Bailly
ου (ἡ) [ᾰ] Samos :
1 la même que Σαμοθρᾴκη, IL.
24, 78, 753 ; Σάμος Θρηϊκίη, IL.
13, 12 ; HH.
Ap. 34, m. sign. ; 2 î. de la mer Icarienne (auj. Sámos,
turc Sisam) HH.
Ap. 41 ; 3 anc. n. de Κεφαλληνία,
c. Σάμη, IL.
2, 634 ; OD.
4, 671 ; 15, 29 ; 4 î. du Nil, HÉCAT. E. BYZ.
v° Ἔφεσος.
➳ Gén. dor. Σάμω, THCR. Idyl. 7, 40.
Étym. σάμος.
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LSJ
ἡ, Samos, the name of several Greek islands;
I. old name for Κεφαλληνία, Il. 2.634, Od. 4.671; also called Σάμη, 1.246, h.Ap. 429; though this, acc. to others, is a town on the island; hence Adj. Σαμαῖος, α, ον, Str. 10.2.13.
II. Σάμος Θρηϊκίη, v. Σαμοθρᾴκη.
III. Samos, the large island over against Ephesus, first in h.Ap. 41; hence Adj. Σάμιος, α, ον, Hdt. 1.70, etc. ; ἡ Σαμία (sc. γῆ) ibid., Thphr. Lap. 62; also Σ. ἀστήρ, clay with medicinal properties, Gal. 12.178; — Σαμιακός, ή, όν, Cratin. 13. (Acc. to Str. 8.3.19, 10.2.17, σάμος was an old word signifying a height.)
Liddell-Scott-Jones, Greek-English Lexicon (9th ed., 1940)
TBESG
Σάμος, -ου, ἡ
Samos, an island in the Ægean: Act.20:15.†
(AS)
Translators Brief lexicon of Extended Strongs for Greek based on Abbot-Smith, A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament (1922) (=AS), with corrections and adapted by Tyndale Scholars