yokefellow 4805 # suzugos {sood'-zoo-gos}; from 4801; co-yoked, i.e. (figuratively) as noun, a colleague; probably rather as a proper name; Syzygus, a Christian: -- {yokefellow}.[ql fell 5307 ## naphal {naw-fal'}; a primitive root; to fall, in a great variety of applications (intransitive or causative, literal or figurative): -- be accepted, cast (down, self, [lots], out), cease, die, divide (by lot), (let) fail, (cause to, let, make, ready to) fall (away, down, -en, -ing), {fell}(-ing), fugitive, have [inheritance], inferior, be judged [by mistake for 6419], lay (along), (cause to) lie down, light (down), be (X hast) lost, lying, overthrow, overwhelm, perish, present(-ed, - ing), (make to) rot, slay, smite out, X surely, throw down.[ql fell 1356 # diopetes {dee-op-et'-ace}; from the alternate of 2203 and the alternate of 4098; sky-fallen (i.e. an aerolite): -- which {fell} down from Jupiter.[ql feller 3772 ## karath {kaw-rath'}; a primitive root; to cut (off, down or asunder); by implication, to destroy or consume; specifically, to covenant (i.e. make an alliance or bargain, originally by cutting flesh and passing between the pieces): -- be chewed, be con-[feder-]ate, covenant, cut (down, off), destroy, fail, {feller}, be freed, hew (down), make a league ([covenant]), X lose, perish, X utterly, X want. [ql felloe 2839 ## chishshuq {khish-shook'}; from 2836; conjoined, i. e. a wheel-spoke or rod connecting the hub with the rim: -- {felloe}. [ql fellow 0376 ## >iysh {eesh}; contracted for 582 [or perhaps rather from an unused root meaning to be extant]; a man as an individual or a male person; often used as an adjunct to a more definite term (and in such cases frequently not expressed in translation): -- also, another, any (man), a certain, + champion, consent, each, every (one), {fellow}, [foot-, husband-]man, [good-, great, mighty) man, he, high (degree), him (that is), husband, man[-kind], + none, one, people, person, + steward, what (man) soever, whoso(-ever), worthy. Compare 802. [ql fellow 0582 ## >enowsh {en-oshe'}; from 605; properly, a mortal (and thus differing from the more dignified 120); hence, a man in general (singly or collectively): -- another, X [blood- ]thirsty, certain, chap[-man]; divers, {fellow}, X in the flower of their age, husband, (certain, mortal) man, people, person, servant, some ( X of them), + stranger, those, + their trade. It is often unexpressed in the English versions, especially when used in apposition with another word . Compare 376. [ql fellow 2269 ## chabar (Aramaic) {khab-ar'}; from a root corresponding to 2266; an associate: -- companion, {fellow}. [ql fellow 2270 ## chaber {khaw-bare'}; from 2266; an associate: -- companion, {fellow}, knit together. [ql fellow 5997 ##