מֵֽ/אִתָּ֔/ם
𐤌/𐤀𐤕/𐤌
ʼêth
from-them
A preposition indicating proximity or association, functioning primarily to express "with" or "in company with." The core sense is that of accompanying, being together with, or at someone's side, whether in physical location or figurative presence. Rarely, it can convey the sense of opposition when context demands. Most common as a marker introducing the accompanying party, group, or object in actions and relationships.
Numbers 7:5 · Word #2
Lexicon H854
| Lemma | אֵת |
| Lemma (Paleo) | 𐤀𐤕 |
| Transliteration | ʼêth |
| Strong's | H854 |
| Definition | A preposition indicating proximity or association, functioning primarily to express "with" or "in company with." The core sense is that of accompanying, being together with, or at someone's side, whether in physical location or figurative presence. Rarely, it can convey the sense of opposition when context demands. Most common as a marker introducing the accompanying party, group, or object in actions and relationships. |
Morphology HR/R/Sp3mp
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | R — Preposition — Shows relationship between words |
Common Translation
| Phrase | from-them |
SIBI-P1 Translation H854-12
from being-with them
| Morphological Notes | Preposition מִן (from) prefixed to אֵת (with, beside) + 3rd person masculine plural pronominal suffix ("them"). |
| Rendering Rationale | The base preposition אֵת denotes proximity or accompaniment ("with, beside"). The prefixed מִן (מֵ) adds the sense of source or separation ("from"), and the 3rd person masculine plural suffix yields "them," resulting in "from being-with them." |
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SILEX v2