Biblica Analytica

אַכְזָב

akh.zav (H0391)

deceptive

2 verses 2 books OT 2 / NT 0
AI Word Study

# The Hebrew Word "Akhzav" (אַכְזָב) The Hebrew term *akhzav* carries the meaning "deceptive" and appears only twice in the biblical text. This rarity limits our ability to establish a comprehensive range of usage from the scriptures alone, though the consistent semantic field points to ideas of falsehood and unreliability. The word belongs to a category of Hebrew vocabulary concerned with deception and broken promises—concepts that held considerable weight in ancient Israelite thought and ethics. Because *akhzav* occurs only twice in the biblical corpus, each instance carries particular significance for understanding how the ancient writers employed this specific term rather than synonymous alternatives. The limited attestation suggests that while the concept of deception was expressed through multiple Hebrew words, *akhzav* may have carried a distinct nuance or been reserved for particular contexts. Without access to the specific passages where it appears, we cannot determine whether both occurrences share identical semantic force or whether the term's meaning carried contextual variation in its two biblical uses.

AI synthesis uses only provided lexicon data -- never training knowledge.

Jeremiah 15:18

Why is my pain perpetual, and my wound incurable, which refuses to be healed? Will you indeed be to me as a deceitful brook, like waters that fail?

Micah 1:14

Therefore you will give a parting gift to Moresheth Gath. The houses of Achzib will be a deceitful thing to the kings of Israel.