Lexical Summary
lo: no, nor, cannot
Original Word:לֹא
Part of Speech:Adverb
Transliteration:lo'
Pronunciation:lo
Phonetic Spelling:(lo)
KJV: X before, + or else, ere, + except, ig(-norant), much, less, nay, neither, never, no((-ne), -r, (-thing)), (X as though,(can-), for) not (out of), of nought, otherwise, out of, + surely, + as truly as, + of a truth, + verily, for want, + whether, without
NASB:no, nor, cannot, never, without, nothing, none
Word Origin:[a primitive particle]
1. (the simple or absolute negation) not
2. (by implication) no
{often used with other particles}
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
before, or else, ere, except, ignorant, much, less, nay,
Or lowi {lo}; or loh (Deut. 3:11) {lo}; a primitive particle; not (the simple or abs. Negation); by implication, no; often used with other particles (as follows) -- X before, + or else, ere, + except, ig(-norant), much, less, nay, neither, never, no((-ne), -r, (-thing)), (X as though...,(can-), for) not (out of), of nought, otherwise, out of, + surely, + as truly as, + of a truth, + verily, for want, + whether, without.
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origina prim. adverb
Definitionnot
NASB Translationbefore (3), before* (5), behold (2), beyond (2), breathless* (1), cannot (81), cannot their nor (1), cannot* (47), carefully (1), cheaply* (1), disregarded* (1), except (1), failed* (1), false* (1), futile* (1), gone (1), ignorant* (1), illiterate* (1), impotent* (1), incapable* (1), indeed (2), injustice* (2), instead (2), many* (1), most assuredly* (1), neither (8), neither by nor (1), neither he nor (1), neither him nor (1), neither i nor (1), neither my nor (1), neither them nor (1), neither they nor (2), neither you nor (3), neither your nor (1), neither* (4), neither...nor (15), neither (2), never (64), never about nor (1), never* (25), no (525), no been nor (1), no to nor (1), no* (30), none (28), none* (19), nor (401), nor* (5), nothing (35), nothing* (27), nowhere* (1), or (10), or else (1), otherwise (4), pathless* (2), rather than (3), refrain (1), refuse* (1), refused* (1), ruthlessly* (1), so (11), so that we will no (1), such (1), surely* (27), too (1), truly* (2), unable* (10), unanswered* (1), unavoidable* (1), unaware* (1), unawares* (1), unceasingly* (1), unclean* (3), undivided* (1), undone* (1), ungodly* (1), unjustly* (1), unknown* (1), unless (1), unless* (7), unproductive* (1), unpunished* (1), unreliable* (1), unsearchable* (1), unsown* (1), unsparing* (1), untrained* (1), unvented* (1), unwilling* (3), unwise* (1), useless* (1), weak (1), whether* (1), without (61), worthless* (2).
Brown-Driver-Briggs
or (Arabic

, Aramaic ,

, Sabean , Ass.
