אֲבִיאֶ֨/נּוּ֙

𐤀𐤁𐤉𐤀/𐤍𐤅

Bo

I bring him

A verb denoting the act of going, coming, or entering, usually indicating movement toward a point (frequently the speaker or a referent location). Used to express entry into a place, event or state, both literally (such as entering a city, house, or land) and figuratively (such as attaining a condition, being included, or happening). In causative (hiphil) stem, it frequently means to bring or cause to come, i.e., cause a person, thing, or event to enter or occur.

H935

Genesis 44:32 · Word #11

Lexicon H935

Lemmaבּוֹא
Lemma (Paleo)𐤁𐤅𐤀
TransliterationBo
Strong'sH935
DefinitionA verb denoting the act of going, coming, or entering, usually indicating movement toward a point (frequently the speaker or a referent location). Used to express entry into a place, event or state, both literally (such as entering a city, house, or land) and figuratively (such as attaining a condition, being included, or happening). In causative (hiphil) stem, it frequently means to bring or cause to come, i.e., cause a person, thing, or event to enter or occur.

Morphology HVhi1cs/Sp3ms All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan h — Hiphil — Causative active
Conjugation i — Imperfect — Incomplete or ongoing action
Person 1 — 1st person — First person ("I" / "we")
Gender c — Common — Common (both genders)
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

PhraseI bring him

SIBI-P1 Translation H935-05

I will bring him in

Morphological NotesHiphil imperfect, 1st person common singular with 3rd person masculine singular pronominal suffix.
Rendering RationaleThe Hiphil stem gives a causative sense, shifting the core idea "to come/enter" into "to cause to come/enter." The imperfect 1st person singular with 3rd masculine singular suffix yields "I will bring him in," preserving both causation and the object suffix.

View full lexicon entry for H935 →

SILEX v2