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HebrewH4758

מַרְאֶה

mareh

Modern Summary of Strong’s Concordance (1890)

The word "מַרְאֶה" (mareh) primarily refers to the act of seeing or something that is seen, such as an appearance, shape, or vision. It can describe physical beauty or attractiveness, often in the form of looks or countenance, as well as mental impressions like visions. The term is derived from a root meaning "to see" and is used to convey both literal and figurative perceptions.

a view (the act of seeing); also an appearance (the thing seen), whether (real) a shape (especially if handsome, comeliness; often plural the looks), or (mental) a vision

The Hebrew word mareh means "a view (the act of seeing); also an appearance (the thing seen), whether (real) a shape (especially if handsome, comeliness; often plural the looks), or (mental) a vision," encompassing related ideas including apparently, appearance, as soon as beautiful, countenance.

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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