כְּב֣וֹד

𐤊𐤁𐤅𐤃

kâbôwd

the glory

The condition or quality of being heavy, significant, impressive, or honored; in extended (figurative) usage, the state of being held in high esteem, respected, impressive in appearance or status, or possessing splendor and dignity. In reference to persons, often denotes social distinction, respect, or status; when describing YHWH, bears the sense of manifest majesty, presence, or power. On rare occasions, refers to material wealth or substantiality.

H3519

Ezekiel 10:18 · Word #2

Lexicon H3519

Lemmaכָּבוֹד
Lemma (Paleo)𐤊𐤁𐤅𐤃
Transliterationkâbôwd
Strong'sH3519
DefinitionThe condition or quality of being heavy, significant, impressive, or honored; in extended (figurative) usage, the state of being held in high esteem, respected, impressive in appearance or status, or possessing splendor and dignity. In reference to persons, often denotes social distinction, respect, or status; when describing YHWH, bears the sense of manifest majesty, presence, or power. On rare occasions, refers to material wealth or substantiality.

Morphology HNcbsc All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Subtype c — Common — Common noun
Gender b — Both — Both (masculine and feminine)
Number s — Singular — Singular
State c — Construct — The noun is bound to the following word

Common Translation

Phrasethe glory

SIBI-P1 Translation H3519-07

weightiness of

Morphological NotesNoun, common; singular; construct state; gender common (masculine in form).
Rendering RationaleThe noun derives from the root כבד meaning "to be heavy, weighty, honored." As a singular construct form, it denotes the state or quality of weightiness belonging to something else, hence "weightiness of," preserving both the root sense and the construct relationship.

View full lexicon entry for H3519 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

glory of

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
Rationale'Glory of' matches the contextual sense of כְּבוֹד referring to the manifested presence or honor, rather than 'weightiness of', which is too abstract for this context.