גנז
Hebrew
Etymology
| Root |
|---|
| ג־נ־ז (g-n-z) |
From the root ג־נ־ז (g-n-z), probably from Persian گنج (ganj, “treasure”, noun); compare Classical Syriac ܓܙܐ (gazzā) and Arabic كنز (kanz).
Verb
גָּנַז • (ganáz) third-singular masculine past (pa'al construction, future יגנוז / יִגְנֹז, passive participle גָּנוּז)
- (Talmudic) to suppress (a book) as heretical
- a. 500 C.E., Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 30b:
- בַּקְּשׁוּ חֲכָמִים לִגְנֹז סֵפֶר קֹהֶלֶת מִפְּנֵי שֶׁדְּבָרָיו סוֹתְרִין זֶה אֶת זֶה.
- Baqshú ḥakhamim lignoz séfer Kohélet mipnéi she-dvaráv sotrín zeh et zeh
- The sages sought to suppress as heretical the book of Ecclesiastes because its words contradict one another
Conjugation
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