4507. rhuparia
Lexicon
rhuparia: Filthiness, moral impurity

Original Word: ῥυπαρία
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: rhuparia
Pronunciation: hroo-par-EE-ah
Phonetic Spelling: (hroo-par-ee'-ah)
KJV: turpitude
Word Origin: [from G4508 (ῥυπαρός - dirty)]

1. dirtiness (morally)

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
dirtiness, turpitude.

From rhuparos; dirtiness (morally) -- turpitude.

see GREEK rhuparos

HELPS Word-studies

Cognate: 4507 rhyparía (a feminine noun) – properly, dirt (filth); (figuratively) moral filth that soils (desecrates) the soul, emphasizing a specific application (influence) of moral filth. 4507 /rhyparía ("moral filth") is only used in Js 1:21.

[See also the cognate masculine noun 4509 (rhýpos), "moral filth viewed as a working principle."]

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 4507: ῤυπαρία

ῤυπαρία, ῥυπαριας, (ῤυπαρός), filthiness (Plutarch, praecept. conjug. c. 28); metaphorically, of wickedness as moral defilement: James 1:21. (Of sordidness, in Critias quoted in Pollux 3, 116; Plutarch, de adulat. et amic. § 19; others.)

Forms and Transliterations
ρυπαριαν ρυπαρίαν ῥυπαρίαν rhyparian rhyparían ruparian
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Englishman's Concordance
James 1:21 N-AFS
GRK: ἀποθέμενοι πᾶσαν ῥυπαρίαν καὶ περισσείαν
NAS: all filthiness and [all] that remains
KJV: all filthiness and
INT: having laid aside all filthiness and abounding

Strong's Greek 4507
1 Occurrence


ῥυπαρίαν — 1 Occ.

4506
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