Loading...

Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
<
>
 
 

Deuteronomy 11:9

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Masoretic Text 1524

H4616 And that ולמען
H748 ye may prolong תאריכו
H3117 your days ימים
H5921 in על
H127 the land האדמה
H834 which אשׁר
H7650 sware נשׁבע
H3068 the LORD יהוה
H1 unto your fathers לאבתיכם
H5414 to give לתת
H2233 unto them and to their seed להם ולזרעם
H776   ארץ
H2100 floweth זבת
H2461 with milk חלב
H1706 and honey ודבשׁ׃

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  And
H4616 that
  ye
  may
H748 prolong
  your
H3117 days
  the
H127 land
H834 which
  the
H3068 LORD
H7650 sware
  unto
  your
H1 fathers
  to
H5414 give
  unto
  them
  and
  to
  their
H2233 seed
  a
H127 land
H4616 that
H2100 floweth
  with
H2461 milk
  and
H1706 honey

Hebrew-English Dictionary

Strongs: H3117
Hebrew: יוֹם
Transliteration: yôwm
Pronunciation: yome
Part of Speech: Noun Masculine
Bible Usage: {age} + {always} + {chronicles} continually ({-ance}) {daily} ({[birth-]} {each} to) {day} (now {a} two) days ({agone}) + {elder} X-(idiom) {end} + {evening} + (for) ever ({-lasting} {-more}) X-(idiom) {full} {life} as (so) long as (. . . {live}) (even) {now} + {old} + {outlived} + {perpetually} {presently} + {remaineth} X-(idiom) {required} {season} X-(idiom) {since} {space} {then} (process of) {time} + as at other {times} + in {trouble} {weather} (as) {when} ({a} {the} within a) while ({that}) X-(idiom) whole (+ {age}) (full) year ({-ly}) + younger.
Definition:  

a day (as the warm {hours}) whether literally (from sunrise to {sunset} or from one sunset to the {next}) or figuratively (a space of time defined by an associated {term}) (often used adverbially)

1. day, time, year

a. day (as opposed to night)

b. day (24 hour period)

1. as defined by evening and morning in Genesis 1

2. as a division of time 1b

c. a working day, a day's journey

d. days, lifetime (pl.)

e. time, period (general)

f. year

g. temporal references

1. today

2. yesterday

3. tomorrow

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