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  1. 24 Μαΐ 2021 · Psalms 14:1: “To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David. The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good. In English the word fool means a person who acts unwisely or imprudently; a silly person.

  2. I. נָבָל adjective foolish, senseless, especially of the man who has no perception of ethical and religious claims, and with collateral idea of ignoble, disgraceful; — absolute ׳ נ 2 Samuel 3:33 14t.; masculine plural נְבָלִים 2 Samuel 13:13; Ezekiel 13:3 (ᵐ5 Co מִלִּבָּם); feminine plural נְבָלוֺת Job 2:10; — senseless, especially of religious ...

  3. 26 Απρ 2012 · The word used in Matthew 5:22 is the hapax legomenon rhaka <4469>, which comes from the Aramaic word reyq <07386>. That word, in turn, comes from the Hebrew ruwq <07324> which has a primary meaning of: to make empty, empty out. Again, the foolish meaning is figurative.

  4. The KJV translates Strong's H5036 in the following manner: fool (9x), foolish (5x), vile person (2x), foolish man (1x), foolish women (1x).

  5. be silly, play the fool. For kacal; to be silly -- do (make, play the, turn into) fool(-ish, -ishly, -ishness). see HEBREW kacal

  6. 15 Δεκ 2023 · In Hebrew, the primary word for fool is “kesil,” which denotes a person who acts without thought or understanding. This word appears frequently in the Old Testament, highlighting the dangers of thoughtlessness and the consequences of rejecting wisdom.

  7. סָכָל (sakal) -- a fool. fool (5), foolish (1), stupid (1). סָכָל noun masculine fool (on formation compare Lag BN 48): — Jeremiah 5:21; Ecclesiastes 2:19; Ecclesiastes 7:17; Ecclesiastes 10:3 (twice in verse); Ecclesiastes 10:14; plural adjective סְכָלִים Jeremiah 4:22.

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