Strong's #2621: katakeimai (pronounced kat-ak'-i-mahee)
from 2596 and 2749; to lie down, i.e. (by implication) be sick; specially, to recline at a meal:--keep, lie, sit at meat (down).
Thayer's Greek Lexicon:
́
katakeimai
1) to have lain down, i.e. to lie prostrate
1a) of the sick
1b) of those at meals, to recline
Part of Speech: verb
Relation: from G2596 and G2749
Citing in TDNT: 3:655, 425
Usage:
This word is used 11 times:
Mark 1:30: "But Simon's wife's mother lay sick of a fever, and anon they tell"
Mark 2:4: "wherein the sick of the palsy lay."
Mark 2:15: "it came to pass, that, as Jesus sat at meat in his house, many"
Mark 14:3: "the leper, as he sat at meat, there came a woman having an alabaster box"
Luke 5:25: "them, and took up that whereon he lay, and departed to his own"
Luke 5:29: "and of others that sat down with them."
John 5:3: "In these lay a great multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt,"
John 5:6: "When Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been"
Acts 9:33: "man named Aeneas, which had kept his bed eight"
Acts 28:8: "that the father of Publius lay sick of a fever and of a bloody flux:"
1 Corinthians 8:10: "thee which hast knowledge sit at meat in the idol's temple, shall not the"