Bible Verse Dictionary
Numbers 31:32 - Six
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
And the booty | H4455 | מַלְקוֹחַ |
[Noun Masculine] transitively (in dual) the jaws (as taking food); intransitively spoil (and {captives}) (as taken) |
being the rest | H3499 | יֶתֶר |
[Noun Masculine] also a small rope (as hanging free) |
of the prey | H957 | בַּז |
[Noun Masculine] plunder |
which | H834 | אֲשֶׁר |
{who} which: {what} that; also (as adverb and conjunction) {when} where: {how} because: in order {that} etc. |
the men | H5971 | עַם |
[Noun Masculine] a people (as a congregated unit); specifically a tribe (as those of Israel); hence (collectively) troops or attendants; figuratively a flock |
of war | H6635 | צָבָא |
[Noun Masculine] a mass of persons (or figurative {things}) especially regularly organized for war (an army); by implication a {campaign} literally or figuratively (specifically {hardship} worship) |
had caught | H962 | בָּזַז |
[Verb] to plunder |
was | H1961 | הָיָה |
[Verb] to {exist} that {is} be or {become} come to pass (always {emphatic} and not a mere copula or auxiliary) |
six | H8337 | שֵׁשׁ |
[Noun] a primitive number; six (as an overplus (see H7797) beyond five or the fingers of the hand); as ordinal sixth |
hundred | H3967 | מֵאָה |
[Noun Feminine] a hundred; also as a multiplicative and a fraction |
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 |
and seventy | H7657 | שִׁבְעִים |
[Noun] seventy |
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 |
and five | H2568 | חָמֵשׁ |
[Noun] five |
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 |
sheep | H6629 | צֹאן |
[Noun Feminine] a collective name for a flock (of sheep or goats); also figuratively (of men) |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.