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- H161
Strong's Concordance, Hebrew Dictionary
Ohad, an Israelite, Hebrew: אֹהַד, ʾōhad (H161)
2 King James Bible Verses
Here is Ohad in the Bible. What does the source Hebrew word אֹהַד mean and how is it used in the Bible? Below are the English definition details. Also below are examples within Bible verses highlighted in yellow (follow this link to go there). Tap or hover on blue, underlined words to see more original scripture and meanings. Information sourced from Strong's Concordance[1].
Definition Details
Strong's Number: H161
Hebrew Base Word: אֹהַד
Part of speech: Proper Name Masculine
Usage: Ohad
Literally: united
Definition: Ohad, an Israelite.
Detailed definition:
- Son of Simeon and grandson of Jacob.
Derived terms: From an unused root meaning to be united; unity.
Pronunciation:
- Biblical International Phonetic Alphabet: ʔoˈhɑd̪
- Modern International Phonetic Alphabet: ʔo̞wˈhɑd
- Transliteration: ʾōhad
- Biblical Pronunciation: oh-HAHD
- Modern Pronunciation: oh-HAHD
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How to Use this Concordance Get the Real Meaning Behind Underlined Scripture
Hover on the underlined Bible text in the verses on this page (as shown). Popups will show translations and definitions based on the original source Scripture. Click to pin the displayed definition in place. Click on the 'Strong's Concordance Details' button for more information including related verses.
Tap on the underlined Bible text in the verses on this page (as shown below). Popups will show translations and definitions based on the original source Scripture. Tap on the 'Strong's Concordance Details' button for more information including related verses:
Bible Verses with אֹהַד (H161)
1 to 2 of 2 Verses
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“And the sons of Simeon; Jemuel, and Jamin, and Ohad, and Jachin, and Zohar, and Shaul the son of a Canaanitish woman.”
— Genesis 46:10
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“And the sons of Simeon; Jemuel, and Jamin, and Ohad, and Jachin, and Zohar, and Shaul the son of a Canaanitish woman: these are the families of Simeon.”
— Exodus 6:15
Sources:
The King James Bible (1611) and Strong's Concordance (1890) with Hebrew and Greek dictionaries are sourced from the BibleForgeDB database (https://github.com/bibleforge) within the BibleForge project (http://bibleforge.com). Popularity rankings are based on search data from the Google AdWords Keyword Planner tool.