Bible Verse Dictionary
Hosea 6:4 - Dew
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
O Ephraim | H669 | אֶפְרַיִם |
[Proper Name Masculine] double fruit; {Ephrajim} a son of Joseph; also the tribe descended from {him} and its territory |
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 |
shall I do | H6213 | עָשָׂה |
[Verb] to do or {make} in the broadest sense and widest application |
unto thee O Judah | H3063 | יְהוּדָה |
[Proper Name Masculine] celebrated; Jehudah (or {Judah}) the name of five Israelites; also of the tribe descended from the {first} and of its territory |
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 |
shall I do | H6213 | עָשָׂה |
[Verb] to do or {make} in the broadest sense and widest application |
unto thee for your goodness | H2617 | חֵסֵד |
[Noun Masculine] kindness; by implication (towards God) piety; rarely (by opprobrium) {reproof} or (subjectively) beauty |
is as a morning | H1242 | בֹּקֶר |
[Noun Masculine] properly dawn (as the break of day); generally morning |
cloud | H6051 | עָנָן |
[Noun Masculine] a cloud (as covering the {sky}) that {is} the nimbus or thunder cloud |
and as the early | H7925 | שָׁכַם |
[Verb] properly to incline (the shoulder to a burden); but used only as denominative from H7926; literally to load up (on the back of man or {beast}) that {is} to start early in the morning |
dew | H2919 | טַל |
[Noun Masculine] dew (as covering vegetation) |
it goeth away | H1980 | הָלַךְ |
[Verb] a primitive root; to walk (in a great variety of {applications} literally and figuratively) |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.