בְּ/דִבְרֵ֥י

𐤁/𐤃𐤁𐤓𐤉

Davar

with the words of

A discrete unit of speech (word), message, or utterance; more broadly, an event, matter, issue, or thing under consideration. 'Davar' serves as a flexible term in Biblical Hebrew, used to denote both spoken and written words, as well as abstract or concrete matters or affairs. Its semantic range includes specific utterances, divine messages or commandments, matters of legal or administrative concern, and, in extended use, events, situations, or objects.

H1697

2 Chronicles 29:30 · Word #8

Lexicon H1697

Lemmaדָּבָר
Lemma (Paleo)𐤃𐤁𐤓
TransliterationDavar
Strong'sH1697
DefinitionA discrete unit of speech (word), message, or utterance; more broadly, an event, matter, issue, or thing under consideration. 'Davar' serves as a flexible term in Biblical Hebrew, used to denote both spoken and written words, as well as abstract or concrete matters or affairs. Its semantic range includes specific utterances, divine messages or commandments, matters of legal or administrative concern, and, in extended use, events, situations, or objects.

Morphology HR/Ncmpc All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Subtype c — Common — Common noun
Gender m — Masculine — Masculine
Number p — Plural — Plural
State c — Construct — The noun is bound to the following word

Common Translation

Phrasewith the words of

SIBI-P1 Translation H1697-04

in matters of

Morphological NotesNoun, masculine plural construct with prefixed preposition בְּ (“in”).
Rendering RationaleThe noun דִבְרֵי is masculine plural construct of דָּבָר (“that which is spoken,” extended to “matter, affair”). With the prefixed בְּ (“in”), the form denotes engagement or involvement in spoken matters or affairs, hence “in matters of.”

View full lexicon entry for H1697 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

in words of

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleSILEX definition and context indicate the likely referent is speech ('words of'), rather than broader 'matters of'. Adjusted for precision in this ritual context, matching the Hebrew idiom.