Nasa
To lift , in a great variety of applications, literal and figurative, absolute and relative · to take up (literally or figuratively)
Reading a lexicon entry
What this page is: Each lexicon entry shows the original Hebrew or Greek word behind the English translation: its meaning, its range of use, and where it appears in Scripture.
Strong's number: The Strong's code (H- or G-) is the standard reference number for this word. It connects this entry to chapter and passage language tabs.
Canonical witness: The witness passages show where this word is used in context. Click any to open the study page for that passage.
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Words in this compound — expand to study each participant
נָשָׂא H5375 to lift , in a great variety of applications, literal and figurative, absolute and relative
ἀναφέρω G399 to take up (literally or figuratively)
What does nasa (nasa) mean in the Bible?
נָשָׂא · ἀναφέρω is a Hebrew word meaning "to lift, carry, bear".
Full entry for nasa (H5375, G399) · Browse the biblical lexicon
Meaning
Grammatical Forms
How the stem changes the meaning of this verb across the biblical text.
Qal basic active stem — the word in its most common, direct sense 325×
Niphal passive or reflexive — the subject receives or experiences the action 16×
Piel intensive active — emphasizes thoroughness or repeated action 5×
Hithpael reflexive or reciprocal — the subject acts on itself or mutually with others 5×
Hebrew Verb Forms
How this verb appears across 351 occurrences in the Hebrew OT (OSHB Leningrad Codex).
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)
Cross-Language Connections
Greek words that correspond to or develop the meaning of this Hebrew word in the New Testament.
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