וְ/עָרַכְתָּ֖

𐤅/𐤏𐤓𐤊𐤕

ʻârak

and arrange

to arrange, to set in order, to organize or position objects, people, or concepts in a deliberate sequence; used in a range of contexts including preparing items, arranging units or troops, organizing offerings or objects, composing arguments, or ordering events. The verb conveys the idea of intentional arrangement or preparation for a particular purpose, whether military, ritual, social, or intellectual.

H6186

Exodus 40:4 · Word #4

Lexicon H6186

Lemmaעָרַךְ
Lemma (Paleo)𐤏𐤓𐤊
Transliterationʻârak
Strong'sH6186
Definitionto arrange, to set in order, to organize or position objects, people, or concepts in a deliberate sequence; used in a range of contexts including preparing items, arranging units or troops, organizing offerings or objects, composing arguments, or ordering events. The verb conveys the idea of intentional arrangement or preparation for a particular purpose, whether military, ritual, social, or intellectual.

Morphology HC/Vqq2ms All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan q — Qal — Simple active
Conjugation q — Sequential Perfect — Perfect with waw-consecutive, continuing a narrative
Person 2 — 2nd person — Second person ("you")
Gender m — Masculine — Masculine
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

Phraseand arrange

SIBI-P1 Translation H6186-27

and you arranged

Morphological NotesQal sequential perfect (vav-consecutive) verb, 2nd person masculine singular.
Rendering RationaleThe Qal stem expresses the simple action of arranging or setting in order. The sequential perfect 2nd masculine singular form with prefixed וְ conveys "and you arranged," preserving both the root sense of deliberate ordering and the masculine singular address.

View full lexicon entry for H6186 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

and you shall arrange

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleAdjusted to 'you shall arrange' for proper command imperative, matching context of assembly instructions. 'Arranged' is past tense, but imperative is appropriate here.