Hebrew · H605 · unreviewed

אָנַשׁ

To be frail , feeble , or (figuratively) melancholy

These lexicon entries are being actively developed. If you notice missing content, incorrect definitions, or have suggestions, we'd love to hear from you. Share a note on our Connect page and include a screenshot if helpful.

אָנַשׁ H605
Pronunciation anushah

What does אָנַשׁ (anushah) mean in the Bible?

אָנַשׁ (anushah) is a Hebrew word meaning "to be frail , feeble , or (figuratively) melancholy". to be frail, feeble, or (figuratively) melancholy BDB: be weak Usage: desperate(-ly wicked), incurable, sick, woeful. It portrays the depth of Judah’s spiritual condition, highlighting the need for divine intervention rather than superficial reform.

Full entry for אָנַשׁ (H605) · Browse the biblical lexicon

Meaning

to be frail , feeble , or (figuratively) melancholy
Extended definition

Describes human weakness and vulnerability, moving from physical frailty to existential hopelessness or desperation.

to be frail, feeble, or (figuratively) melancholy BDB: be weak Usage: desperate(-ly wicked), incurable, sick, woeful.

Source: Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon + Brown-Driver-Briggs
Why This Word Matters
It portrays the depth of Judah’s spiritual condition, highlighting the need for divine intervention rather than superficial reform. Micah 1:6-9
Grammatical Forms

How this word appears across different grammatical cases and numbers.

Biblical Occurrences

Each occurrence shows the passage reference, the original language term as it appears in that context, its transliteration, and the contextual sense.

Showing 8 of 9 occurrences in the biblical text.

Appears In

Compound and idiomatic lexemes in which this word is a constituent. Follow a link to study the phrase and its other participating words.

Sources