Meaning:spiritual. Word Origin:Derived from πνεῦμα (pneuma), meaning "spirit" or "breath." Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries:While there is no direct Hebrew equivalent for "pneumatikos," the concept is related to the Hebrew word רוּחַ (ruach), Strong's Hebrew 7307,...
It was in Alexandria that the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek; the version was known as the Septuagint, a word meaning seventy, after the number of scholars said to have collaborated in the translation. 正是在亚历山大,希伯来圣经被翻译成了希腊语;这个版本被称为《七十士译本》,这个词意为...
We may trace to one of them, Anaximenes, who regarded air as the primary principle, the doctrine of the "pneuma," or the breath of life—the psychic force which animates the body and leaves it at death—"Our soul being air, holds us together." Of another, the famous Heraclitus, ...
this remarkable observation was scornfully discarded by Galen, who claimed that even the ass’ brain presented numerous convolutions. In Galen’s pneumatic physiology it was the psychic pneuma to
pneu(mo/st), pneuma, pneumat- (G) air, lung, breath (pneumatic, pneumon [lung]) pod- (G) foot (pseudopod, pseuodpodium, Cephalopod) pogo- beard poikilo- (G) manifold (poikilothermous, poikilocyte) polio- grey polit- polished poll(ex)- thumb poly- (G) many (polybasic, polyc...
It was in Alexandria that the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek; the version was known as the Septuagint, a word meaning seventy, after the number of scholars said to have collaborated in the translation. 正是在亚历山大,希伯来圣经被翻译成了希腊语;这个版本被称为《七十士译本》,这个词意...