בָּאִ֜ים

𐤁𐤀𐤉𐤌

Bo

are coming

A verb denoting the act of going, coming, or entering, usually indicating movement toward a point (frequently the speaker or a referent location). Used to express entry into a place, event or state, both literally (such as entering a city, house, or land) and figuratively (such as attaining a condition, being included, or happening). In causative (hiphil) stem, it frequently means to bring or cause to come, i.e., cause a person, thing, or event to enter or occur.

H935

Jeremiah 49:2 · Word #4

Lexicon H935

Lemmaבּוֹא
Lemma (Paleo)𐤁𐤅𐤀
TransliterationBo
Strong'sH935
DefinitionA verb denoting the act of going, coming, or entering, usually indicating movement toward a point (frequently the speaker or a referent location). Used to express entry into a place, event or state, both literally (such as entering a city, house, or land) and figuratively (such as attaining a condition, being included, or happening). In causative (hiphil) stem, it frequently means to bring or cause to come, i.e., cause a person, thing, or event to enter or occur.

Morphology HVqrmpa 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

Phraseare coming

SIBI-P1 Translation H935-15

the ones coming

Morphological NotesQal active participle, masculine plural, absolute.
Rendering RationaleThe Qal active participle masculine plural denotes those who are in the act or state of coming/entering. Rendering it as "the ones coming" preserves the participial force and the plural masculine morphology while reflecting the core sense of movement toward a point.

View full lexicon entry for H935 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

are coming

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleP1 'the ones coming' is grammatically participial, but in context refers to imminent time ("days are coming"). Adjusted to 'are coming' to fit the temporal and idiomatic sense of the phrase.