Hebrew · H5753, G1294 · unreviewed

נַעֲוֵה

To crook , literally or figuratively · to pervert

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Words in this compound — expand to study each participant

עָוָה H5753 to crook , literally or figuratively
Pronunciation ʿiwwāh
Moral crookedness: physical bending metaphorically extends to ethical distortion and iniquity before God.
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διαστρέφω G1294 to pervert
Pronunciation diastréphō
To twist or distort, especially morally or doctrinally; describing those who corrupt truth or teaching.
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What does נַעֲוֵה (na'aveh) mean in the Bible?

עָוָה · διαστρέφω is a Hebrew word meaning "twisted, distorted, morally crooked".

Full entry for נַעֲוֵה (H5753, G1294) · Browse the biblical lexicon

Meaning

twisted, distorted, morally crooked
Grammatical Forms

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

Hiphil causative active — the subject causes someone else to perform the action
Perfect 2Chr 6:37 · Ps 106:6 · 2Sam 24:17 · Job 33:27 · 2Sam 19:20 · Jer 3:21
Infinitive absolute Jer 9:4
Niphal passive or reflexive — the subject receives or experiences the action
Perfect Isa 21:3 · Ps 38:7
Participle active 1Sam 20:30
Qal basic active stem — the word in its most common, direct sense
Perfect Esth 1:16
Piel intensive active — emphasizes thoroughness or repeated action
Perfect Lam 3:9
Hebrew Verb Forms

How this verb appears across 12 occurrences in the Hebrew OT (OSHB Leningrad Codex).

Aspect / Form
Perfect 10 Participle 1 Infinitive absolute 1
Stem
Hiphil 7 Niphal 3 Qal 1 Piel 1
Mood
Indicative 10

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