- In Hebrew, verbs,
which take the form of
derived stems, are
conjugated to
reflect their tense and mood, as well as to
agree with
their subjects in gender...
- (2006). "Are
Yahweh and El
Distinct Deities in Deut. 32:8-9 and
Psalm 82?".
HIPHIL Novum – via
Liberty University.
Elnes &
Miller 1999, p. 295. The Ancient...
- or 'casting down' ("the
horns of the nations," in
Zechariah 2:4). In the
hiphil form, it
normally means 'praising' (usually in the
context of
ritual worship)...
- the note "Hr10s0 קרב" in the
apparatus which means that the word is a "
Hiphil suffix conjugation third masculine singular verb with a wāv
retentive and...
- (1QH4:6: kšḥr, 'like the dawn'; 11QPsa 26:11:
establishment of the dawn [kwn
hiphil]; 4Q487 36,1 lšḥr, uncertain);
Jewish Aramaic šaḥarā, 'morning dawn, early...
- — Lev 7:12 KJV The
Hebrew noun
todah "thanksgiving" is
derived from the
Hiphil of the verb
yadah (יָדָה) "to praise."
Commonly used as "Thank You" usually...
-
Genesis 9:27 it
forms a pun with the
Hebrew root yph: "May God make room [the
hiphil of the yph root] for ****heth, that he may live in Shem's
tents and Canaan...
- and
yihye 'he will be'
versus yehi 'may he be',
imperfect forms of the
hiphil stem, and also
generally for
first person imperfect forms: אֵשֵׁב (imperfect...
- well as in the
prophetical books of the Bible, are
either yatsa in the
Hiphil form (as the
received text has it here) or padah. The
roots harah or hur...
- person. "Has flattered": in
Hebrew literally "has made smooth",
using the
Hiphil II of חָלַק, khalaq, "to be smooth; to be slippery", with the
meaning (1)...