Bible Verse Dictionary
Joshua 4:21 - Stones
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
And he spake | H559 | אָמַר |
[Verb] to say (used with great latitude) |
unto | 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 children | H1121 | בֵּן |
[Noun Masculine] a son (as a builder of the family {name}) in the widest sense (of literal and figurative {relationship} including {grandson} subject: {nation} quality or {condition} {etc.} (like {H1 } {H251 } etc.) |
of Israel | H3478 | יִשְׂרָאֵל |
[Proper Name Masculine] he will rule as God; {Jisrael} a symbolical name of Jacob; also (typically) of his posterity |
saying | H559 | אָמַר |
[Verb] to say (used with great latitude) |
When | H834 | אֲשֶׁר |
{who} which: {what} that; also (as adverb and conjunction) {when} where: {how} because: in order {that} etc. |
your children | H1121 | בֵּן |
[Noun Masculine] a son (as a builder of the family {name}) in the widest sense (of literal and figurative {relationship} including {grandson} subject: {nation} quality or {condition} {etc.} (like {H1 } {H251 } etc.) |
shall ask | H7592 | שָׁאַל |
[Verb] to inquire; by implication to request; by extension to demand |
their fathers | H1 | אָב |
[Noun Masculine] father in a literal and {immediate} or figurative and remote application |
in time to come | H4279 | מָחָר |
[Noun Masculine] properly {deferred} that {is} the morrow; usually (adverbially) tomorrow; indefinitely hereafter |
saying | H559 | אָמַר |
[Verb] to say (used with great latitude) |
What | 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 |
mean these | H428 | אֵלֶּה |
these or those |
stones | H68 | אֶבֶן |
[Noun Feminine] a stone |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.