כָּרַ֥תִּי

𐤊𐤓𐤕𐤉

kârath

I-have-made

To cut, sever, or divide something, typically with a sharp instrument; frequently used in both literal and metaphorical contexts. It carries the sense of physically cutting as well as bringing something to an end; in legal or ritual expressions, it refers to the formal undertaking of a covenant, signifying the act of making or ratifying a solemn agreement, often through a ritual act of cutting (such as animals sacrificed and divided as part of covenant ceremonies).

-kata "to cut" (Venda) · kata "to cut" (Tsonga) · -kata "to cut sharply, sever" (Shona) +11 more

H3772

2 Kings 17:38 · Word #3

Lexicon H3772

Lemmaכָּרַת
Lemma (Paleo)𐤊𐤓𐤕
Transliterationkârath
Strong'sH3772
DefinitionTo cut, sever, or divide something, typically with a sharp instrument; frequently used in both literal and metaphorical contexts. It carries the sense of physically cutting as well as bringing something to an end; in legal or ritual expressions, it refers to the formal undertaking of a covenant, signifying the act of making or ratifying a solemn agreement, often through a ritual act of cutting (such as animals sacrificed and divided as part of covenant ceremonies).

Morphology HVqp1cs All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan q — Qal — Simple active
Conjugation p — Perfect — Completed action
Person 1 — 1st person — First person ("I" / "we")
Gender c — Common — Common (both genders)
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

PhraseI-have-made

SIBI-P1 Translation H3772-19

I cut

Morphological NotesVerb, Qal stem, perfect (suffix conjugation), 1st person common singular.
Rendering RationaleThe Qal stem conveys the simple active sense of the root "to cut." The perfect 1st person singular form expresses a completed action performed by the speaker, hence "I cut."

View full lexicon entry for H3772 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

I cut

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleStandardized from "I made".

Bantu Hebrew

כָּרַ֥תִּי (kârath) — To cut, sever, or divide something, typically with a sharp instrument; frequently used in both literal and metaphorical contexts. It carries the sense of physically cutting as well as bringing something to an end; in legal or ritual expressions, it refers to the formal undertaking of a covenant, signifying the act of making or ratifying a solemn agreement, often through a ritual act of cutting (such as animals sacrificed and divided as part of covenant ceremonies).

View all comparisons →

Word Meaning Language
-kata to cut Venda
kata to cut Tsonga
-kata to cut sharply, sever Shona
-kata to cut Ndebele
kata to cut Lozi
kata to cut Tonga (Zambia)
kata to cut Lunda
ḱata to cut Chichewa
kata to cut Bemba
kàta to cut Luganda
gāta to cut Kirundi
gāta to cut Kinyarwanda
gàta to cut Kikuyu
kata to cut Swahili