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Hephzibah or Hepzibah (English: / ˈ h ɛ f z ɪ b ə / or / ˈ h ɛ p z ɪ b ə /; Hebrew: חֶפְצִי־בָהּ, romanized: Ḥep̄ṣi-ḇāh, lit. 'my delight (is) in her') is a minor figure in the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible.
According to Genesis 5:9–14, Kenan was a son of Enosh and a grandson of Seth. Born when Enosh was 90 years old (3679 BC), [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Kenan fathered Mahalalel when he was 70 years old. [ 3 ] [ 1 ] Other sons and daughters were born to Kenan before he died at 910 years of age (when Noah was aged 179 as per the Masoretic chronology).
The parashah tells the stories of Abraham's negotiations to purchase a burial place for his wife Sarah and his servant's mission to find a wife for Abraham's son Isaac. The parashah is made up of 5,314 Hebrew letters, 1,402 Hebrew words, 105 verses , and 171 lines in a Torah Scroll ( סֵפֶר תּוֹרָה , Sefer Torah ). [ 1 ]
Keturah (Hebrew: קְטוּרָה, Qəṭūrā, possibly meaning "incense"; [1] Arabic: قطورة) was a wife [2] and a concubine [3] of the Biblical patriarch Abraham. According to the Book of Genesis, Abraham married Keturah after the death of his first wife, Sarah. Abraham and Keturah had six sons. [2]
Several volumes of the Ben-Yehuda Dictionary. The Ben-Yehuda Dictionary is a historical Hebrew dictionary.The first volume was published in 1908 [1] by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, while the last was published long after his death, in 1958 by his wife and his son. [2]
The feminine form is baʿalah (Hebrew: בַּעֲלָה; [23] Arabic: بَعْلَة), meaning 'mistress' in the sense of a female owner or lady of the house [23] and still serving as a rare word for 'wife'.
The reference to Judah's wife in Genesis 38:12 refers to her as the "daughter of Shuah", or "bat-Shuah" in Hebrew. This has led some to take Bat-Shuah (and variants) as her actual name. [17] A midrashic tradition says her name was Aliyath. [18] Bat-Shuah is also an alternative name for Bathsheba, wife of Judah's descendant, King David. [19]
Aholibamah (Hebrew: אָהֳלִיבָמָה ʾĀhŏlīḇāmā; "My tabernacle of/is height/exaltation" or "Tent of the High Place" [1]), is an eight-time referenced matriarch in the biblical record. [2] Aholibamah was the daughter of Anah and granddaughter of Zibeon the Hivite, [3] son of Seir the Horite. [4]