Bible Verse Dictionary
Joshua 7:25 - Fire
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
And Joshua | H3091 | יְהוֹשׁוּעַ |
Jehovah-saved; Jehoshua (that {is} {Joshua}) the Jewish leader |
said | H559 | אָמַר |
[Verb] to say (used with great latitude) |
Why | H4100 | מָה |
properly interrogitive what ? (including {how ?} why ? and when ?); but also exclamations like what ! (including {how !}) or indefinitely what (including {whatever} and even relatively that which); often used with prefixes in various adverbial or conjugational sneses |
hast thou troubled | H5916 | עָכַר |
[Verb] properly to roil water; figuratively to disturb or afflict |
us the LORD | H3068 | יְהֹוָה |
[Proper Name] (the) self Existent or eternal; {Jehovah} Jewish national name of God |
shall trouble | H5916 | עָכַר |
[Verb] properly to roil water; figuratively to disturb or afflict |
thee this | H2088 | זֶה |
the masculine demonstrative {pronoun} this or that |
day | H3117 | יוֹם |
[Noun Masculine] 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) |
And all | H3605 | כֹּל |
[Noun Masculine] properly the whole; hence {all} any or every (in the singular {only} but often in a plural sense) |
Israel | H3478 | יִשְׂרָאֵל |
[Proper Name Masculine] he will rule as God; {Jisrael} a symbolical name of Jacob; also (typically) of his posterity |
stoned | H5619 | סָקַל |
[Verb] properly to be weighty; but used only in the sense of lapidation or its contrary (as if a delapidation) |
him with stones | H68 | אֶבֶן |
[Noun Feminine] a stone |
and burned | H8313 | שָׂרַף |
[Verb] to be (causatively set) on fire |
them with fire | H784 | אֵשׁ |
[Noun Feminine] fire (literally or figuratively) |
after they had stoned | H5619 | סָקַל |
[Verb] properly to be weighty; but used only in the sense of lapidation or its contrary (as if a delapidation) |
them with stones | H68 | אֶבֶן |
[Noun Feminine] a stone |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.