וָאֹמַ֕ר (wā·’ō·mar) in Isaiah 6:11: Conjunctive waw | Verb - Qal - Consecutive imperfect - first person common singular
וָאֹמַ֕ר (wā·’ō·mar) in Isaiah 6:11
Source Word
The BSB+ row for Isaiah 6:11 links the English rendering "Then I asked" with וָאֹמַ֕ר, Strong's H559, and the morphology label Conj-w | V-Qal-ConsecImperf-1cs.
How The Form Affects Interpretation
The form clarifies the turn-taking in the vision scene, but the meaning of the speech depends on the words that follow.
How To Communicate It
When teaching Isaiah 6:11, use this form to show who is speaking in the vision sequence before explaining the content of the speech.
What Not To Say
- Grammar should serve context, not override it.
- Do not make the speech formula carry the whole theology of holiness, cleansing, or judgment.
- Do not use the stem label alone to settle a theological claim.
- Do not treat this occurrence as a complete word study for the whole Hebrew lemma.
What Does The Label Mean?
Hebrew-verb
Verb
Conjunctive waw | Verb - Qal - Consecutive imperfect - first person common singular
Conjunctive waw
Qal
Consecutive imperfect
First person
Common
Singular
The consecutive imperfect form participates in the verse's movement; Isaiah 6:11 determines whether the reader should hear sequence, result, or narrative progress.
This form carries the BSB rendering "Then I asked" within Isaiah 6:11. Isaiah 6 shows the prophet before the holy Lord, receiving cleansing and a commission in the presence of divine glory.
What The Form Does In This Verse
Isaiah's speech in Isaiah 6:11
Isaiah's question after receiving the hardening commission
The waw-linked Qal consecutive imperfect carries the next speech turn in Isaiah 6 and identifies Isaiah as the speaker in context.
The form does not by itself settle the whole theology of Isaiah's vision, cleansing, commission, or judgment.
How Much The Form Matters Here
High: The form helps identify the speaker in a major prophetic vision scene.
Waw-linked Hebrew sequence form. marks the next speech turn in the vision narrative. Attached to Isaiah's speech in Isaiah 6:11. Governed by Isaiah's question after receiving the hardening commission. The waw-linked consecutive imperfect advances the local discourse, but the verse and passage decide how the action relates to the larger argument.
Who is speaking at this point in the vision? Isaiah is the speaker in this speech turn.
Direct: The form directly supports the rendering "Then I asked" as the next speech action.
The waw-linked consecutive imperfect advances the local discourse, but the verse and passage decide how the action relates to the larger argument. The attached waw should be explained from the clause relation rather than treated as a stand-alone theological signal. The form identifies a speech turn, but the interpretation comes from the speech content and the vision context.
Consecutive imperfect proves every chronology claim: The form advances the discourse; broader chronology or theology must be argued from the passage, not the sequence form alone. stem label settles the theology: The Hebrew stem identifies the verbal pattern; the passage supplies the theological claim. grammar replaces context: The morphology should clarify the clause while remaining governed by the surrounding passage.
How The Interpretation Is Derived
The BSB+ row for Isaiah 6:11 links the English rendering "Then I asked" with וָאֹמַ֕ר, Strong's H559, and the morphology label Conj-w | V-Qal-ConsecImperf-1cs.
H559 is represented here by the lemma אָמַר. In this occurrence, the public guide is limited to the BSB rendering "Then I asked" rather than every possible gloss of the entry.
The first person common singular marks Isaiah as the speaker, while the attached waw moves the vision narrative to his response.
Isaiah 6 shows the prophet before the holy Lord, receiving cleansing and a commission in the presence of divine glory.
The form fits Scripture's witness to holiness, cleansing, and commissioned speech before the Lord.
When teaching Isaiah 6:11, use this form to show who is speaking in the vision sequence before explaining the content of the speech.
Do not derive the whole theology of holiness, cleansing, commission, or judgment from the waw-linked speech form alone.