חפר

Hebrew

Root
ח־פ־ר (ḥ-p-r)

Etymology 1

From Proto-Semitic *ḥapar-. Cognate with Arabic حَفَرَ (ḥafara).

Verb

חָפַר • (khafár) third-singular masculine past (pa'al construction)

  1. to dig
  2. (by extension) to search, to look through
    חפר בארגז החפצים.khafár be'argáz hakhafatsím.[He] searched in the stuffs crate.
    • Tanach, Genesis 26:19, with translation of the New International Version:
      וַיַּחְפְּרוּ עַבְדֵי־יִצְחָק בַּנָּחַל וַיִּמְצְאוּ־שָׁם בְּאֵר מַיִם חַיִּים׃
      Isaac’s servants dug in the valley and discovered a well of fresh water there.
  3. (by extension) to tunnel, to burrow or to excavate
  4. (slang) To pester or to annoy especially by talking a lot.
  5. (biblical) to survey, to spy out
Conjugation

or

Derived terms

References

Etymology 2

From Proto-Semitic *ḫapar-. Cognate with Arabic خَفِرَ (ḵafira).

Verb

חָפֵר • (khafér, ḥāp̄ēr) third-singular masculine past (pa'al construction)

  1. to be ashamed
Conjugation

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.