lâ; not in Ethiopic: compare Kö
ii. 1. 236 Walker
AJSL 1896, 237 ff.) — , according to Masora (Fr
MM 248), 35 t., besides 6t., and , the orthography of which varies much (
ib.p. 251), e.g. in Samuel always , in Chronicles always , on the whole 141t., 128t.; twice, according to Masora, written (Qr ),
1 Samuel 2:16;
1 Samuel 20:2, once
Deuteronomy 3:11 Kt: —
not — denying objectively, like (not = ): —
verb; so most frequently, and nearly always (a) with the finite tenses, whether perfect (Genesis 2:5; bGenesis 4:5 etc.) or imperfect (Genesis 3:4; 8:21,22 etc.); in short circumstantial clauses, asGenesis 44:4 ,Isaiah 40:20 , and with a final forceIsaiah 41:7;Exodus 28:32 (see Ges§ 156. 3 R. b, c Dr§ 162). Governing two closely connected verbs (Dr§ 115, )Exodus 28:43 ,Leviticus 19:12,29bDeuteronomy 7:25,26;Deuteronomy 19:10;Deuteronomy 22:1 and elsewhere; and two parallel clauses (Ges§ 152. 3)Isaiah 23:4bPsalm 9:19;Psalm 44:19;Job 3:1 and elsewhere With the imperfect, especially with 2 person, often expresses (not, like , a deprecation,do not . . .,let not . . ., but) aprohibition, asGenesis 2:17 thoushall not eat of it,Genesis 3:1,3;Exodus 20:3 thereshall not be to thee, etc.,Exodus 20:13 , etc. With the coh. and jussive moods (which are negatived regularly by ), it occurs only exceptionally (Ges§ 109. 1 b R. 1),Genesis 24:8;1 Samuel 14:36;2 Samuel 17:12;2 Samuel 18:14;1 Kings 2:6;Ezekiel 48:14. (b) with the infinitive (which is negatived by , q. v.), only once, in (), and with , in the sense ofcannot, ormust not;Judges 1:19 for itwas not (possible)to dispossess, etc.Amos 6:10 ,1 Chronicles 5:1;1 Chronicles 15:2 (Dr§ 202. 2); compare AramaicDaniel 6:9;Ezra 6:8. On its use with the participle, see
c. (c) always negates properly the word immediately following: hence, in a verbal sentence, where this is not the verb, some special stress rests upon it,Genesis 32:29not Jacob shall thy name be called any more, but Israel,Genesis 45:8Not ye (in our idiom: It is not ye who) have sent me hither, but God,Exodus 16:8;1 Samuel 8:7 ,Psalm 115:17; without a following correcting clause,Genesis 38:9;Numbers 16:29Not (but another) hath sent me,Deuteronomy 32:27 ,1 Chronicles 17:4;Deuteronomy 8:9;Isaiah 28:28not for ever (but only for a while) . . . (soIsaiah 57:16;Psalm 9:19;Psalm 49:18;Psalm 103:9; butIsaiah 13:20 is, willnot be inhabited for ever),Isaiah 43:22;Job 13:16;Job 32:9; hence rhetorically, insinuating something very different, not named,2 Kings 6:10not once, andnot twice (but repeatedly),Ezra 10:13;Jeremiah 4:11 a windnot to winnow, andnot to cleanse (but to exterminate),Isaiah 45:13;Isaiah 48:1bJoshua 24:12;Daniel 11:20,29;Job 34:20 (but by a Divine agency: compareDaniel 2:34; alsoJob 20:26 firenot blown upon [but kindled from heaven],Lamentations 4:6; andIsaiah 47:14). (d) standing alone: (a)if not,Genesis 18:21 ,Genesis 29:49;Genesis 42:16;Job 9:24;Job 24:25; () ,or not,Genesis 24:21 waiting to know ,Genesis 27:21;Genesis 37:32;Exodus 16:4;Numbers 11:23;Deuteronomy 8:2;Judges 2:22 (compare , , ). In answer to a question or request, to deny, or decline,Nay, Nö:Judges 12:5 ,Haggai 2:12;Genesis 23:11;Genesis 42:10;1 Samuel 1:15 +; often followed by , Nöfor . . . = Nöbut . . .,Genesis 18:15 ,Genesis 19:2;Joshua 5:14;Joshua 24:21;1 Samuel 2:16 Qr (see Dr),1 Samuel 10:19 ( MSS),2 Samuel 16:18;2 Samuel 24:24;1 Kings 3:22 (twice in verse) +;Job 23:6 (strangely). (compare, in deprecation, .) (e) with an interrogative force, which however does not lie in as such, but (as in other cases) in the contrast with a preceding clause, or in the tone of voice (compare
f; Ew§ 324 a Ges§ 150. 1 Dr1Samuel 11:12):Jonah 4:11 ,Job 2:10;Job 22:11;Exodus 8:22;2 Kings 5:26;Jeremiah 49:9 ("" Obadiah 5 ),Malachi 2:15;Lamentations 3:38; and in passages, exegesis or text. doubtful (see Commentaries),1 Samuel 20:14;2 Samuel 23:5 (but see Bu),Hosea 10:9 (Ew We),Hosea 11:5 (Ew),Job 14:16b (but Ew Di ),Lamentations 1:12 (Ew Ke),Lamentations 3:36 (Ke Bä).
