Bible Verse Dictionary
Ezekiel 41:5 - Side
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
After he measured | H4058 | מָדַד |
[Verb] properly to stretch; by implication to measure (as if by stretching a line); figuratively to be extended |
the wall | H7023 | קִיר |
[Noun Masculine] a wall (as built in a trench) |
of the house | H1004 | בַּיִת |
[Noun Masculine] a house (in the greatest variation of {applications} especially {family} etc.) |
six | H8337 | שֵׁשׁ |
[Noun] a primitive number; six (as an overplus (see H7797) beyond five or the fingers of the hand); as ordinal sixth |
cubits | H520 | אַמָּה |
[Noun Feminine] properly a mother (that {is} unit) of {measure} or the forearm (below the {elbow}) that {is} a cubit; also a door base (as a bond of the entrance) |
and the breadth | H7341 | רֹחַב |
[Noun Masculine] width (literally or figuratively) |
of every side | H5439 | סָבִיב |
[Substitution] (as noun) a {circle} {neighbor } or environs; but chiefly (as {adverb} with or without preposition) around |
chamber | H6763 | צֵלָע |
[Noun Feminine] a rib (as {curved }) literally (of the body) or figuratively (of a {door} that {is} leaf); hence a {side} literally (of a person) or figuratively (of an object or the {sky} that {is} quarter); arcitecturally a timber (especially floor or ceiling) or plank (single or {collectively} that {is} a flooring) |
four | H702 | אַרְבַּע |
from H7251; four |
cubits | H520 | אַמָּה |
[Noun Feminine] properly a mother (that {is} unit) of {measure} or the forearm (below the {elbow}) that {is} a cubit; also a door base (as a bond of the entrance) |
round about | H5439 | סָבִיב |
[Substitution] (as noun) a {circle} {neighbor } or environs; but chiefly (as {adverb} with or without preposition) around |
the house | H1004 | בַּיִת |
[Noun Masculine] a house (in the greatest variation of {applications} especially {family} etc.) |
on every side | H5439 | סָבִיב |
[Substitution] (as noun) a {circle} {neighbor } or environs; but chiefly (as {adverb} with or without preposition) around |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.