תִּֽשְׂחַ֥ק

𐤕𐤔𐤇𐤒

sâchaq

she laughs at

To laugh, express joy or amusement, often as audible laughter; to engage in playful or lighthearted activity; in extended usage, to mock, ridicule, or treat with derision. The primary lexical meaning is to laugh, but the verb is also used for both positive (joy, play, celebration) and negative (mockery, scorn, derision) actions depending on context.

seka "to laugh" (Lingala) · seka "to laugh, to mock" (Kongo) · seka "to laugh" (Tonga) +13 more

H7832

Job 39:18 · Word #4

Lexicon H7832

Lemmaשָׂחַק
Lemma (Paleo)𐤔𐤇𐤒
Transliterationsâchaq
Strong'sH7832
DefinitionTo laugh, express joy or amusement, often as audible laughter; to engage in playful or lighthearted activity; in extended usage, to mock, ridicule, or treat with derision. The primary lexical meaning is to laugh, but the verb is also used for both positive (joy, play, celebration) and negative (mockery, scorn, derision) actions depending on context.

Morphology HVqi3fs All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan q — Qal — Simple active
Conjugation i — Imperfect — Incomplete or ongoing action
Person 3 — 3rd person — Third person ("he/she/they")
Gender f — Feminine — Feminine
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

Phraseshe laughs at

SIBI-P1 Translation H7832-12

you laugh

Morphological NotesQal imperfect, 2nd person masculine singular verb.
Rendering RationaleThe Qal imperfect 2nd person masculine singular denotes a simple, active action: "you laugh." This preserves the root’s primary sense of audible laughter while allowing its broader semantic range without imposing contextual nuance.

View full lexicon entry for H7832 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

you will laugh

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleStandardized from "she laughs".
P1 Flagwrong person/number

Bantu Hebrew

תִּֽשְׂחַ֥ק (sâchaq) — To laugh, express joy or amusement, often as audible laughter; to engage in playful or lighthearted activity; in extended usage, to mock, ridicule, or treat with derision. The primary lexical meaning is to laugh, but the verb is also used for both positive (joy, play, celebration) and negative (mockery, scorn, derision) actions depending on context.

See all 16 languages →

Word Meaning Language
seka to laugh Lingala
seka to laugh, to mock Kongo
seka to laugh Tonga
seka to laugh Chichewa
ñeka to laugh Kikuyu