adjectives andsubstantive: (a)Genesis 2:18not good is man's being alone,Exodus 18:17 + often (b)Exodus 4:16 ,Amos 7:14 ,Numbers 23:9 ,Deuteronomy 17:15 (see
b)Deuteronomy 20:20;Deuteronomy 32:47;1 Samuel 15:29;2 Samuel 18:20 ,2 Samuel 21:2;1 Kings 22:33;2 Kings 6:19 ,Micah 2:10;Isaiah 27:11;Hosea 8:6;Jeremiah 2:11;Jeremiah 16:20;2 Kings 19:18;1 Kings 19:11 (twice in verse) ,Deuteronomy 30:12,13;Job 15:9;Job 28:14 ("" )s,Psalm 74:9;Jeremiah 5:10 ,Jeremiah 10:16;Deuteronomy 32:21 ,Jeremiah 10:14;Habakkuk 1:14;Job 16:17;Job 38:26 ;1 Kings 22:17 ,Jeremiah 49:31;Psalm 22:3 ,Job 18:17,19;Job 29:12 ,Job 30:13;Job 33:9;Jeremiah 2:19 and (that) my terror reached not unto thee,Job 21:9; absoluteGenesis 29:7 (Haggai 1:2),Numbers 20:5;2 Kings 4:23 ,Isaiah 44:9;Jeremiah 5:12 ,Job 9:32;Job 22:16;Job 36:26;Job 41:2;Proverbs 19:7 (si vera lectio) words whichare not, whichare nought. (c) with the participle is rare, a finite verb being usually preferred (Exodus 34:7 : Ew§ 320 c Dr§ 162):2 Samuel 3:34 ,Ezekiel 4:14;Ezekiel 22:24;Deuteronomy 28:61;Psalm 38:15 who isnot hearing,Job 12:3;Job 13:2 ,Zephaniah 3:5 (very anomalous);1 Kings 10:21 is probably textual error In or ,Deuteronomy 4:42;Deuteronomy 19:4,6;Joshua 20:5 (compareNumbers 35:23), is best construed as a substantive, he being anot-hater to him afore-time. — In most of the cases underb, c, could have been employed; but the negation by is more pointed and forcible.
Not in predication:
coupled to an adjective to negative it, like the Greek , but usually by way of litotes:Hosea 13:13 anunwise son,Psalm 36:5 a waynot good,Psalm 43:1 ,Proverbs 16:29;Proverbs 30:25,26;Ezekiel 20:25; 2Chronicles 30:17 :Isaiah 16:14 , compareIsaiah 10:7 .
with a participleJeremiah 2:2 ,Jeremiah 18:15 (the finite verb is more common: seeIsaiah 62:12 (compareIsaiah 54:11),Jeremiah 6:8 ,Jeremiah 15:18;Jeremiah 22:6;Jeremiah 31:18;Zephaniah 2:1).
Genesis 15:13 ,Jeremiah 5:19;Habakkuk 1:6 ,Proverbs 26:17 .
with a substantive, in poetry, forming a kind of compound, expressing pointedly its antithesis or negation (Germanun- is sometimes used similarly):Deuteronomy 32:5(?). 17. 21 a they made me jealous with anot-God (with what in no respect deserved the name of God), vb i.e. with an unorganized horde,Amos 6:13 i.e. at a thing whichis not, an unreality (of their boasted strength),Isaiah 10:15 like a rod's lifting upwhat is no wood (but the agent wielding it),Isaiah 31:8 , ,Isaiah 55:2 forwhat is not bread, forwhat is not for satiety,Jeremiah 5:7 bynot-gods, in late prose 2 Chronicles 13:9 ;Psalm 44:13 forno-value (i.e. cheaply),Proverbs 13:23;Job 10:12 darkness anddisorder; soHosea 1:9;Hosea 2:25: still more pregnantlyJob 26:2 a (poetic for ) thepowerless,Job 26:2b;Job 26:3a (Ew§ 286 g Ges§ 152. 1 n.),Job 39:16 useth hardly her young ones (making them) intonone of hers; and evenHabakkuk 2:6what is not his own (compareJob 18:15 ). compare with a verb, and ellipse of ,Isaiah 65:1 to those who have not asked, vbJeremiah 2:8 ,Jeremiah 2:11b; alsoHosea 1:6,8;Hosea 2:25, and probablyJob 31:31 (perfect in p.) onenot satisfied.
