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HebrewH3688

כָּסַל

kâçal

Modern Summary of Strong’s Concordance (1890)

The word "kâçal" primarily means "to be fat," but it is used figuratively to describe being silly or foolish. It originates from a basic root word and is translated in the King James Version as "be foolish."

properly, to be fat, i.e. (figuratively) silly

The Hebrew word kâçal means "properly, to be fat, i.e. (figuratively) silly," used in Scripture in contexts that reveal its full semantic depth.

Lexical data derived from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance. See full disclaimer

Word DNA

Origin

This word acts as a root form.

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