אנשׁ
'ânash
aw-nash'
A primitive root; to be frail, feeble, or (figuratively) melancholy
KJV Usage: desperate (-ly wicked), incurable, sick, woeful.
KJV Usage: desperate (-ly wicked), incurable, sick, woeful.
2 Samuel 12:15 | and he was very sick. |
Job 34:6 | is incurable |
Isaiah 17:11 | and of desperate |
Jeremiah 15:18 | incurable, |
Jeremiah 17:9 | incurable: |
Jeremiah 17:16 | the woeful |
Jeremiah 30:12 | is incurable, |
Jeremiah 30:15 | is incurable |
Micah 1:9 | is incurable; |
2 | is incurable |
1 | and he was very sick. |
1 | and of desperate |
1 | incurable, |
1 | the woeful |
1 | is incurable, |
1 | is incurable; |
1 | incurable: |
KJV Usage: another, X [blood-] thirsty, certain, chap [-man], divers, fellow, X in the flower of their age, husband, (certain, mortal) man, people, person, servant, some (X of them), + stranger, those, + their trade. It is often unexpressed in the Engl. version, especially when used in apposition with another word. H582 אנושׁ 'ĕnôsh
'ĕnôsh
en-oshe'
From H605; properly a mortal (and thus differeing from the more dignified H120); hence a man in general (singly or collectively). It is often unexpressed in the English Version, especially when used in apposition with another word