Hebrew Form Guide

זַרְעוֹ־ (zar·‘ōw-) in Genesis 1:11: Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular

זַרְעוֹ־ (zar·‘ōw-) in Genesis 1:11

Source Word

זַרְעוֹ־ zar·‘ōw- Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular

The BSB+ row for Genesis 1:11 links the English rendering "with seed" with זַרְעוֹ־, Strong's H2233, and the morphology tag N-msc | 3ms.

How The Form Affects Interpretation

The form clarifies that "with seed" is part of Genesis 1's ordered vegetation command. The grammar supports a relation inside the phrase rather than an isolated word study.

How To Communicate It

Use the form to ask what belongs within the created vegetation or fruit phrase. The answer is seed, read inside God's command for plants and trees according to kind.

What Not To Say

  • Grammar should serve context, not override it.
  • Do not draw theology from grammatical gender, number, or state apart from the verse.
  • Do not treat the construct relationship as a complete interpretation of the passage.
  • Do not treat this occurrence as a complete word study for the whole Hebrew lemma.
  • Do not treat the attached suffix as a full theology of the participant; let the verse identify the relationship.
  • Do not use the grammar profile as a shortcut around the wording and logic of the verse.

What Does The Label Mean?

Profile

Hebrew-nominal

Part of Speech

Noun

Form Label

Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular

Suffix

Third person masculine singular

Gender

Masculine

Number

Singular

State

Construct

Verse Role

This form carries the BSB rendering "with seed" within Genesis 1:11. Genesis 1 presents God as Creator who orders, names, blesses, and declares his creation good.

What The Form Does In This Verse

Attached To

The phrase rendered "with seed" in Genesis 1:11

Governed By

The construct noun with suffix stands inside God's command for vegetation and fruit trees to come forth according to kind.

Role In The Phrase

It identifies seed as belonging within the created plant or fruit phrase, supporting the ordered fruitfulness described in the command.

What It Is Not Doing

The form does not by itself settle biology, every use of H2233, or the full doctrine of creation order.

How Much The Form Matters Here

Interpretive Weight

High: The form contributes to Genesis 1's ordered vegetation command and its seed-bearing language.

Syntax Profile

Construct noun with third-person suffix. marks seed as belonging within the plant or fruit phrase. Attached to the seed-bearing phrase in Genesis 1:11. Governed by God's command for vegetation and fruit trees to come forth. The suffix relation should be interpreted from the immediate vegetation context.

Reader Question

What relation does the form mark in the vegetation command? It marks seed as belonging within the plant or fruit phrase in Genesis 1:11.

Translation Effect

Direct: The construct noun and suffix directly support the seed relation rendered in English as "with seed."

Where Caution Is Needed

The suffix relation should be read from the immediate plant and fruit context, not generalized beyond the clause. The grammar identifies a seed relation; it does not supply a full biological or theological account by itself.

Fallacies To Avoid

Construct form proves creation biology by itself: The form clarifies the phrase relation; Genesis 1 supplies the creation context. masculine means male: Masculine here is grammatical gender and should not be turned into a biological claim.

How The Interpretation Is Derived

Textual Witness

The BSB+ row for Genesis 1:11 links the English rendering "with seed" with זַרְעוֹ־, Strong's H2233, and the morphology tag N-msc | 3ms.

Lexical Identity

H2233 is represented here by the lemma זֶרַע. In this occurrence, the public guide is limited to the BSB rendering "with seed" rather than every possible gloss of the entry.

Grammar In Context

Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular functions as a construct phrase in Genesis 1:11. The suffix marks seed related to the plant or fruit phrase in God's creation command.

Passage Meaning

Genesis 1 presents God as Creator who orders, names, blesses, and declares his creation good.

Canonical Fit

The form fits Scripture's creation witness, where God's word and action establish the world as dependent on him.

Communication Use

When teaching Genesis 1:11, use this form to show that the verse describes ordered fruitfulness in the created vegetation, while avoiding claims that outrun the clause.

Do Not Derive

Do not make the construct form alone prove a full doctrine of biological reproduction or creation order. The form clarifies the seed relation in this verse.