Lexical Summary bachal: to feel a loathing Original Word: בָּחלTransliteration: bachal Phonetic Spelling: (baw-khal') Part of Speech: Verb Short Definition: to feel a loathing Meaning: to feel a loathing Strong's Concordance abhor, A primitive root; to loath -- abhor, get hastily (from the margin for bahal). see HEBREW bahal Brown-Driver-Briggs H973. bachal I. [בָּחֵל] verb feel loathing (compare Syriac **NöZAW xvii {1897}, 188 disproves Syriac , and adopts the view of GeiUrschrift 270 (בחל euphemism for a √ II. בעל = loathe, with בְּ, assumed (Thes Buhl) for Jeremiah 3:14; 31:32; see below) (so in lexicons) nauseated (yet see GeiUrschrift, 270); NSyriac envy compare StoddardGram. 12, 57) — Qal Perfect3feminine singular בָּֽחֲלָה Zechariah 11:8 ׳בּ בִי נַפְשָׁם וְגַם בָּהֶם נַפְשִׁי וַתִּקְצַר felt a loathing against me. II. [בָּחֵל] verb (Arabic be avaricious); only Pu`al Participle מְבֹחֶלֶת נַחֲלָה an inheritance gotten by greed Proverbs 20:21 Kt; < Qr Vrss ׳נ מְבֹהֶלֶת, see בהל. |