Bible Verse Dictionary
Haggai 2:16 - Fifty
| Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since those days were | H4480 | מִן |
[Preposition] properly a part of; hence ({prepositionally}) from or out of in many senses |
| when one came | H935 | בּוֹא |
[Verb] to go or come (in a wide variety of applications) |
| to | H413 | אֵל |
[Preposition] a primitive {particle} properly denoting motion {towards} but occasionally used of a quiescent {position} that {is} near: with or among; often in {general} to |
| an heap | H6194 | עָרֵם |
[Noun Feminine] a heap; specifically a sheaf |
| of twenty | H6242 | עֶשְׂרִים |
[Noun] twenty; also (ordinal) twentieth |
| measures there were | H4480 | מִן |
[Preposition] properly a part of; hence ({prepositionally}) from or out of in many senses |
| but ten | H6235 | עֶשֶׂר |
[Noun] ten (as an accumulation to the extent of the digits) |
| when one came | H935 | בּוֹא |
[Verb] to go or come (in a wide variety of applications) |
| to | H413 | אֵל |
[Preposition] a primitive {particle} properly denoting motion {towards} but occasionally used of a quiescent {position} that {is} near: with or among; often in {general} to |
| the pressfat for to | H413 | אֵל |
[Preposition] a primitive {particle} properly denoting motion {towards} but occasionally used of a quiescent {position} that {is} near: with or among; often in {general} to |
| draw out | H2834 | חָשַׂף |
[Verb] to strip {off} that {is} generally to make naked (for exertion or in {disgrace}) to drain away or bail up (a liquid) |
| fifty | H2572 | חֲמִשִּׁים |
[Noun] fifty |
| vessels out | H2834 | חָשַׂף |
[Verb] to strip {off} that {is} generally to make naked (for exertion or in {disgrace}) to drain away or bail up (a liquid) |
| of the press | H6333 | פּוּרָה |
[Noun Feminine] a wine press (as crushing the grapes) |
| there were | H4480 | מִן |
[Preposition] properly a part of; hence ({prepositionally}) from or out of in many senses |
| but twenty | H6242 | עֶשְׂרִים |
[Noun] twenty; also (ordinal) twentieth |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.