הָקִ֣ים

𐤄𐤒𐤉𐤌

Qum

that the tabernacle was set up

To rise, stand up, or get up, in both literal and figurative senses. The verb denotes the physical act of rising from a seated, lying, or fallen position; it further expands to describe standing before someone (such as in respect or preparation for action), taking action or initiative, and being firmly established or confirmed (as with a decree, covenant, or promise). In the causative stem (hiphil), it conveys the ideas of raising up, establishing, appointing, or restoring. Semantic range includes personal or communal resurrection, establishing something as enduring or official, or persisting/continuing. Frequently used in idiomatic expressions, commands, and judicial or covenantal contexts.

okuwa "to rise, to stand up" (Luganda) · kuima "to stand, stand up, rise (from lying or sitting)" (Chichewa) · kuima "to stand (up), get up" (Yao) +8 more

H6965

Numbers 9:15 · Word #2

Lexicon H6965

Lemmaקוּם
Lemma (Paleo)𐤒𐤅𐤌
TransliterationQum
Strong'sH6965
DefinitionTo rise, stand up, or get up, in both literal and figurative senses. The verb denotes the physical act of rising from a seated, lying, or fallen position; it further expands to describe standing before someone (such as in respect or preparation for action), taking action or initiative, and being firmly established or confirmed (as with a decree, covenant, or promise). In the causative stem (hiphil), it conveys the ideas of raising up, establishing, appointing, or restoring. Semantic range includes personal or communal resurrection, establishing something as enduring or official, or persisting/continuing. Frequently used in idiomatic expressions, commands, and judicial or covenantal contexts.

Morphology HVhc All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state
Binyan h — Hiphil — Causative active
Conjugation c — Infinitive Construct — The verbal noun ("to ...")

Common Translation

Phrasethat the tabernacle was set up

SIBI-P1 Translation H6965-13

to raise up

Morphological NotesVerb, Hiphil (causative) stem, infinitive construct; no pronominal suffix.
Rendering RationaleThe Hiphil stem gives the causative sense of the root קום, meaning "to cause to rise" or "to establish." As an infinitive construct, it expresses the verbal idea in its abstract form: "to raise up," preserving both the root concept of rising and the causative morphology.

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SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

of raising up

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleShifted P1 'to raise up' to 'of raising up' to fit the construct form and context relating to the day on which the tabernacle was raised up.

Bantu Hebrew

הָקִ֣ים (Qum) — To rise, stand up, or get up, in both literal and figurative senses. The verb denotes the physical act of rising from a seated, lying, or fallen position; it further expands to describe standing before someone (such as in respect or preparation for action), taking action or initiative, and being firmly established or confirmed (as with a decree, covenant, or promise). In the causative stem (hiphil), it conveys the ideas of raising up, establishing, appointing, or restoring. Semantic range includes personal or communal resurrection, establishing something as enduring or official, or persisting/continuing. Frequently used in idiomatic expressions, commands, and judicial or covenantal contexts.

View all comparisons →

Word Meaning Language
okuwa to rise, to stand up Luganda
kuima to stand, stand up, rise (from lying or sitting) Chichewa
kuima to stand (up), get up Yao
kumira to stand, stand up Ndau
ozoma to stand, to rise, to get up Herero
kumala to stand, rise up Nyamwezi
kuma to stand, rise Kongo
kuma to stand up, to rise Tonga
kumira to stand, be upright, to stand up Shona
-simama to stand, stand up, get up (from sitting or lying); also to rise in a figurative sense Swahili
uku-ima to stand up Bemba