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14 lut 2024 · Aneph is the word used for anger and in its semitic origins it is a snort. It derives from the camel snorting when he is frustrated or angry. Actually, anger is a hard word to understand in the Hebrew. It is also a hard word to understand in English.
Definition. to hinder, restrain, frustrate. NASB Translation. discouraged* (1), discouraging* (1), forbid (2), forbidden (1), forbids (1), frustrates (1), refuse (1). NAS Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible with Hebrew-Aramaic and Greek Dictionaries. Copyright © 1981, 1998 by The Lockman Foundation. All rights reserved Lockman.org.
29 lip 2020 · God changes His mind because Moses makes his case. The event is what the text says it is—divine frustration. There is a small caveat here. The opening Hebrew word, ʿattâ, translated “now,” is a derivative of ʿānâ, a word that basically expresses “to answer, to respond, to speak.”. This is Zornberg’s point.
7 maj 2024 · YAHWEH or YEHOVAH (JEHOVAH) The tetragrammaton, YHVH, is the personal name of God in the Hebrew Bible. In English translations, it is often translated as “the LORD” – in capital letters. When the Jewish people read their Hebrew Scriptures, they usually say “Adonai” when the name יַהְוֶה appears.
24 mar 2016 · Free online Biblical Old Testament Hebrew Dictionary. Abarim Publications' ever expanding online Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament comprises 587 articles that discuss the meaning and relationships of thousands of Hebrew words. Our dictionary is not organized according to alphabet but rather according to similarity of form.
חָרוֹן (charon) -- (burning of) anger. burning (17), burning anger (2), fierce (15), fierceness (3), fury (1), wrath (3). חָרוֺן noun masculine (burning of) anger (compare Lag BN 204 Anm.
parar: defeat. Original Word: פָרַר. Part of Speech: Verb. Transliteration: parar. Phonetic Spelling: (paw-rar') Definition: to break, frustrate. Strong's Exhaustive Concordance. break asunder, cast off, cause to cease, clean, defeat, disannul, disappoint, A primitive root; to break up (usually figuratively, i.e.