Reference:Search:

Dict: all - KINE



tcr.html:



smith:



KINE - K>@ - the plural of cow.
See BULL, BULLOCK


easton:



Kine @ (Heb. sing. parah, i.e., "fruitful"), mentioned in Pharaoh's dream kjv@Genesis:41:18). Here the word denotes "buffaloes," which fed on the reeds and sedge by the river's brink.

tcr.html2:



torrey:



tcr.1:



naves:



KINE (BOVINE) @
- Pharaoh's dream of kjv@Genesis:41:2-7 kjv@Genesis:41:26-30
-
See CATTLE

- FIGURATIVE kjv@Amos:4:1

filter-bible-link.pl:



hitchcock:



tcr:



strongs:



H1241 <STRHEB>@ בּקר bâqâr baw-kawr' From H1239; a beeve or animal of the ox kind of either gender (as used for ploughing); collectively a herd: - {beeve} bull (+ {-ock}) + {calf} + {cow} great {[cattle]} + {heifer} {herd} {kine} ox.


H1706 <STRHEB>@ דּבשׁ debash deb-ash' From an unused root meaning to be gummy; honey (from its stickiness); by analogy syrup: - honey ([-comb]).


H2461 <STRHEB>@ חלב châlâb khaw-lawb' From the same as H2459; milk (as the richness of kine): - + {cheese} {milk} {sucking}


H504 <STRHEB>@ אלף 'eleph eh'-lef From H502; a family; also (from the sense of yoking or taming) an ox or cow: - {family} {kine} oxen.


H6510 <STRHEB>@ פּרה pârâh paw-raw' Feminine of H6499; a heifer: - {cow} {heifer} kine.


H6940 <STRHEB>@ קדרוּת qadrûth kad-rooth' From H6937; duskiness: - blackness.


H653 <STRHEB>@ אפלה 'ăphêlâh af-ay-law' Feminine of H651; {duskiness} figuratively misfortune; concretely concealment: - {dark} {darkness} {gloominess} X thick.


H7835 <STRHEB>@ שׁחר shâchar shaw-khar' A primitive root (rather identical with H7836 through the idea of the duskiness of early dawn); to be dim or dark (in color): - be black.


G2795 <STRGRK>@ κινέω kineō kin-eh'-o From κίω kiō (poetic for [εἶμι eimi to go]); to stir (transitively) literally or figuratively: - (re-) move (-r) way.


G3334 <STRGRK>@ μετακινέω metakineō met-ak-ee-nah'-o From G3326 and G2795; to stir to a place elsewhere that is remove (figuratively): - move away.


G4787 <STRGRK>@ συγκινέω sugkineō soong-kin-eh'-o From G4682 and G2795; to move together that is (specifically) to excite as a mass (to sedition): - stir up.