ה֤וֹד

𐤄𐤅𐤃

hôwd

majesty

A quality of splendor or majesty, especially pertaining to appearance, dignity, or visible grandeur; often denotes impressive beauty, noble bearing, or the visible manifestation of regal or divine majesty. The term can refer to the magnificence or distinguished nature of an individual’s appearance (human or divine) and, contextually, the grandeur attributed to God, rulers, or objects. The word emphasizes what is striking, visually and symbolically impressive, or imbued with honor and excellence.

H1935

1 Chronicles 16:27 · Word #1

Lexicon H1935

Lemmaהוֹד
Lemma (Paleo)𐤄𐤅𐤃
Transliterationhôwd
Strong'sH1935
DefinitionA quality of splendor or majesty, especially pertaining to appearance, dignity, or visible grandeur; often denotes impressive beauty, noble bearing, or the visible manifestation of regal or divine majesty. The term can refer to the magnificence or distinguished nature of an individual’s appearance (human or divine) and, contextually, the grandeur attributed to God, rulers, or objects. The word emphasizes what is striking, visually and symbolically impressive, or imbued with honor and excellence.

Morphology HNcmsa All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Subtype c — Common — Common noun
Gender m — Masculine — Masculine
Number s — Singular — Singular
State a — Absolute — The noun stands independently

Common Translation

Phrasemajesty

SIBI-P1 Translation H1935-01

splendor-of

Morphological NotesMasculine singular common noun in construct state (HNcmsc).
Rendering RationaleThe noun denotes visible grandeur or majestic splendor as a quality. The construct singular form requires an English rendering that signals linkage, hence "splendor-of" to preserve its bound state.

View full lexicon entry for H1935 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

splendor

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleP1 'splendor-of' includes a possessive that is not explicit in the Hebrew; context calls for 'splendor' as a standalone quality, matching the noun-use without the construct form here.