in circumstantial clauses (Dr§ 164), in poetry and rare: qualifying a substantive,2 Samuel 23:4 a morningwithout clouds,Job 12:24 in apathless waste,Job 38:26a; and a verbJob 34:24without inquiry,Psalm 59:4 (comparePsalm 59:4 ), in late prose, twice,1 Chronicles 2:30,32 ( and , q. v., are more usual in such cases).
Once (according to many MSS), as a substantive,Job 6:21 for now are ye becomenothing, Hi De Kö (compareDaniel 4:32 (Aramaic) , here , andJob 24:25); but reading fluctuates (Orientals , Qr , Westerns, Baer (see pp. 37, 56) ['now are ye becomethat,' namely the ofJob 24:15]; but even yields a forced sense; and text is probably wrong: Mich Ew Ol Sgf Bu ( also read ); Bö Di . compare Köii. 1. 236 f. With prefixes: —
31 (chiefly in poetry or late), according to the varying significance of : (a) usuallywith not =without,Jeremiah 22:13without justice ("" ; soEzekiel 22:29;Proverbs 16:8),Isaiah 55:1 (twice in verse);Proverbs 19:2;Job 8:11without mire "" ,Job 30:28 (=notthrough the sun),Lamentations 1:6 ,Numbers 35:22 ,Numbers 35:23 (followed by infinitive) , 2 Chronicles 21:20;Ecclesiastes 10:11;Psalm 17:1 ; used more freely in Chronicles,1 Chronicles 12:18 , v.1 Chronicles 12:34 , 2 Chronicles 30:18 . With ellipse of rel.,Lamentations 4:14without (that) men are able to touch, etc. (b) of time,in not, i.e.outside of,Leviticus 15:25 ,beforeJob 15:32 ,Ecclesiastes 7:17 . (c) where belongs to the following word, and is only accidentally preceded by (see above ),Deuteronomy 32:21 (twice in verse);Jeremiah 5:7;Proverbs 13:23 throughinjustice; withpretii,Psalm 44:13;Isaiah 55:2 (twice in verse);Jeremiah 2:11for (that which)profiteth not.
nonne ?Genesis 4:7 + often Inviting, as it does, an affirmative answer, it is often used, (a) especially in conversation, for pointing to a fact in such a way as to arouse the interest of the person addressed, or to win his assent:Genesis 13:19Is not the whole land before thee ?Genesis 19:20;Genesis 20:5;Genesis 27:36;Genesis 29:25;Exodus 4:11 Who maketh dumb or deaf, etc.Do not I ?Exodus 33:16;Judges 4:6,14;Judges 8:2;Judges 9:28,38;1 Samuel 9:20,21;1 Samuel 15:17 etc.; with a verb in 1person,Joshua 1:9 ,Judges 6:14 ,1 Samuel 20:30;2 Samuel 19:23;Ruth 2:9: similarly in a poetical or rhetorical style,Judges 5:30 ,Isaiah 8:19;Isaiah 10:8,9,11;Isaiah 28:25;Isaiah 29:17;Isaiah 40:21,23;Isaiah 42:24;Isaiah 43:19 etc.,Job 4:6;Job 4:21;Job 7:1;Job 10:10;Job 10:20, etc. () it has a tendency to become little more than an affirm. particle, declaring with some rhetorical emphasis what is, or might be, well known:Deuteronomy 3:11 ,Deuteronomy 11:30;1 Samuel 21:12 (compare1 Samuel 29:3,5;2 Samuel 11:3),2 Samuel 23:19; 2Sam 26:1;2 Samuel 15:35; it is thus nearly = ( sometimes represents it by , asJoshua 1:9;Judges 6:14;Ruth 2:9;2 Samuel 15:35); so especially in the phrase of the compiler of Kings, And the rest of the acts of . . .,are theynot written in, etc. ?1 Kings 11:41;1 Kings 14:29 + often (with which there interchanges1 Kings 14:19;2 Kings 15:11,26,31, which is Generally used by the Chronicles, 2Chronicles 16:11; 20:34, etc.),Joshua 10:13 (compare2 Samuel 1:18 ),1 Kings 8:53 ,Esther 10:2;Psalm 56:14 (strangely: contr.Psalm 116:8). —Habakkuk 2:13; 2Chronicles 25:26 (). — OnJudges 14:15, see
end.
