: "[As Herakles was slaying the Kentauroi (Centaurs) of Mount Pholoe with his arrows :] Herakles unwittingly by a shot from his bow killed the Kentauroi Kheiron (Centaur Chiron), who was admired for his knowledge of healing."Pausanias, Description of Greece 5. 5. 9 - 10 (trans. ...
She was the daughter of Aesculapius, you know that dude who managed to raise people from the dead, and got struck down for it. She was the Goddess of Healing and she focuses on the healing power of cleanliness. She introduced the idea of washing patients with soap and water. She had lo...
Health & Healing Cookbooks Health Care Delivery Books Health Policy Books Healthy Living Books Hebrew Language Books Hellboy Books & Comics Herbal Medications Hermeneutics Philosophy Books Higher Education Books Hiking Books Histology Books Historical Biographies & Memoirs Historical Geography Books Historical ...
So she said; but fear seized them all, and none of them uttered a word. But great Kronos (Cronus) the wily took courage and answered his dear mother : ‘Mother, I will undertake to do this deed, for I reverence not our father of evil name, for he first thought of doing shameful ...
Althea means “with healing power” in Greek. It’s always been a poetic, perhaps even ethereal name, widely used in Greek myths and poetry. There are some famous people who have this name, like Althea Gibson — the firstAfrican Americanwinner at Wimbledon. You could easily use theshort ve...
Word Origin: A primary word Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: - H3605 (כֹּל, kol): Often translated as "all" or "every," similar in meaning to "pas" in its comprehensive scope. - H3606 (כָּל, kol): Another Hebrew term for "all" or "every," used in vari...
Examination of Critical Greek Texts of the New Testament Through Word Study of Therapeuo This project seeks to examine the idea of healthcare within the New Testament of the Bible. A word study of the most prevalent Greek word for healing in the New Testament, therapueo, was done to illumin...
Usage:The Greek verb "sózó" primarily means "to save" or "to deliver." In the New Testament, it is used to describe both physical and spiritual salvation. Physically, it can refer to healing from illness or rescue from danger. Spiritually, it denotes the salvation of the soul, deliveranc...
The construct word plays a key role in linguistic theorizing. For instance, there are theories of syntax that are entirely word-based, such as "Word Grammar" (Hudson 1984), as well as theories in which the distinction between a word and a non-word has consequences for other aspects of the...
PAEAN (Paian, Paiêôn or Paiôn), that is, "the healing," is according to Homer the designation of the physician of the Olympian gods, who heals, for example, the wounded Ares and Hades. (Il. v. 401, 899.) After the time of Homer and Hesiod, the word Paian becomes a ...