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  1. HEB: אִם־ רָאִ֣יתָ גַ֭נָּב וַתִּ֣רֶץ עִמּ֑וֹ. NAS: you see a thief, you are pleased. KJV: When thou sawest a thief, then thou consentedst. INT: When see A thief are pleased with. Proverbs 6:30. HEB: לֹא־ יָב֣וּזוּ לַ֭גַּנָּב כִּ֣י יִגְנ֑וֹב. NAS: Men do not despise a thief if.

    • Int

      "If a thief is found while breaking into a house, and is...

    • NAS

      NASB 1995 + Strong's. God the Judge of the Righteous and the...

    • KJV

      9 They shall run to and fro in the city; they shall run upon...

  2. Goniff (GAH-niv) is Hebrew and Yiddish for “thief,” and has come to refer to anyone who is a swindler, a cheat or just plain dishonest. In Yiddish parlance a theft is called a geneivah (a loanword from Hebrew), but the act of stealing is to ganveh, a formulation that imposes Germanic syntax onto the original Hebrew word.

  3. Hebrew word that may have multiple meanings. Words in all lower case letters are affixes (prefixes, suffixes and infixes) that are added to the root stem. These words are found in the Dictionary of affixes where each affix is defined. Words where only the first letter is capitalized are names and they can be found in the Dictionary of Names ...

  4. Mar 24, 2016 · Abarim Publications' ever expanding online Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament comprises 587 articles that discuss the meaning and relationships of thousands of Hebrew words. Our dictionary is not organized according to alphabet but rather according to similarity of form.

  5. • Reverso: Hebrew-English translation, words in context • Lingea : Hebrew-English dictionary & multilingual • Loecsen : Hebrew-English common phrases (+ audio)

  6. The Torah and Jewish Law treat the ganav1 (generally translated as “thief”) and gazlan2 (translated as “robber”) very differently. The ganav is fined for his offense, paying double the amount he has stolen.

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  8. 1. All the original words are treated in their alphabetical Hebrew order, and are numbered regularly from the first to the last, each being known throughout by its appropriate number. This renders reference easy without recourse to the Hebrew characters 2. Immediately after each word is given its exact equivalent in English letters, according

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