Bible Verse Dictionary
Ezekiel 36:11 - Beast
| Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
|---|---|---|---|
| And I | H589 | אֲנִי | I | 
| will multiply | H7235 | רָבָה | [Verb] to increase (in whatever respect) | 
| upon | H5921 | עַל | [Preposition] {above} over: {upon} or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applications | 
| you man | H120 | אָדָם | [Noun Masculine] {ruddy} that {is} a human being (an individual or the {species} {mankind } etc.) | 
| and beast | H929 | בְּהֵמָה | [Noun Feminine] properly a dumb beast; especially any large quadruped or animal (often collectively) | 
| and they shall increase | H7235 | רָבָה | [Verb] to increase (in whatever respect) | 
| and bring fruit | H6509 | פָּרָה | [Verb] to bear fruit (literally or figuratively) | 
| and I | H589 | אֲנִי | I | 
| will settle | H3427 | יָשַׁב | [Verb] properly to sit down (specifically as {judge} in {ambush} in quiet); by implication to {dwell} to remain; causatively to {settle} to marry | 
| you after your old estates | H6927 | קַדְמָה | [Noun Feminine] priority (in time); also used adverbially (before) | 
| and will do better | H3190 | יָטַב | [Verb] to be (causatively) make {well} literally ({sound } beautiful) or figuratively ({happy } {successful } right) | 
| unto you than at your beginnings | H4480 | מִן | [Preposition] properly a part of; hence ({prepositionally}) from or out of in many senses | 
| and ye shall know | H3045 | יָדַע | [Verb] to know (properly to ascertain by seeing); used in a great variety of {senses} {figuratively} {literally} euphemistically and inferentially (including {observation} care: recognition; and causatively {instruction} designation: {punishment} etc.) | 
| that | H3588 | כִּי | [Conjunction] (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjugation or adverb; often largely modified by other particles annexed | 
| I | H589 | אֲנִי | I | 
| am the LORD | H3068 | יְהֹוָה | [Proper Name] (the) self Existent or eternal; {Jehovah} Jewish national name of God | 
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.
