MM); (figuratively) to act with rage (literally like "an uncontrolled horse").
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Originof uncertain derivation
Definitionto neigh, whinny, fig. to be wanton
NASB Translationrage (1).
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 5433: φρυάσσωφρυάσσω: 1 aorist 3 person plural
ἐφρύαξαν; (everywhere in secular authors and also in Macc. as a deponent middle
φρυάσσομαι (
Winers Grammar, 24));
to neigh, stamp the ground, prance, snort; to be high-spirited: properly, of horses (
Anthol. 5, 202, 4;
Callimachus (