Strong's Concordance scholé: leisure, hence disputation (that for which leisure is used), by ext. school Original Word: σχολή, ῆς, ἡPart of Speech: Noun, Feminine Transliteration: scholé Phonetic Spelling: (skhol-ay') Short Definition: leisure, a school Definition: leisure, a school, place where there is leisure. Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 4981: σχολήσχολή, σχολῆς, ἡ (from σχεῖν; hence, properly, German das Anhalten; (cf. English 'to hold on,' equivalent to either to stop or to persist)); 1. from Pindar down, freedom from labor, leisure. 2. according to later Greek usage, a place where there is leisure for anything, a school (cf. Liddell and Scott, under the word, III.; Winer's Grammar, 23): Acts 19:9 (Dionysius Halicarnassus, de jud. Isocrates 1; tie vi Dem. 44; often in Plutarch). Probably feminine of a presumed derivative of the alternate of echo; properly, loitering (as a withholding of oneself from work) or leisure, i.e. (by implication) a "school" (as vacation from physical employment) -- school. see GREEK echo Englishman's Concordance Strong's Greek 49811 Occurrence σχολῇ — 1 Occ. Acts 19:9 N-DFS GRK: ἐν τῇ σχολῇ Τυράννου NAS: daily in the school of Tyrannus. KJV: daily in the school of one Tyrannus. INT: in the lecture hall of Tyrannus |