See also: כ־ פה

Hebrew edit

Etymology 1 edit

Noun edit

כִּפָּה (kipáf

  1. defective spelling of כיפה

Etymology 2 edit

Root
כ־פ־ה (k-p-h)

Verb edit

כָּפָה (kafá) third-singular masculine past (pa'al construction)

  1. (transitive) (He/it) overturned
  2. (transitive) (He/it) coerced, forced
    • a. 1200, Maimonides, משנה תורה,‎ הלכות עבדים‎ 8:17:
      עבד שהשיאו רבו בת חורין או שהניח לו רבו תפילין בראשו [] יצא לחירות וכופין את רבו לכתוב לו גט שיחרור
      A slave to whom his master married a freewoman, or on whose head his master placed phylacteries, [] goes to freedom, and we force his master to write him a document of emancipation.
    • a. 1200, Maimonides, משנה תורה,‎ הלכות עבדים‎ 8:17:
      שכיון שלא כפה אותו במקום שיש לו לכפותו
      for, since he did not force him in a circumstance in which he should force him
Conjugation edit

Etymology 3 edit

Noun edit

כַּפָּהּ (kapáh)

  1. singular form of כף (kaf) with third-person feminine singular personal pronoun as possessor

Etymology 4 edit

Root
כ־ו־ף (k-w-p)

Verb edit

כָּפָה (káfa (past tense), kafá (present tense))

  1. Third-person feminine singular past (suffix conjugation) of כף (kaf).
  2. Feminine singular present participle and present tense of כף (kaf).

Anagrams edit