Bible Verse Dictionary
Nehemiah 5:16 - Thither
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
Yea also | H1571 | גַּם |
[Adverb] properly assemblage; used only adverbially {also} even: {yea} though; often repeated as correlation both ... and |
I continued | H2388 | חָזַק |
[Verb] to fasten upon; hence to {seize} be strong (figuratively {courageous} causatively {strengthen} cure: {help} repair: {fortify }) obstinate; to {bind} {restrain } conquer |
in the work | H4399 | מְלָאכָה |
[Noun Feminine] properly {deputyship} that {is} ministry; generally employment (never servile) or work (abstractly or concretely); also property (as the result of labor) |
of this | H2063 | זֹאת |
[Feminine] this (often used adverbially) |
wall | H2346 | חוֹמָה |
[Noun Feminine] a wall of protection |
neither | H3808 | לֹא |
[Adverb] a primitive particle; not (the simple or abstract negation); by implication no; often used with other particles |
bought | H7069 | קָנָה |
[Verb] to {erect} that {is} create; by extension to {procure} especially by purchase (causatively sell); by implication to own |
we any land | H7704 | שָׂדֶה |
[Noun Masculine] a field (as flat) |
and all | H3605 | כֹּל |
[Noun Masculine] properly the whole; hence {all} any or every (in the singular {only} but often in a plural sense) |
my servants | H5288 | נַעַר |
[Noun Masculine] (concretely) a boy (as {active}) from the age of infancy to adolescence; by implication a servant; also (by interchange of {sex}) a girl (of similar latitude in age) |
were gathered | H6908 | קָבַץ |
[Verb] to {grasp} that {is} collect |
thither | H8033 | שָׁם |
[Adverb] there (transfered to time) then; often {thither} or thence |
unto | H5921 | עַל |
[Preposition] {above} over: {upon} or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applications |
the work | H4399 | מְלָאכָה |
[Noun Feminine] properly {deputyship} that {is} ministry; generally employment (never servile) or work (abstractly or concretely); also property (as the result of labor) |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.