and not=and if not,2 Samuel 13:26;2 Kings 5:17. compare .
Obadiah 16 , poetic for ,as though they had not been.
without, literallyin the condition of no . . . 2 Chronicles 15:3 (compare , also in Chronicles). Elsewhere belongs to the following word,Amos 6:13; 2Chronicles 13:9;Isaiah 65:1 (twice in verse);Job 26:2,3;Job 39:16 (see above ).
— Fifteen times, according to Masora (see DePsalms 100. 3 FrMM 247 StrProl. Cr. 84), is written by error for , namelyExodus 21:8;Leviticus 11:21;Leviticus 25:30;1 Samuel 2:3;2 Samuel 16:18;2 Kings 8:10;Isaiah 9:2;Isaiah 63:9;Psalm 100:3;Psalm 139:16;Job 13:15;Job 41:4;Proverbs 19:7;Proverbs 26:2;Ezra 4:2 (always with Qr ). The passages must be considered each upon its own merits: in some yields a preferable sense; but this is not the case in all. There is the same (rightly) onIsaiah 49:5;1 Chronicles 11:20; but these were not considered to rest upon equal authority, and are hence not reckoned with the fifteen. — InJudges 21:22 (see GFM),1 Samuel 13:13;1 Samuel 20:14 (twice in verse), and inJob 9:33 , read probably for .
(Kt1 Samuel 2:16;1 Samuel 20:2), , see .
(Daniel 4:32) (Biblical Hebrew ; Aramaic of Têma, Egyptian, etc., ; Nerab (Lzb301 CookG1. 67); ; Syriac
); —notJeremiah 10:11;Daniel 2:5,9,10, etc.; before a participle (so rarely in Biblical Hebrew,
c),Daniel 2:27,43;Daniel 3:16;Daniel 4:4;Daniel 4:6;Daniel 4:15 +, soDaniel 4:32 ; areas men not accounted of (so Bev Behrm Marti, compareIsaiah 53:8 ; > most 'accountedas nothing,' for which no analogy, yet comparePsalm 39:6 ); followed by , see . With infinitive andDaniel 6:9 whichit is not to alter = whichis not to be altered (compareDaniel 6:16),Ezra 6:8 (K§ 67, 1 Dr§ 202, 2.; compareIsaiah 35:6 , DAramaic Dialektproben, p. 1). With interr.Daniel 3:24;Daniel 4:27;Daniel 6:13.
Topical Lexicon
The Hebrew Negative Particle לֹא (lo)Overview
Used roughly 5,184 times, לֹא is Scripture’s primary marker of direct negation, shaping revelation by clarifying what is untrue, forbidden, impossible, or unnecessary. Its reach spans every genre, ensuring that God’s word is heard not only in affirmations but also in the boundaries that preserve life and faith.
Negative Commandments in Covenant Law
Eight of the Ten Commandments begin with לֹא (Exodus 20:3-17;Deuteronomy 5:7-21), establishing moral non-negotiables:
•Exodus 20:3 – “You shall have no other gods before Me.”
•Exodus 20:13 – “You shall not murder.”
These negatives safeguard worship, life, marriage, property, truth, and contentment, continuing to inform Christian ethics (Romans 13:9;James 2:11).
Guardrails for Holiness and Worship
Leviticus and Deuteronomy employ לֹא to fence off idolatry (Leviticus 26:1), improper sacrifice (Leviticus 10:1), immoral unions (Leviticus 18:6), unjust business (Leviticus 19:13), and social oppression (Deuteronomy 24:17). The “do not” commands form Israel’s distinctive lifestyle and, by extension, the church’s call to holiness (1 Peter 1:15-16).
