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ISA-11:9 ...for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD,
 as the waters cover the sea.

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  • 1209. dechomai {dekh'-om-ahee}; middle voice of a primary verb;

  • to receive (in various applications, literally or figuratively):

  • --accept, receive, take. Compare 2983.







  • 1223. dia {dee-ah'}; a primary preposition denoting the channel

  • of an act; through (in very wide applications, local, causal, or

  • occasional): --after, always, among, at, to avoid, because of

  • (that), briefly, by, for (cause)...fore, from, in, by occasion

  • of, of, by reason of, for sake, that, thereby, therefore, X

  • though, through(-out), to, wherefore, with(-in). In composition

  • it retains the same general import. ***. Dia. See 2203.







  • 1228. diabolos {dee-ab'-ol-os}; from 1225; a traducer; specially,

  • Satan [compare 7854]: --false accuser, devil, slanderer.







  • 1242. diatheke {dee-ath-ay'-kay}; from 1303; properly, a

  • disposition, i.e. (specially) a contract (especially a devisory

  • will): --covenant, testament.







  • 1248. diakonia {dee-ak-on-ee'-ah}; from 1249; attendance (as a

  • servant, etc.); figuratively (eleemosynary) aid, (official)

  • service (especially of the Christian teacher, or techn. of the

  • diaconate): --(ad-)minister(-ing, -tration, -try), office,

  • relief, service(-ing).







  • 1249. diakonos {dee-ak'-on-os}; probably from an obsolete diako

  • (to run on errands; compare 1377); an attendant, i.e. (genitive

  • case) a waiter (at table or in other menial duties); specially,

  • a Christian teacher and pastor (technically, a deacon or

  • deaconess): --deacon, minister, servant.







  • 1271. dianoia {dee-an'-oy-ah}; from 1223 and 3563; deep thought,

  • properly, the faculty (mind or its disposition), by implication,

  • its exercise: --imagination, mind, understanding.















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