דָבַר
dâbar · daw-bar' · verb · “to speak”
Dabar (verb) means to speak — closely related to the noun for “word.” God speaks creation, covenant, prophets, and finally his Son.
Dabar as a verb means to speak. The same root gives us the noun for “word.” Hebrew thinking holds them together: speaking and what is spoken are one event.
When God speaks (medabber), things happen — worlds arise, prophets are sent, covenants are made. Hebrews opens by saying he “has spoken (elalēsen) to us by his Son” — the final dabar.
Definition: perhaps properly, to arrange; but used figuratively (of words), to speak; rarely (in a destructive sense) to subdue
KJV usage: answer, appoint, bid, command, commune, declare, destroy, give, name, promise, pronounce, rehearse, say, speak, be spokesman, subdue, talk, teach, tell, think, use (entreaties), utter, [idiom] well, [idiom] work.
Reference gloss from Strong's Concordance (1890, public domain).
Original BibleDawn word study. Original-language data and the public-domain Strong's (1890) gloss are referenced; see sources.