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Gannab
- gannab: a thief Original Word: גַּנָּב Part of Speech: Noun Masculine Transliteration: gannab Phonetic Spelling: (gaw-nab') Definition: a thief
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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.
- Lag·Gan·Nāḇ — 1 Occ
lag·gan·nāḇ Englishman's Concordance. lag·gan·nāḇ — 1...
- 1 Occurrence
ḵag·gan·nāḇ Englishman's Concordance. ḵag·gan·nāḇ — 1...
- Hag·Gan·Nāḇ — 5 Occ
NAS: if the thief is caught, KJV: house; if the thief be...
- Gan·Nā·Ḇîm
Bible > Strong's > Hebrew gan·nā·ḇîm Englishman's...
- Int
American Standard Version If the thief be found breaking in,...
- NAS
NASB 1995 + Strong's. God the Judge of the Righteous and the...
- Lag·Gan·Nāḇ — 1 Occ
Strong's Number H1590 matches the Hebrew גַּנָּב (gannāḇ), which occurs 17 times in 17 verses in the WLC Hebrew.
A primitive root; to thieve (literally or figuratively); by implication, to deceive -- carry away, X indeed, secretly bring, steal (away), get by stealth.
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.
Discover the meaning of Thief in the Bible. Study the definition of Thief with multiple Bible Dictionaries and Encyclopedias and find scripture references in the Old and New Testaments.
In contrast, the stealing discussed in Parshas Kedoshim, refers to stealing the property or money of another person. The Rabbis explain that the hebrew word used for stealing in this verse, (the root of the word is ‘gonev’) means one specific kind of stealing – stealing in secret, where nobody else is present-4 .
THIEF. thef: In the Old Testament the uniform translation (17 times) of gannabh, from ganabh, "steal," but gannabh is rather broader than the English "thief," and may even include a kidnapper ( Deuteronomy 24:7 ). In Apocrypha and the New Testament, the King James Version uses "thief" indifferently for kleptes, and lestes, but the Revised ...