Search results
Enter text: Enter word, phrase or verb root (shoresh) below... 1 ! . > . / ? Click the Virtual Keyboard above OR just type on your Physical Keyboard! Think aleph sounds like "a"? Try it. Gimel sounds like "g"? You guessed it again.
- Privacy Policy
Hear Any Word or Phrase in Hebrew | Virtual Phonetic Hebrew...
- Dictionary
English-Hebrew Dictionary Search by Keyword. A B C D E F G H...
- Terms of Use
Hear Any Word or Phrase in Hebrew | Virtual Phonetic Hebrew...
- Help
doitinHebrew.com Help/Support Center. Tet can be entered by...
- Pricing
Expert Hebrew Customer Support; Sign Up. PRO $ 5 /mo. only...
- Contact Us
Questions, Comments, Suggestions? We'd love to hear what you...
- Conjugate Hebrew Verbs
How to Conjugate Hebrew Verbs There are a number of ways to...
- Type in Hebrew
Translate Hebrew - Type in Hebrew - Hebrew Transliteration -...
- Privacy Policy
Word Origin: Derived from the root שָׁרַר (sharar), meaning "to be firm" or "to be strong." Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: - G254 (ἅλυσις, halysis): Refers to a chain, often used in the New Testament to describe chains of imprisonment.
• Reverso: Hebrew-English translation, words in context • Lingea : Hebrew-English dictionary & multilingual • Loecsen : Hebrew-English common phrases (+ audio)
1 kwi 2020 · The Ancient Hebrew Word Picture for Light. And God (אֱלהִים Elohim) said, “Let there be Light (אוֹר Oor),” and there was Light (אוֹר Oor), Genesis 1:3. The original Hebrew word אוֹר, pronounced Or with a Hebrew Resh, shows us a figurative word picture of what Light does:
28 sie 2022 · Brightness/Radiance: Nogah, feminine noun (Strong’s 5051) & To Stream/Radiate Light: Nahar, verb (Strong’s 5102). Root: נגה (nogah) & נהר (nahar) Sounds like: Noe-gaw and Na-hawr. The theme of Light recurs throughout the entire Bible.
Ohr (Hebrew: אור, romanized: ʾor, lit. 'Light', plural: אורות ʾoroṯ) is a central Kabbalistic term in Jewish mysticism. The analogy of physical light describes divine emanations.
Meaning: a chain. Word Origin: Derived from the root שָׁרַשׁ (sharash), meaning "to root" or "to take root." Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: The Greek equivalent often used in the Septuagint and New Testament is ῥίζα (rhiza), Strong's Greek #4491, which also means "root."