וַ/יַּ֤ז
𐤅/𐤉𐤆
nâzâh
and sprinkled
To splash, spatter, or scatter liquid in drops; primarily, to sprinkle or to cause to be sprinkled, especially with reference to ritual contexts involving blood or water. The act often involves intentional, controlled scattering of liquid upon objects, persons, or areas to achieve ritual purification or to mark something as consecrated or affected by an action; figuratively, it can denote making clean or symbolically reconciling.
Leviticus 8:30 · Word #10
Lexicon H5137
| Lemma | נָזָה |
| Lemma (Paleo) | 𐤍𐤆𐤄 |
| Transliteration | nâzâh |
| Strong's | H5137 |
| Definition | To splash, spatter, or scatter liquid in drops; primarily, to sprinkle or to cause to be sprinkled, especially with reference to ritual contexts involving blood or water. The act often involves intentional, controlled scattering of liquid upon objects, persons, or areas to achieve ritual purification or to mark something as consecrated or affected by an action; figuratively, it can denote making clean or symbolically reconciling. |
Morphology HC/Vhw3ms
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | V — Verb — An action or state |
| Binyan | h — Hiphil — Causative active |
| Conjugation | w — Sequential Imperfect — Imperfect with waw-consecutive, narrating past events |
| Person | 3 — 3rd person — Third person ("he/she/they") |
| Gender | m — Masculine — Masculine |
| Number | s — Singular — Singular |
Common Translation
| Phrase | and sprinkled |
SIBI-P1 Translation H5137-03
and he caused to sprinkle
| Morphological Notes | Verb; Hiphil (causative) stem; sequential imperfect (wayyiqtol); 3rd person masculine singular. |
| Rendering Rationale | The Hiphil stem expresses a causative action, so the rendering reflects that he caused the sprinkling to occur. The sequential imperfect (wayyiqtol) form conveys a past narrative action in third masculine singular. |
View full lexicon entry for H5137 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
and he caused to sprinkle
| Same as P1 | Yes |
| Rationale | 'and he caused to sprinkle' closely follows the causative verb form in Hebrew and is root-faithful. |