The Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek languages are rich and descriptive and at times do not translate precisely into present-day English. Although we have many translations of the text, sometimes it is necessary to look at the original language to fully appreciate and understand some terminology. Language conveys ideas and reflects the details of a culture. Aside from an intense language study of archaic languages, serious Bible students learn more about the original intent of a word in a Scripture passage by looking it up.
- For this example, we will perform a Greek word study on the word "covenant". Matthew 26:28 will be the Scripture of reference:

- Key words are underlined and the original Greek is displayed below the verse:

- The following window is displayed showing the definition for the word "covenant", Strong's number, the original word, the word's origin, the transliterated word, the phonetic spelling, and the parts of speach: