I. הֵ֫נָּה49 adverb hither (perhaps from II. הֵן, used δεικτικῶς, with ה- locative, properly lo hitherwards! or perhaps akin to , , here) —
\ \ a. of place: (a) hither [Gen 15:16] יָשׁוּבוּ הֵנָּךְ, [Gen 42:15]; [Gen 45:5] that you have sold me הֵנָּה hither, v[Gen 45:8] v[Gen 45:13]; [Josh 2:2]; [Josh 3:9]; [Josh 18:6]; [2Sam 1:10]; [Isa 57:3] וְאַתֶּם קִרְבוּ הֵנָּה, [Jer 31:8]; [Jer 51:5] +; [1Sam 20:21] מִמְּךָ וָהֵנָּךְ from thee and hitherwards, i.e. on this side of thee (opposed to מִמְּךָ וָהָֽלְאָה): repeated [2Kgs 4:35] אַחַת הֵנָּה וְאַחַת הֵנָּה once hither and once thither = once to and fro; הֵנָּה וָהֵנָּה hither and thither i.e. in different (or opposite) directions, [Josh 8:20]; [2Kgs 2:8]; [2Kgs 2:14]; [1Kgs 20:40] strangely וַיְהִי עַבְדְּךָ עשֵֹׁה הֵנָּח וָהֵנָּה literally and thy servant was a doer of hitherwards and thitherwards, i.e. was engaged in different directions (Ew§ 360, c treats {abbrev}ה here as the pronoun 3 plural feminine construed irregularly, compare עשֵֹׁה אֵלֶּה: but read probably with ᵐ5 ᵑ7 ᵑ6 ᵑ9 Th Klo פֹּנֶה was turning or looking ([Exod 2:12]) for עשֵֹׁךְ); עַדהֵֿנָּה even hither, [Num 14:19]; [1Sam 7:12]; [2Sam 20:16] קְרַב עַדהֵֿנָּה, [2Kgs 8:7], to this point (in a book) [Jer 48:47]; [Jer 51:64] (note of compiler or scribe). (β) here (compare שָׁמָּה = there) [Gen 21:23] swear to me הֵנָּה here, [Dan 12:5] ׳֗֗֗ הֵנָּה לְ ׳חֵנָּה לְ on this side of . . . on that side of . . .
\ \ b. of time, in עַד הֵנָּה hitherto [Gen 15:16] (with a negative, = not yet) [Gen 44:28]; [Judg 16:13]; [Ps 71:17] & until now do I keep declaring thy wonders, [1Chr 9:18]; [1Chr 12:9] until now (the point reached in the narrative). In late Hebrew, contracted to עֲדֶ֫נָה hitherto, still [Eccl 4:2], עֲדֶן [Eccl 4:3] אֲשֶׁר עֲדֶן לֹא הָיָה = who has not yet been (compare Mishna עֲדַיִן hitherto, still, עֲדַיִן לֹא = not yet).
The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon
License: Public domain document; formatting developed for use in https://marvel.bible by Eliran Wong.
Source: provided by Tim Morton, the developer of Bible Analyzer