עָבְרָ֑/ם

𐤏𐤁𐤓/𐤌

ʻâbar

they had crossed

To pass over, cross, or traverse a physical or conceptual boundary; to proceed beyond or through, whether literally (crossing a river, territory, or threshold) or figuratively (overcoming, transgressing, or passing a point of time or action). Used in a wide variety of contexts, including: moving from one side to another, the passing of years or time, the act of transgressing a command or limit, removal or taking away, experiencing or enduring an event, causing something or someone to cross or move, and in specific idioms such as proclaiming (as in 'to make something pass over the lips') and in euphemisms for sexual intercourse (to cover or enter).

H5674

Joshua 5:1 · Word #28

Lexicon H5674

Lemmaעָבַר
Lemma (Paleo)𐤏𐤁𐤓
Transliterationʻâbar
Strong'sH5674
DefinitionTo pass over, cross, or traverse a physical or conceptual boundary; to proceed beyond or through, whether literally (crossing a river, territory, or threshold) or figuratively (overcoming, transgressing, or passing a point of time or action). Used in a wide variety of contexts, including: moving from one side to another, the passing of years or time, the act of transgressing a command or limit, removal or taking away, experiencing or enduring an event, causing something or someone to cross or move, and in specific idioms such as proclaiming (as in 'to make something pass over the lips') and in euphemisms for sexual intercourse (to cover or enter).

Morphology HVqc/Sp3mp All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan q — Qal — Simple active
Conjugation c — Infinitive Construct — The verbal noun ("to ...")

Common Translation

Phrasethey had crossed

SIBI-P1 Translation H5674-10

Exalted Father

Morphological NotesMasculine singular proper name (personal name).
Rendering RationaleThe name combines אב (father) and רם (high, exalted), yielding the sense 'Exalted Father' or 'the father is exalted.' Rendering it transparently preserves the root meaning rather than substituting a later conventional form.

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