תְּקוּמָה
te.qu.mah
standing
Lexicon Entry
Lexicon data from STEPBible TIPNR, Tyndale House, Cambridge. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.
What Original Readers Understood
Supported# תְּקוּמָה (tequmah) – "Standing" This Hebrew word appears only once in the biblical text, making it a rare term in the scriptural record. The lexicon identifies its basic meaning as "standing," which refers to the physical state or act of being upright or positioned in place. Despite its singular occurrence, the word carries the conceptual weight of stability and presence that the root concept of "standing" typically conveys in ancient Hebrew thought. The rarity of this particular form limits our ability to observe how its meaning might shift across different contexts or literary genres. With only one biblical occurrence, we cannot determine whether the word was an archaic term, a stylistic variant, or simply an uncommon way of expressing the concept of standing compared to more frequently used synonyms. This scarcity means the word's full semantic range—what nuances of meaning it might have carried for ancient audiences—remains largely inaccessible from the biblical evidence alone. For readers approaching biblical Hebrew, תְּקוּמָה represents the kind of word that appears peripherally in scriptural language, contributing to its overall texture without establishing patterns of usage that would illuminate broader theological or narrative significance.
Source data & methodology
Occurrences in Scripture
1 total occurrence across the text