יום שבת, 27 יוני 2026Saturday, June 27, 2026
Follow Us
יום שבת, י״ב תמוז תשפ״וSaturday, June 27, 2026
Follow Us

Sections

Categories:

In Hebrew: 'To Purchase'

By Ami Steinberger

|

February 5, 2013, 12 PM ET

לִרְכּוֹשׁ

Yesterday, we saw the Hebrew word for shopping - קְנִיּוֹת- which comes from the verb, to buy - לִקְנוֹת. In English, we have the everyday verb to buy, as well as higher-register verbs to purchase and to acquire. Hebrew is no different: while לקנות is the everyday verb, לִרְכּוֹשׁa word appearing in abundance in Biblical Hebrew, denotes the act of purchasing something of greater substance. For example:

הִיא רָכְשָׁה* כַּרְטִיסִים לַמַּחֲזֶמֶר. She purchased tickets to the musical.

The act of purchasing or acquiring is רְכִישָׁה. For example:

בְּיַחַד הֵם הֵקִימוּ קְבוּצַת רְכִישָׁה. Together they established an acquisitions group.

Likewise, something that has been acquired - property - is רְכוּשׁ. And the business activity of acquisitions or procurement is called רֶכֶשׁ. Visit Ktzat Ivrit.

Serials

Freedom Is the Ownership of Time

By Itamar Frankenthal

View all

Sponsored Posts

cross