דִּֽי

𐤃𐤉

dîy

who

A relative particle introducing clauses that specify, define, or clarify a noun or previous statement; typically translated as 'that,' 'which,' 'who,' 'whom,' or 'whose.' Also used as a marker of various adverbial phrases, often corresponding to English prepositional constructions like 'of,' 'for,' or 'from.' Functions as both a relative and a conjunction, and sometimes as a subordinating particle in complex sentences.

H1768

Daniel 5:7 · Word #17

Lexicon H1768

Lemmaדִּי
Lemma (Paleo)𐤃𐤉
Transliterationdîy
Strong'sH1768
DefinitionA relative particle introducing clauses that specify, define, or clarify a noun or previous statement; typically translated as 'that,' 'which,' 'who,' 'whom,' or 'whose.' Also used as a marker of various adverbial phrases, often corresponding to English prepositional constructions like 'of,' 'for,' or 'from.' Functions as both a relative and a conjunction, and sometimes as a subordinating particle in complex sentences.

Morphology ATr All morphology codes

Part of Speech T — Particle — Function word
Subtype r — Relative — Relative

Common Translation

Phrasewho

SIBI-P1 Translation H1768-03

that-which

Morphological NotesAramaic relative particle; invariant form; functions as relative marker or subordinating conjunction.
Rendering RationaleDerived from a demonstrative root meaning "to point out," this relative particle introduces clauses that specify or indicate something. "That-which" preserves both its deictic force and its role in marking a defining or subordinate clause.

View full lexicon entry for H1768 →

SILEX v2