Bible Verse Dictionary
Ezra 2:65 - Men
| Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beside | H4480 | מִן | 
[Preposition] properly a part of; hence ({prepositionally}) from or out of in many senses  | 
                            
| their servants | H5650 | עֶבֶד | 
[Noun Masculine] a servant  | 
                            
| and their maids | H519 | אָמָה | 
[Noun Feminine] a maidservant or female slave  | 
                            
| of whom | H428 | אֵלֶּה | 
 these or those  | 
                            
| there were seven | H7651 | שֶׁבַע | 
[Noun] a primitive cardinal number; seven (as the sacred full one); also (adverbially) seven times; by implication a week; by extension an indefinite number  | 
                            
| thousand | H505 | אֶלֶף | 
[Noun Masculine] hence (an ox´ s head being the first letter of the {alphabet} and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousand  | 
                            
| three | H7969 | שָׁלוֹשׁ | 
[Noun] a primitive number; three; occasionally (ordinal) {third} or (multiplicative) thrice  | 
                            
| hundred | H3967 | מֵאָה | 
[Noun Feminine] a hundred; also as a multiplicative and a fraction  | 
                            
| thirty | H7970 | שְׁלוֹשִׁים | 
[Noun Masculine] thirty; or (ordinal) thirtieth  | 
                            
| and seven | H7651 | שֶׁבַע | 
[Noun] a primitive cardinal number; seven (as the sacred full one); also (adverbially) seven times; by implication a week; by extension an indefinite number  | 
                            
| and there were among them two hundred | H3967 | מֵאָה | 
[Noun Feminine] a hundred; also as a multiplicative and a fraction  | 
                            
| singing men | H7891 | שִׁיר | 
[Verb] a primitive root (rather identical with H7788 through the idea of strolling minstrelsy); to sing  | 
                            
| and singing women | H7891 | שִׁיר | 
[Verb] a primitive root (rather identical with H7788 through the idea of strolling minstrelsy); to sing  | 
                            
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.