Loading...

Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
<
>
 
 

Song of Solomon 1:7

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Masoretic Text 1524

H5046 Tell הגידה
H157   לי שׁאהבה
H5315 me O thou whom my soul נפשׁי
H349 where איכה
H7462 thou feedest תרעה
H349 where איכה
H7257 thou makest thy flock to rest תרביץ
H6672 at noon בצהרים
H4100   שׁלמה
H1961 should I be אהיה
H5844 as one that turneth aside כעטיה
H5921 by על
H5739 the flocks עדרי
H2270 of thy companions חבריך׃

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

H5046 Tell
  me
  O
  thou
  whom
  my
H5315 soul
H7945 loveth
H349 where
  thou
H7462 feedest
H349 where
  thou
  makest
  thy
  flock
  to
H7257 rest
  at
H6672 noon
  for
  should
  I
  as
  one
  that
  turneth
H5844 aside
  the
H5739 flocks
  of
  thy
H2270 companions

Hebrew-English Dictionary

Strongs: H5315
Hebrew: נֶפֶשׁ
Transliteration: nephesh
Pronunciation: neh'-fesh
Part of Speech: Noun Feminine
Bible Usage: {any} {appetite} {beast} {body} {breath} {creature} X-(idiom) dead ({-ly}) {desire} X-(idiom) [dis-] {contented} X-(idiom) {fish} {ghost} + {greedy} {he} heart ({-y}) ({hath} X-(idiom) jeopardy of) life (X in {jeopardy}) {lust} {man} {me} {mind} {mortality} {one} {own} {person} {pleasure} ({her-} {him-} {my-} thy-) {self} them (your) {-selves} + {slay} {soul} + {tablet} {they} {thing} (X she) {will} X-(idiom) would have it.
Definition:  

properly a breathing {creature} that {is} animal or (abstractly) vitality; used very widely in a {literal} accommodated or figurative sense (bodily or mental)

1. soul, self, life, creature, person, appetite, mind, living being, desire, emotion, passion

a. that which breathes, the breathing substance or being, soul, the inner being of man

b. living being

c. living being (with life in the blood)

d. the man himself, self, person or individual

e. seat of the appetites

f. seat of emotions and passions

g. activity of mind

1. dubious

h. activity of the will

1. dubious

i. activity of the character

1. dubious

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