הַ/קֹּשְׁרִ֖ים
𐤄/𐤒𐤔𐤓𐤉𐤌
qâshar
who had conspired
To tie or bind physically, or to form an alliance or connection, either materially (such as tying together cords or binding up something) or, more frequently in figurative and political contexts, to conspire or form a league against an individual or authority. The word denotes the establishment of a close association through deliberate commitment, whether by physical fastening or by plotting together for a common purpose.
2 Kings 21:24 · Word #6
Lexicon H7194
| Lemma | קָשַׁר |
| Lemma (Paleo) | 𐤒𐤔𐤓 |
| Transliteration | qâshar |
| Strong's | H7194 |
| Definition | To tie or bind physically, or to form an alliance or connection, either materially (such as tying together cords or binding up something) or, more frequently in figurative and political contexts, to conspire or form a league against an individual or authority. The word denotes the establishment of a close association through deliberate commitment, whether by physical fastening or by plotting together for a common purpose. |
Morphology HTd/Vqrmpa
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | V — Verb — An action or state |
| Binyan | q — Qal — Simple active |
| Conjugation | r — Participle Active — The one doing the action |
| Gender | m — Masculine — Masculine |
| Number | p — Plural — Plural |
| State | a — Absolute — The noun stands independently |
Common Translation
| Phrase | who had conspired |
SIBI-P1 Translation H7194-04
the ones who bind together
| Morphological Notes | Qal active participle, masculine plural, absolute state, with definite article ("the"). |
| Rendering Rationale | The Qal active participle masculine plural with the definite article denotes identifiable males characterized by the act of binding. "Bind together" preserves the root sense of tying or forming a deliberate connection, whether physical or relational. |
View full lexicon entry for H7194 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
the conspirators
| Same as P1 | No — adjusted for context |
| Rationale | P1 'the ones who bind together' follows the literal meaning but in context refers to political conspirators against the king; 'the conspirators' is a concise, context-accurate rendering following the silex_definition. |