Lexical Summary
phrenapatés: Deceiver, seducer
Original Word: φρεναπατής
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Transliteration: phrenapatés
Pronunciation: fren-ap-at-ace'
Phonetic Spelling: (fren-ap-at'-ace)
KJV: deceiver
NASB: deceivers
Word Origin: [from G5424 (φρήν - thinking) and G539 (ἀπάτη - deceitfulness)]
1. a mind-misleader, i.e. seducer
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
deceiver.
From phren and apate; a mind-misleader, i.e. Seducer -- deceiver.
see GREEK phren
see GREEK apate
HELPS Word-studies
5423 phrenapátēs (from 5424 /phrḗn, "outlook from insignt" and 538 /apatáō, "deceive") – properly, deceivers, leading others into their delusions – especially exploiting those with a narrow mind (used only in Tit 1:10).
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Originfrom
phrén and
apatéDefinitionself-deceiving
NASB Translationdeceivers (1).
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 5423: φρεναπάτηςφρεναπάτης,
φρεναπατου,
ὁ (
φρήν and
ἀπάτη),
a mind-deceiver;
Vulg.seductor; (
A. V. deceiver):
Titus 1:10. (Several times in ecclesiastical writings.)