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Exodus 3:2

A Consuming Bramble
And he is seeing an angel of He Is toward himself within a heart of fire from the center of the Bramble. And he is seeing, and behold! the Bramble has consumed within a fire, and the Bramble, he is not food.2,3

Footnote:

Exo. 3:2

ืื™ื ื ื• (einenu) is a word that specifically refers to non-existence or absence rather than negating a verb. It is used to mean "he is not" or "it is not," and primarily conveys the idea of something not existing or being absent, rather than negating an action.

The word ืื™ื ื ื• (inenu) is a negation/counterpart of the verb ื”ื™ื” (to be), meaning "is not" or "does not exist." This construct occurs 47 times. It is used to express the absence or non-existence of something or someone, often indicating temporal or spatial absence. Commonly found in contexts describing the disappearance or non-presence of a subject or entity, ืื™ื ื ื• negates the presence or state of being of the subject. For example, in Gen. 5:24, "And Enoch walked with God, and he is not (ืื™ื ื ื•) because God took him," ืื™ื ื ื• emphasizes Enoch's departure. Similarly, in Gen. 31:2, it indicates Laban's absence: "And Jacob saw the face of Laban, and behold, he is not (ืื™ื ื ื•) with him." The term appears frequently in the Hebrew Bible to signify the absence or non-existence of persons, actions, or conditions in a given time or space.

The literal translation of ืื™ื ื ื• ืื›ืœ therefore would be "there is no eating" or "eating is not happening," which emphasizes the absence of the action of eating, rather than focusing on the subject of the action.

  • ืื™ื ื ื•: "there is not" or "it is not" (indicating the non-existence or absence of the action).
  • ืื›ืœ: "eating" (noun or gerund form of the verb).