יָֽלְדָה֙

𐤉𐤋𐤃𐤄

yâlad

gave birth to

To give birth, bring forth or beget offspring. In human contexts, it refers to the physical act of childbirth by a woman or of fathering children by a man, as well as the broader process of producing a descendant. In specialized contexts, it covers the technical act of midwifery, the record of genealogy or lineage, and metaphorical uses for origin or production.

fyala "give birth; bring forth children" (Bemba)

H3205

Genesis 4:22 · Word #4

Lexicon H3205

Lemmaיָלַד
Lemma (Paleo)𐤉𐤋𐤃
Transliterationyâlad
Strong'sH3205
DefinitionTo give birth, bring forth or beget offspring. In human contexts, it refers to the physical act of childbirth by a woman or of fathering children by a man, as well as the broader process of producing a descendant. In specialized contexts, it covers the technical act of midwifery, the record of genealogy or lineage, and metaphorical uses for origin or production.

Morphology HVqp3fs All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan q — Qal — Simple active
Conjugation p — Perfect — Completed action
Person 3 — 3rd person — Third person ("he/she/they")
Gender f — Feminine — Feminine
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

Phrasegave birth to

SIBI-P1 Translation H3205-82

she bore offspring

Morphological NotesVerb, Qal stem, perfect conjugation, 3rd person feminine singular.
Rendering RationaleThe Qal stem expresses the simple active sense of bringing forth. The perfect 3rd feminine singular form indicates a completed action performed by a female subject, hence "she bore offspring."

View full lexicon entry for H3205 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

she fathered offspring

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleStandardized from "gave birth to".

Bantu Hebrew

יָֽלְדָה֙ (yâlad) — To give birth, bring forth or beget offspring. In human contexts, it refers to the physical act of childbirth by a woman or of fathering children by a man, as well as the broader process of producing a descendant. In specialized contexts, it covers the technical act of midwifery, the record of genealogy or lineage, and metaphorical uses for origin or production.

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Word Meaning Language
fyala give birth; bring forth children Bemba