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 5:25

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Masoretic Text 1524

H2421 lived ויחי
H4968 And Methuselah מתושׁלח
H7651 and seven שׁבע
H8084 eighty ושׁמנים
H8141 years שׁנה
H3967 an hundred ומאת
H8141   שׁנה
H3205 and begat ויולד
H853   את
H3929 Lamech למך׃

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  And
H4968 Methuselah
H2421 lived
  an
H3967 hundred
H8084 eighty
  and
H7651 seven
H8141 years
  and
H3205 begat
H3929 Lamech

Hebrew-English Dictionary

Strongs: H2421
Hebrew: חָיָה
Transliteration: châyâh
Pronunciation: khaw-yaw'
Part of Speech: Verb
Bible Usage: keep ({leave} make) {alive} X-(idiom) {certainly} give (promise) {life} ({let} suffer to) {live} nourish {up} preserve ({alive}) {quicken} {recover} {repair} restore (to {life}) {revive} (X God) save ({alive} {life} {lives}) X-(idiom) {surely} be whole.
Definition:  

to {live} whether literally or figuratively; causatively to revive

1. to live, have life, remain alive, sustain life, live prosperously, live for ever, be quickened, be alive, be restored to life or health

a. (Qal)

1. to live 1a

b. to have life 1a

c. to continue in life, remain alive 1a

d. to sustain life, to live on or upon 1a

e. to live (prosperously)

1. to revive, be quickened 1a

f. from sickness 1a

g. from discouragement 1a

h. from faintness 1a

i. from death

j. (Piel)

1. to preserve alive, let live

2. to give life

3. to quicken, revive, refresh 1b

k. to restore to life 1b

l. to cause to grow 1b

m. to restore 1b

n. to revive

o. (Hiphil)

1. to preserve alive, let live

2. to quicken, revive 1c

p. to restore (to health) 1c

q. to revive 1c

r. to restore to life

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