מָוֶת
mâveth · maw'-veth · noun · “death”
Maweth means death — the great enemy that sin brought into the world. The Old Testament longs for the day God will “swallow up death forever” — fulfilled in Christ’s resurrection.
Maweth is the Hebrew word for death — both physical and, in the prophets, the spiritual ruin sin produces. It enters the story in Genesis 3 as the sentence on sin.
But God promises to undo it: “He will swallow up death forever” (Isaiah 25:8). The New Testament announces that promise fulfilled in Jesus, who “tasted death for everyone” and was raised, breaking maweth’s grip.
Definition: death (natural or violent); concretely, the dead, their place or state (hades); figuratively, pestilence, ruin
KJV usage: (be) dead(-ly), death, die(-d).
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.