Lexical Summary radad: to beat out, beat down, subdue Original Word: רָדַדTransliteration: radad Phonetic Spelling: (raw-dad') Part of Speech: Verb Short Definition: to beat out, beat down, subdue Meaning: to tread in pieces, to conquer, to overlay Strong's Concordance spend, spread, subdue A primitive root; to tread in pieces, i.e. (figuratively) to conquer, or (specifically) to overlay -- spend, spread, subdue. Brown-Driver-Briggs H7286. radad [רָדַד] verb beat out, figurative beat down, subdue (Late Hebrew Pi`el stamp or beat down, make flat, spread out; רְדַד ᵑ7 beat out; compare probably Arabic repel, reject (NöM 75); Assyrian radâdu is pursue (rare)); — Qal, figurative, beat down: Infinitive construct גּוֺיִם לְפָנָיו לְרַד Isaiah 45:1; Participle active תַּחְתָּ֑י עַמִּי הָרוֺדֵד Psalm 144:2; — so also Imperfect יָרֹד Isaiah 41:2 accusative Ew and others (for יַרְדְּ ᵑ0, see I. רדה Hiph`il). — Judges 19:11 read יָרַד. Hiph`il literally beat out: Imperfect3masculine singular אֶתהַֿזָּהָב ֗֗֗ עַלהַֿכְּרוּבִים וַיָּ֫רֶד 1 Kings 6:32 and beat out the gold upon the cherubim (covered them with beaten gold). |