רַגְלֵי/הֶ֖ם

𐤓𐤂𐤋𐤉/𐤄𐤌

regel

their feet

Foot—specifically the lower extremity of the leg, used for walking, standing, and movement. The term is used literally for the physical foot and, by extension and metonymy, for a range of related meanings including: a person's gait or steps; times or occasions (especially in set phrases denoting recurring events or pilgrimages); a person's presence in or movement to a place; territory possessed or traversed ('under one's foot'); and, euphemistically, the genitals. Figuratively, it can denote subjugation or dominance ('placed under the foot'), perseverance or endurance, or one who frequents a place (as in 'haunt').

H7272

Isaiah 36:12 · Word #27

Lexicon H7272

Lemmaרֶגֶל
Lemma (Paleo)𐤓𐤂𐤋
Transliterationregel
Strong'sH7272
DefinitionFoot—specifically the lower extremity of the leg, used for walking, standing, and movement. The term is used literally for the physical foot and, by extension and metonymy, for a range of related meanings including: a person's gait or steps; times or occasions (especially in set phrases denoting recurring events or pilgrimages); a person's presence in or movement to a place; territory possessed or traversed ('under one's foot'); and, euphemistically, the genitals. Figuratively, it can denote subjugation or dominance ('placed under the foot'), perseverance or endurance, or one who frequents a place (as in 'haunt').

Morphology HNcfdc/Sp3mp All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Subtype c — Common — Common noun
Gender f — Feminine — Feminine
Number d — Dual — Dual (exactly two)
State c — Construct — The noun is bound to the following word

Common Translation

Phrasetheir feet

SIBI-P1 Translation H7272-33

their feet

Morphological NotesNoun, feminine dual construct רַגְלֵי + 3mp pronominal suffix הֶם.
Rendering RationaleThe noun רֶגֶל denotes the physical foot, the organ of walking, directly reflecting the root idea of movement by foot. The dual construct form with 3rd person masculine plural suffix yields "their feet," preserving both dual number and possessive morphology.

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