Hebrew · H3811, G2872 · unreviewed

לָאָה

To tire ; (figuratively) to be (or make ) disgusted · to feel fatigue; by implication, to work hard

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Words in this compound — expand to study each participant

לָאָה H3811 to tire ; (figuratively) to be (or make ) disgusted
Pronunciation lāʾāh
Weariness that deepens into emotional disgust or loathing; exhaustion of body manifests as revulsion of spirit.
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κοπιάω G2872 to feel fatigue; by implication, to work hard
Pronunciation kopiáō
To labor intensely with physical or spiritual exertion; exhaustion results from the work itself, not mere activity
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What does לָאָה (la'ah) mean in the Bible?

לָאָה · κοπιάω is a Hebrew word meaning "to become tired or exhausted".

Full entry for לָאָה (H3811, G2872) · Browse the biblical lexicon

Meaning

to become tired or exhausted
Grammatical Forms

How the stem changes the meaning of this verb across the biblical text.

Niphal passive or reflexive — the subject receives or experiences the action
Perfect Isa 1:14 · Jer 6:11 · Jer 15:6 · Isa 16:12 · Prov 26:15 · Isa 47:13 · Jer 9:4
Hiphil causative active — the subject causes someone else to perform the action
Perfect Ezek 24:12
Infinitive construct Isa 7:13
Imperfect Isa 7:13
Qal basic active stem — the word in its most common, direct sense
Imperfect Job 4:2
Hebrew Verb Forms

How this verb appears across 11 occurrences in the Hebrew OT (OSHB Leningrad Codex).

Aspect / Form
Perfect 8 Imperfect 2 Infinitive construct 1
Stem
Niphal 7 Hiphil 3 Qal 1
Mood
Indicative 8 Indicative/jussive 2

Aspect in Hebrew reflects grammatical form, not tense. "Perfect" (Perfective) typically denotes completed action; "Imperfect" (Imperfective) denotes incomplete or ongoing action. Stem modifies the action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive, etc.).

Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)

Word Pictures (Robertson)

A.T. Robertson's Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) discusses this term in the following chapters. Open any chapter and go to the Word Pictures tab to read his verse-by-verse commentary.

A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) — public domain

Sources