Divine Promises Framed Negatively
God often comforts by declaring what will never occur:
•Deuteronomy 31:6 – “He will never leave you nor forsake you.”
•Psalm 121:3 – “He will not allow your foot to slip.”
•Isaiah 42:4 – “He will not falter or be discouraged.”
Negated assurances stress the absolute reliability of the covenant-keeping Lord.
Warnings and Rebukes in the Prophets
Prophets wield לֹא to expose sin and false security:
•Isaiah 30:1-2 – “Woe… who set out to go down to Egypt, but do not ask My counsel.”
•Jeremiah 7:4 – “Do not trust in deceptive words.”
Judgment oracles frequently hinge on what God will not tolerate and what the people must not presume.
Rhetorical Negation in Wisdom Literature
•Proverbs 3:5 – “Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.”
•Ecclesiastes 1:8 – “The eye is not satisfied with seeing.”
Negative maxims teach discernment by warning against paths that end in ruin.
Poetic and Liturgical Emphasis
Psalms deepen worship through contrast:
•Psalm 23:1 – “The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.”
•Psalm 46:2 – “Therefore we will not fear, though the earth is transformed.”
Negative parallelism magnifies God’s sufficiency and power.
Narrative Function
In storylines לֹא heightens drama and faith:
•Genesis 15:1 – “Do not be afraid, Abram.”
•Genesis 22:12 – “Do not lay a hand on the boy.”
Negated commands steer protagonists toward obedience and trust, revealing God’s redemptive plan.
Theological Assertions about God
•Numbers 23:19 – “God is not a man, that He should lie.”
•Malachi 3:6 – “I the LORD do not change.”
Negation protects divine holiness, immutability, and truthfulness.
Eschatological Hope
•Zechariah 4:6 – “Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit.”
•Micah 4:3 – “Nation will not lift up sword against nation.”
Future promises often announce what will no longer blight the renewed creation.
Intertextual Influence
The Septuagint’s οὐ/οὐχ transmits לֹא into the New Testament, enabling citations such asHebrews 13:5 (fromDeuteronomy 31:6) andRomans 9:13 (fromMalachi 1:2-3), thereby carrying the force of Old Testament negation into apostolic teaching.
Pastoral and Homiletical Applications
1. Ethical clarity: preaching the “shall nots” uncovers sin and guides repentance.
2. Assurance: negative promises (“will never”) stabilize believers in trial.
3. Discipleship: forbidding self-reliance or conformity to the world shapes Christlike character.
Representative Verses
Genesis 2:17;Exodus 20:3-17;Numbers 23:19;Deuteronomy 31:6;Psalm 23:1;Psalm 121:3;Proverbs 3:5-7;Isaiah 40:31;Isaiah 55:11;Zechariah 4:6.
Frequency and Form
Appearing with imperfect, jussive, cohortative, and participial forms, לֹא negates statements, commands, intentions, and descriptions alike, distinguishing it from אַל, which focuses on immediate prohibitions.
Ministry Significance
By God’s “no” to sin and false refuge, the pathway to His saving “yes” is cleared (2 Corinthians 1:20). Proclaiming what God forbids and denies faithfully sets the stage for the fullness of grace revealed in Jesus Christ, “who committed no sin, and no deceit was found in His mouth” (1 Peter 2:22).
