κατάκειμαιkatákeimai
GreekG262110 occurrences (KJV)
to lie down, i.e. (by implication) be sick; specially, to recline at a meal
KJV renders it: keep, lie, sit at meat (down)
Where it appears
- Mark 1:30Now Simon’s wife’s mother lay sick with a fever, and immediately they told him about her.
- Mark 2:4When they could not come near to him for the crowd, they removed the roof where he was. When they had broken it up, they let down the mat that the paralytic was lying on.
- Mark 2:15He was reclining at the table in his house, and many tax collectors and sinners sat down with Jesus and his disciples, for there were many, and they followed him.
- Mark 14:3While he was at Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, as he sat at the table, a woman came having an alabaster jar of ointment of pure nard — very costly. She broke the jar, and poured it over his head.
- Luke 5:25Immediately he rose up before them, and took up that which he was laying on, and departed to his house, glorifying God.
- John 5:3In these lay a great multitude of those who were sick, blind, lame, or paralyzed, waiting for the moving of the water;
- John 5:6When Jesus saw him lying there, and knew that he had been sick for a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to be made well?”
- Acts 9:33There he found a certain man named Aeneas, who had been bedridden for eight years, because he was paralyzed.
- Acts 28:8The father of Publius lay sick of fever and dysentery. Paul entered in to him, prayed, and laying his hands on him, healed him.
- 1 Cor 8:10For if a man sees you who have knowledge sitting in an idol’s temple, won’t his conscience, if he is weak, be emboldened to eat things sacrificed to idols?
Lexical data: Strong’s Hebrew & Greek Dictionaries (1890, public domain; openscriptures, CC-BY-SA). Word tagging from the Strong’s-numbered KJV.