Apollyon and the meaning of perdition
Revelation 9 11And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon. 12One woe is past; and, behold, there come two woes more hereafter. 13And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the four horns of the golden altar which is before God, definitions
G684 Pðþëåéá, apoôleia , ap-o'-li-a From a presumed derivative of G622; ruin or loss (physical, spiritual or eternal):—damnable (-nation), destruction, die, perdition, X perish, pernicious ways, waste
G622 Pðüëëõìé,
apollumi, ap-ol'-loo-mee From G575 and the base of G3639; to destroy fully (reflexively to perish, or lose), literally or figuratively:—destroy, die, lose, mar, perish.G3639 –
ëåèñïò , olethros, ol'-eth-ros, From –
ëëõìé ollumi a primary word (to destroy; a prolonged form); ruin, that is, death, punishment:—destruction.G3 EÁâáääþí, Abaddoôn , ab-ad-dohn', Of Hebrew origin [H11]; a destroying angel:—Abaddon. H11 ïBcá—
à チaõbaddoòn, ab-ad-done', Intensively from H6; abstractly a perishing; concretely Hades:—destruction. H6 ãá—S , チaòbad, aw-bad', A primitive root; properly to wander away, that is lose oneself; by implication to perish (causatively, destroy):—break, destroy (-uction), + not escape, fail, lose, (cause to, make) perish, spend, X and surely, take, be undone, X utterly, be void of, have no way to flee.