בְּנֹתַ֗/י

𐤁𐤍𐤕/𐤉

Bat

my daughters

Female offspring; a daughter, a female descendant. More broadly, a female member of a family, community, or group; can be used collectively for women of a city or nation. Figuratively, it denotes dependency, belonging, or characteristic association (e.g., 'daughters of Zion' = women, inhabitants, or symbolic representations of Zion). Employed for city populations ('daughter of cities'), subordinate towns, or associated groups. It frequently appears in anthropomorphic metaphors, especially for personified cities or nations. In some figurative uses, the term can refer to a dependent, offshoot, or subordinate entity (e.g., a village as a 'daughter' of a larger city). Occasionally used in idioms or set phrases, such as 'daughter of the eye' for 'pupil of the eye.'

H1323

Ruth 1:13 · Word #12

Lexicon H1323

Lemmaבַּת
Lemma (Paleo)𐤁𐤕
TransliterationBat
Strong'sH1323
DefinitionFemale offspring; a daughter, a female descendant. More broadly, a female member of a family, community, or group; can be used collectively for women of a city or nation. Figuratively, it denotes dependency, belonging, or characteristic association (e.g., 'daughters of Zion' = women, inhabitants, or symbolic representations of Zion). Employed for city populations ('daughter of cities'), subordinate towns, or associated groups. It frequently appears in anthropomorphic metaphors, especially for personified cities or nations. In some figurative uses, the term can refer to a dependent, offshoot, or subordinate entity (e.g., a village as a 'daughter' of a larger city). Occasionally used in idioms or set phrases, such as 'daughter of the eye' for 'pupil of the eye.'

Morphology HNcfpc/Sp1cs All morphology codes

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

Common Translation

Phrasemy daughters

SIBI-P1 Translation H1323-06

my built-up daughters

Morphological NotesFeminine plural construct noun from בַּת with 1st person common singular pronominal suffix; "daughters of me" = "my daughters."
Rendering RationaleThe plural construct form with 1st person singular suffix denotes "my daughters." Rendering as "built-up daughters" preserves the root connection to בנה (to build), reflecting daughters as female offspring established within the household.

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