Bible Verse Dictionary
Leviticus 26:16 - Over
Verse | Strongs No. | Hebrew | |
---|---|---|---|
I | H589 | אֲנִי |
I |
also | H637 | אַף |
[Conjunction] meaning accession (used as an adverb or conjugation); also or yea; adversatively though |
will do | H6213 | עָשָׂה |
[Verb] to do or {make} in the broadest sense and widest application |
this | H2063 | זֹאת |
[Feminine] this (often used adverbially) |
unto you I | H589 | אֲנִי |
I |
will even appoint | H6485 | פָּקַד |
[Verb] to visit (with friendly or hostile intent); by analogy to {oversee} muster: {charge} care {for} miss: {deposit} etc. |
over | 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 terror | H928 | בֶּהָלָה |
[Noun Feminine] {panic} destruction |
consumption | H7829 | שַׁחֶפֶת |
[Noun Feminine] emaciation |
and the burning ague | H6920 | קַדַּחַת |
[Noun Feminine] {inflammation} that {is} febrile disease |
that shall consume | H3615 | כָּלָה |
[Verb] to {end} whether intransitively (to {cease} be {finished} perish) or transitively (to {complete} {prepare } consume) |
the eyes | H5869 | עַיִן |
[Noun] an eye (literally or figuratively); by analogy a fountain (as the eye of the landscape) |
and cause sorrow | H1727 | דּוּב |
[Verb] to {mope} that {is} (figuratively) pine |
of heart | H5315 | נֶפֶשׁ |
[Noun Feminine] properly a breathing {creature} that {is} animal or (abstractly) vitality; used very widely in a {literal} accommodated or figurative sense (bodily or mental) |
and ye shall sow | H2232 | זָרַע |
[Verb] to sow; figuratively to {disseminate} {plant } fructify |
your seed | H2233 | זֶרַע |
[Noun Masculine] seed; figuratively {fruit} plant: sowing {time} posterity |
in vain | H7385 | רִיק |
[Noun Masculine] emptiness; figuratively a worthless thing; adverbially in vain |
for your enemies | H341 | אֹיֵב |
hating; an adversary |
shall eat | H398 | אָכַל |
[Verb] to eat (literally or figuratively) |
it |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.