תשורה
Hebrew
Etymology
Uncertain.
- According to Strong, from the root שׁוּר, forming words relating to travelling.
Note that the verbs תָּשַׁר (tashár, “to make a gift/give a present”) and הִתְשִׁיר (hit'shír, “?”) are denominative verbs from תְּשׁוּרָה.
Pronunciation
- (Modern Israeli Hebrew) IPA(key): /teʃuˈʁa/
- (Tiberian Hebrew) IPA(key): /təʃuːˈʀɔː/
Noun
תְּשׁוּרָה • (t'shurá) f
Synonyms
- מַתָּנָה (mataná)
- שַׁי (sháy)
- דּוֹרוֹן (dorón)
- אֶשְׁכָּר (eshkár)
- זֶבֶד (zéved), זֵבֶד
- מִנְחָה (minkhá)
- מַתָּת (matát)
Derived terms
- תָּשַׁר (tashár, “to make a gift/give a present”)
- הִתְשִׁיר (hit'shír, “?”)
- תֶּשֶׁר (tésher, “(biblical, poetic) gift, (modern) tip, gratuity”)
References
- H8670 in Strong, James (1979) Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance to the Bible
- Klein, Ernest (1987) “תְּשׁוּרָה”, in A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the Hebrew Language for Readers of English[1], Jerusalem: Carta, →ISBN, page 720a