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good Samaritan
[ good suh-mar-i-tn ]
noun
- one who is compassionate and helpful to a person in distress.
Good Samaritan
noun
- New Testament a figure in one of Christ's parables (Luke 10:30–37) who is an example of compassion towards those in distress
- a kindly person who helps another in difficulty or distress
Good Samaritan
- In one of the parables of Jesus , the only one of several passersby to come to the aid of a Jew (see also Jews ) who had been robbed, beaten, and left to die on the roadside. The kindness of the Samaritan was particularly admirable because Jews and Samaritans (i.e., people of Samaria) were generally enemies. Jesus told the parable of the Good Samaritan to answer a man who had asked him, “Who is my neighbor?” He forced his questioner to admit that the Samaritan was the true neighbor of the man who had been robbed.
Notes
Word History and Origins
Origin of good Samaritan1
Idioms and Phrases
A compassionate person who unselfishly helps others, as in In this neighborhood you can't count on a good Samaritan if you get in trouble . This expression alludes to Jesus's parable about a Samaritan who rescues and cares for a stranger who had been robbed and badly hurt and had been ignored by a priest and a Levite (Luke 10:30–35). The Samaritans were considered a heretical group by other Jews, so by using a Samaritan for the parable, Jesus chose a person whom his listeners would find least likely to be worthy of concern. [c. 1600]Example Sentences
Relatives of a "good Samaritan" murdered by a man who was only released from jail the day before are taking legal action against a number of authorities.
Three weeks before our search, Siegman and Wood had found Jackie living in a tent under a tree on Wilshire Boulevard near Good Samaritan Hospital.
They said that fire was stomped out by a good Samaritan.
They said the fire was stomped out by a good Samaritan.
After the crash, a good Samaritan tried to stop Isaiah’s bleeding by wrapping his head in her sweater before the siblings were taken to the hospital, according to the family’s GoFundMe page.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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