¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hebraizes
1. hebraize [v] - See also: hebraize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hebraizes
Literary usage of Hebraizes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Companion to the Greek Testament and the English Version by Philip Schaff (1883)
"Matthew's style is simple, calm, dignified, even majestic, lie hebraizes, but
less than Mark and the first two chapters of Luke ..."
2. Essays on Some Biblical Questions of the Day by Henry Barclay Swete (1909)
"... Logos is a dynamic principle—in this he hebraizes. But he is also a cosmic
principle, who accounts for the existence of the world and its order. ..."
3. The Journal of Sacred Literature by John Kitto, Henry Burgess, Benjamin Harris Cowper (1851)
"But, in the New Testament, which hebraizes to an amazing extent, the usage is
frequent, as it also is in the simplest and plainest Arabic, Syriac, ..."
4. Benedict de Spinoza: His Life, Correspondence, and Ethics by Robert Willis (1870)
"... is because you measure phrases in Eastern languages by European modes of
speech; and though John wrote his Gospel in Greek, he hebraizes nevertheless. ..."