Loading...

Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
<
>
 
 

Genesis 37:32

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Masoretic Text 1524

H7971 And they sent וישׁלחו
H853   את
H3801 the coat כתנת
H6446 of many colours הפסים
H935 and they brought ויביאו
H413 to אל
H1 their father אביהם
H559 and said ויאמרו
H2063 This זאת
H4672 have we found מצאנו
H5234 know הכר
H4994 now נא
H3801 be thy son's coat הכתנת
H1121   בנך
H1931 it הוא
H518 or אם
H3808 no לא׃

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  be
  thy
  son's
H3801 coat
  whether
H5234 know
H4672 found
  we
  have
H2063 This
H559 said
  and
H1 father
  their
H935 brought
  they
  and
H6446 colours
  many
  of
H3801 coat
  the
H7971 sent
  they
  And

Hebrew-English Dictionary

Strongs: H5234
Hebrew: נָכַר
Transliteration: nâkar
Pronunciation: naw-kar'
Part of Speech: Verb
Bible Usage: {acknowledge} X-(idiom) {could} {deliver} {discern} {dissemble} {estrange} feign self to be {another} {know} take knowledge ({notice}) {perceive} {regard} (have) {respect} behave (make) self strange (-ly).
Definition:  

properly to {scrutinize} that {is} look intently at; hence (with recognition {implied}) to {acknowledge} be acquainted {with} care {for} respect: {revere} or (with suspicion {implied}) to {disregard} ignore: be strange {toward} reject: {resign} dissimulate (as if ignorant or disowning)

1. to recognise, acknowledge, know, respect, discern, regard

a. (Niphal) to be recognised

b. (Piel) to regard

c. (Hiphil)

1. to regard, observe, pay attention to, pay regard to, notice

2. to recognise (as formerly known), perceive

3. to be willing to recognise or acknowledge, acknowledge with honour

4. to be acquainted with

5. to distinguish, understand

d. (Hithpael) to make oneself known

2. to act or treat as foreign or strange, disguise, misconstrue

a. (Niphal) to disguise oneself

b. (Piel)

1. to treat as foreign (profane)

2. to misconstrue

c. (Hithpael)

1. to act as alien

2. to disguise oneself

The Brown-Driver-Briggs
Hebrew-English Lexicon (BDB) 1906
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.