Forms and Transliterations
אַל־ אל־ בְּ֝לֹ֗א בְּֽלֹא־ בְּֽלוֹא־ בְּל֣וֹא בְּלֹ֣א בְּלֹ֤א בְּלֹ֥א בְּלֹא֙ בְּלֹא־ בְּלוֹא־ בְלֹא־ בלא בלא־ בלוא בלוא־ הֲ֝לֹ֗א הֲ֠לוֹא הֲֽ֝לֹא־ הֲֽלֹא־ הֲֽלוֹא־ הֲל֕וֹא הֲל֖וֹא הֲל֗וֹא הֲל֛וֹא הֲל֞וֹא הֲל֣וֹא הֲל֣וֹא ׀ הֲל֤וֹא הֲל֥וֹא הֲל֧וֹא הֲל֨וֹא הֲלֹ֖א הֲלֹ֗א הֲלֹ֛א הֲלֹ֞א הֲלֹ֡א הֲלֹ֣א הֲלֹ֣א ׀ הֲלֹ֣ה הֲלֹ֤א הֲלֹ֥א הֲלֹ֧א הֲלֹ֨א הֲלֹֽא־ הֲלֹֽא׃ הֲלֹא֙ הֲלֹא֩ הֲלֹא֮ הֲלֹא־ הֲלֽוֹא־ הֲלוֹא֙ הֲלוֹא֩ הֲלוֹא־ הלא הלא־ הלא׃ הלה הלוא הלוא־ וְ֝לֹ֗א וְֽלֹא־ וְל֤וֹא וְל֥וֹא וְלֹ֖֣א וְלֹ֖א וְלֹ֖ו וְלֹ֗א וְלֹ֣א וְלֹ֣א ׀ וְלֹ֣ו וְלֹ֤א וְלֹ֥א וְלֹ֥א־ וְלֹ֥ו וְלֹ֧א וְלֹ֨א וְלֹ֪א וְלֹ֬א וְלֹֽא וְלֹֽא־ וְלֹא֙ וְלֹא֩ וְלֹא־ וְלֹו־ וַהֲל֤וֹא וָלֹ֕א וּבְל֥וֹא וּלְלֹ֛א וּלְלֹ֥א ובלוא והלוא ולא ולא־ ולו ולו־ ולוא וללא כְּל֥וֹא כלוא ל֕וֹא ל֖וֹא ל֣וֹא ל֣וֹא ׀ ל֤וֹא ל֥וֹא לְּלֹא־ לְל֣וֹא לְלֹ֣א לְלֹ֣א ׀ לְלֹ֥א לְלֹֽא־ לְלֹא־ לֹ֑ו לֹ֔א לֹ֕א לֹ֖א לֹ֖ו לֹ֗א לֹ֘א לֹ֚א לֹ֛א לֹ֞א לֹ֠א לֹ֡א לֹ֣֖א לֹ֣א לֹ֣א ׀ לֹ֣א־ לֹ֣ו לֹ֤א לֹ֤ו לֹ֥֖א לֹ֥א לֹ֥א־ לֹ֥ו לֹ֦א לֹ֧א לֹ֨א לֹ֪א לֹ֫א לֹ֭א לֹּ֔א לֹּ֣א לֹּ֥א לֹּֽא־ לֹּא־ לֹֽ֣א לֹֽ֣א־ לֹֽא לֹֽא־ לֹֽא׃ לֹֽו־ לֹא֙ לֹא֩ לֹא־ לֹו־ לֽוֹא־ לא לא־ לא׃ לו לוֹא־ לו־ לוא לוא־ ללא ללא־ ללוא שֶׁלֹּ֤א שֶׁלֹּ֥א שֶׁלֹּ֨א שלא ’al- al bə·lō bə·lō- ḇə·lō- bə·lō·w bə·lō·w- beLo bəlō bəlō- ḇəlō- bəlōw bəlōw- hă·lō hă·lō- hă·lō·w hă·lō·w- hă·lōh haLo hălō hălō- hălō·w- haLoh hălōh hălōw hălōw- kə·lō·w keLo kəlōw lə·lō lə·lō- lə·lō·w leLo ləlō ləlō- ləlōw lo lō lō- lō·w lō·w- loSha lov lōw lōw- šel·lō šellō shelLo ū·ḇə·lō·w ū·lə·lō ūḇəlōw uleLo ūləlō uveLo vahaLo vaLo veLo veloSha veloShi velov wa·hă·lō·w wā·lō wahălōw wālō wə·lō wə·lō- wə·lō·w wə·lōw wə·lōw- wəlō wəlō- wəlōw wəlōw-
Links
Interlinear Greek •
Interlinear Hebrew •
Strong's Numbers •
Englishman's Greek Concordance •
Englishman's Hebrew Concordance •
Parallel Texts