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  1. Strong's Hebrew: 1952. הוֹן (hon) -- Wealth, riches, substance, possessions. Usage: The Hebrew word "הוֹן" (hon) primarily refers to material wealth or possessions. It is often used in the context of abundance and prosperity, signifying the accumulation of goods, money, or resources. In the Old Testament, "hon" is frequently associated ...

    • Wā·Hō·Wn

      Englishman's Concordance. wā·hō·wn — 1 Occurrence. Proverbs...

    • Wə·Hō·Wn

      Englishman's Concordance. wə·hō·wn- — 2 Occurrences....

    • La·Hō·Wn

      Englishman's Concordance. la·hō·wn — 1 Occurrence. Proverbs...

    • Hō·W·Na·Yiḵ

      NAS: With the abundance of your wealth and your merchandise...

    • Hō·W·Nêḵ

      NAS: Your wealth, your wares, KJV: Thy riches, and thy...

    • Hō·W·Nōw

      hō·w·nōw Englishman's Concordance. hō·w·nōw — 1 Occurrence....

    • Int

      House and wealth are the inheritance of fathers, And from...

    • 26 Occurrences

      NAS: A rich man's wealth is his strong KJV: The rich man's...

    • Genesis 31:16. HEB: כִּ֣י כָל־ הָעֹ֗שֶׁר אֲשֶׁ֨ר הִצִּ֤יל. NAS:Surely all the wealthwhich God. KJV:For all the richeswhich God. INT:Surely all the wealthwhich has taken.
    • 1 Samuel 17:25. HEB: יַעְשְׁרֶ֥נּוּ הַמֶּ֣לֶךְ ׀ עֹ֣שֶׁר גָּד֗וֹל וְאֶת־ NAS:him with great richesand will give. KJV:him with great riches,and will give. INT:will enrich the king richesgreat his daughter.
    • 1 Kings 3:11. HEB: שָׁאַ֤לְתָּ לְּךָ֙ עֹ֔שֶׁר וְלֹ֥א שָׁאַ֖לְתָּ NAS:have asked richesfor yourself, nor. KJV:neither hast asked richesfor thyself, nor hast asked.
    • 1 Kings 3:13. HEB: לָ֔ךְ גַּם־ עֹ֖שֶׁר גַּם־ כָּב֑וֹד. NAS:both richesand honor, KJV:thee that which thou hast not asked, both riches,and honour: INT:given both richeshave also and honor.
  2. Interestingly, such caveats are encoded within the various words used to refer to money in Biblical Hebrew. Kesef, for example, is etymologically related to the word nichsaf, which means yearning, alluding to the deep-seated and often insatiable drive to acquire and amass wealth.3

    • Mendel Kalmenson
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MammonMammon - Wikipedia

    Mammon. Mammon (Aramaic: מָמוֹנָא, māmōnā) in the New Testament is commonly thought to mean money, material wealth, or any entity that promises wealth, and is associated with the greedy pursuit of gain. The Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke both quote Jesus using the word in a phrase often rendered in English as "You cannot ...

  4. Aug 8, 2015 · You see, our English definition of rich is, and I quote Webster the authority on the English language, “rich – Having wealth or great possessions, abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy.”. Now let me give you the ancient Semitic definition of rich, “having 100 sheep.”. If you had only 99 sheep, you were poor, but ...

  5. The Hebrew noun כסף(kesef, pronounced KESS-eff) is the Biblical Hebrew word for both "silver" and "money." It is easy to understand the relationship between the two words, as one of the earliest forms of "money" was weighed bags of silver. For instance, Genesis 42:35 describes each of Joseph's brothers finding his "bag of money(כסף)".

  6. Nov 14, 2024 · In Mishnaic Hebrew the word mihamon is a contraction of mi, meaning “from,” and hāmōn, meaning “accumulation,” and connotes wealth or money. This word is used neutrally in the Hebrew Bible as the equivalent to gain and is found in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Talmud.

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