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In our modern Western culture, love is an abstract thought of emotion, how one feels toward another, but the Hebrew word אהב ahav [H:157] goes much deeper than simple emotion. The parent root of this word is הב hav .
28 lip 2023 · The Hebrew word for love is ahavah, which is rooted in the more molecular word hav, 1 which means to give, revealing that, according to Judaism, giving is at the root of love. What does this etymological insight teach us both about the function of love and about how love functions?
In our modern Western culture love is an abstract thought of emotion, how one feels toward another but the Hebrew meaning goes much deeper. As a verb this word means "to provide and protect what is given as a privilege" as well as " to have an intimacy of action and emotion".
start with a definition of the verb אהב (for the sense of “in love”). The definition was derived from the following twenty-six texts that I see as specifically referring to a sense of אהב akin to “in love”: Gen 29:18, 30, 32; 34:3; Deut 21:15, 16; Judg 14:16; 16:4, 15; 1Sam 1:5; 2 Sam 13:1, 4, 15;
1 sty 2009 · The Hebrew texts suggest how decided David was: ^ybiêa' !t"ån"Ahy> ‘rWb[]B; ds,x, ’ ^ïM.[i hf, ’ [/a, • hfo[' yKiä (ki asoh e’eseh immeka hesed ba’abur yehonatan abika).
The Hebrew verb אהב (ahav, pronounced ah-HAV, with the final bet pronounced as a "v") is a Biblical Hebrew word meaning "to love." The noun form of this word is אהבה (ahavah, pronounced ah-ha-VAH) meaning "love." Ahav and ahavah cover a broad spectrum of concepts of love.
In the Hebrew Bible, the verb ’ āhēb , rendered in the Greek translation of the Old Testament known as the Septuagint with the verb agapao , implies a “preferential love”, e.g. it is used for a...