יֵ֥שׁ
𐤉𐤔
yêsh
there are
A particle indicating the existence or presence of someone or something; used to assert 'there is', 'there are', or 'there exists'. Its primary function is to mark or specify existence, presence, or possession, whether of persons, objects, qualities, or conditions. It commonly appears in constructions with prepositions or pronouns to declare the presence or availability of a state or entity, and provides the existential or possessive sense absent from finite verbal forms.
2 Chronicles 16:9 · Word #17
Lexicon H3426
| Lemma | יֵשׁ |
| Lemma (Paleo) | 𐤉𐤔 |
| Transliteration | yêsh |
| Strong's | H3426 |
| Definition | A particle indicating the existence or presence of someone or something; used to assert 'there is', 'there are', or 'there exists'. Its primary function is to mark or specify existence, presence, or possession, whether of persons, objects, qualities, or conditions. It commonly appears in constructions with prepositions or pronouns to declare the presence or availability of a state or entity, and provides the existential or possessive sense absent from finite verbal forms. |
Morphology HTm
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | T — Particle — Function word |
| Subtype | d — Demonstrative — Demonstrative |
Common Translation
| Phrase | there are |
SIBI-P1 Translation H3426-06
there exists
| Morphological Notes | Existential particle; invariable; functions to assert existence or possession; not a finite verb. |
| Rendering Rationale | This particle asserts the existence or presence of something without verbal inflection. "There exists" preserves its core existential force independent of context or number. |
View full lexicon entry for H3426 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
there are
| Same as P1 | No — adjusted for context |
| Rationale | 'there exists' is literal, but the standard English expression for this existential phrase is 'there are,' since it refers to plural 'wars.' |