Loading...

Interlinear Textus Receptus Bibles shown verse by verse.

Textus Receptus Bible chapters shown in parallel with your selection of Bibles.

Compares the 1550 Stephanus Textus Receptus with the King James Bible.

Visit the library for more information on the Textus Receptus.

Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
<
>
 
 

Genesis 1:9

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Masoretic Text 1524

H559 said ויאמר
H430 And God אלהים
H6960 be gathered together יקוו
H4325 Let the waters המים
H8478   מתחת
H8064 the heaven השׁמים
H413 unto אל
H4725 place מקום
H259 one אחד
H7200 land appear ותראה
H3004 and let the dry היבשׁה
H1961 and it was ויהי
H3651 so כן׃

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  And
H430 God
H559 said
  Let
  the
H4325 waters
H4480 under
  the
H8064 heaven
  be
  gathered
H6960 together
H413 unto
H259 one
H4725 place
  and
  let
  the
  land
H7200 appear
  and
  it

Hebrew-English Dictionary

Strongs: H8478
Hebrew: תַּחַת
Transliteration: tachath
Pronunciation: takh'-ath
Part of Speech: Noun Masculine
Bible Usage: {as} {beneath} X-(idiom) {flat} in ({-stead}) (same) place (where . . . {is}) {room} for . . . {sake} stead {of} {under} X-(idiom) {unto} X-(idiom) when . . . was {mine} {whereas} [where-] {fore} with.
Definition:  

the bottom (as depressed); only adverbially below (often with prepositional prefix {underneath }) in lieu {of} etc.

1. the under part, beneath, instead of, as, for, for the sake of, flat, unto, where, whereas n m

a. the under part adv accus

b. beneath prep

c. under, beneath

1. at the foot of (idiom)

2. sweetness, subjection, woman, being burdened or oppressed (fig)

3. of subjection or conquest

d. what is under one, the place in which one stands

1. in one's place, the place in which one stands (idiom with reflexive pronoun)

2. in place of, instead of (in transferred sense)

3. in place of, in exchange or return for (of things mutually interchanged) conj

e. instead of, instead of that

f. in return for that, because that in compounds

g. in, under, into the place of (after verbs of motion)

h. from under, from beneath, from under the hand of, from his place, under, beneath

The Brown-Driver-Briggs
Hebrew-English Lexicon (BDB) 1906
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.