Also see definition of "Jot" in Word Study
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NAVE: Jot
EBD: Jot
SMITH: JOT
ISBE: JOT
Joshua, The Book of | Josiah | Josias | Josibiah | Josiphiah | Jot | Jotapata | Jotbah | Jotbathah | Jotham | Jothath

Jot

Jot [EBD]

or Iota, the smallest letter of the Greek alphabet, used metaphorically or proverbially for the smallest thing (Matt. 5:18); or it may be = yod, which is the smallest of the Hebrew letters.

Jot [NAVE]

JOT
smallest letter in Hebrew/Aramaic, "Yodh." Matt. 5:18

JOT [SMITH]

the English form of the Greek iota , i.e., the smallest letter of the Greek alphabet. The Hebrew is yod , or y formed like a comma (?). It is used metaphorically to express the minutest thing.

JOT [ISBE]

JOT - jot: "Jot" (Revised Version, later editions of the King James Version) is a corruption of iote (early editions of the King James Version, Geneva, Rheims, Bishops'--pronounced i-o'te), an English transliteration of iota, the 9th letter of the Greek alphabet (Mt 5:18 parallel). "Iota," in turn, is the nearest Greek equivalent for the Hebrew yodh ("y"), the smallest letter of the Hebrew alphabet, in New Testament times being little larger than an English accent ('). The tittle (which see) is the smallest part of a letter (not part of a y, however). Consequently, thinking of the law as written out, the sense of Mt 5:17, is: "From this code, so written, not the smallest letter nor part of a letter--not an `i' nor the crossing of a `t'--shall be erased until all things come to pass." (For the meaning, see LAW.) The reference is to the synagogue rolls, which were written in Hebrew, so that the passage has no bearing on the language used by Christ. For the form of the "jot," compare the tables in HDB, article "Alphabet," more fully in Chwolson,. Corp. Inscr. Hebrew. (1882).

See TITTLE.

Burton Scott Easton


Also see definition of "Jot" in Word Study


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