נַחֲלַתְ/כֶֽם

𐤍𐤇𐤋𐤕/𐤊𐤌

nachălâh

your-inheritance

A possession or allotment received as an inheritance, whether land, property, or rights, especially those passed down as part of familial or tribal heritage; by extension, any apportioned share or entitlement. The term primarily denotes holdings or privileges received by inheritance, especially with reference to the Israelite distribution of land and rights among tribes and families. In some contexts, it can refer more generally to any granted share or inherited right, not limited to literal property.

H5159

Psalms 105:11 · Word #8

Lexicon H5159

Lemmaנַחֲלָה
Lemma (Paleo)𐤍𐤇𐤋𐤄
Transliterationnachălâh
Strong'sH5159
DefinitionA possession or allotment received as an inheritance, whether land, property, or rights, especially those passed down as part of familial or tribal heritage; by extension, any apportioned share or entitlement. The term primarily denotes holdings or privileges received by inheritance, especially with reference to the Israelite distribution of land and rights among tribes and families. In some contexts, it can refer more generally to any granted share or inherited right, not limited to literal property.

Morphology HNcfsc/Sp2mp All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Subtype c — Common — Common noun
Gender f — Feminine — Feminine
Number s — Singular — Singular
State c — Construct — The noun is bound to the following word

Common Translation

Phraseyour-inheritance

SIBI-P1 Translation H5159-23

your inherited allotment

Morphological NotesFeminine singular noun in construct state with 2nd person masculine plural pronominal suffix.
Rendering RationaleThe noun denotes that which is received by inheritance or allotment. The construct form with a 2nd person masculine plural suffix specifies possession, yielding "your inherited allotment."

View full lexicon entry for H5159 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

your inherited allotment

Same as P1Yes
Rationale'Your inherited allotment' correctly reflects the possessive construction and inheritance sense; P1 is already contextually correct here.