מַגִּ֤יעַ

𐤌𐤂𐤉𐤏

nâgaʻ

To touch, make contact with, or reach someone or something, either physically or metaphorically. In various contexts, נָגַע can denote merely making contact, approaching or reaching a person, place, or object, or bringing about an effect through touching (such as transfer of impurity, blessing, or disease). It can also indicate striking, injuring, or inflicting harm, either by physical violence or as divine punishment, and is sometimes used euphemistically for sexual relations. Thus, the semantic range covers ordinary physical touch, reaching, striking, affliction, or the conveyance of a condition or status through contact.

H5060

Ecclesiastes 8:14 · Word #11

Lexicon H5060

Lemmaנָגַע
Lemma (Paleo)𐤍𐤂𐤏
Transliterationnâgaʻ
Strong'sH5060
DefinitionTo touch, make contact with, or reach someone or something, either physically or metaphorically. In various contexts, נָגַע can denote merely making contact, approaching or reaching a person, place, or object, or bringing about an effect through touching (such as transfer of impurity, blessing, or disease). It can also indicate striking, injuring, or inflicting harm, either by physical violence or as divine punishment, and is sometimes used euphemistically for sexual relations. Thus, the semantic range covers ordinary physical touch, reaching, striking, affliction, or the conveyance of a condition or status through contact.

Morphology HVhrmsa All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan h — Hiphil — Causative active
Conjugation r — Participle Active — The one doing the action
Gender m — Masculine — Masculine
Number s — Singular — Singular
State a — Absolute — The noun stands independently

SIBI-P1 Translation H5060-14

causing-to-touch

Morphological NotesHiphil active participle, masculine singular absolute of נגע; denotes an agent causing contact, reaching, or striking.
Rendering RationaleThe Hiphil stem gives a causative sense to the root נגע (“to touch/reach/strike”), so the active masculine singular participle denotes one who is causing contact or impact. “Causing-to-touch” preserves the core idea of contact while reflecting the causative morphology.

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