Strong's #5737: `adar (pronounced aw-dar')
a primitive root; to arrange, as a battle, a vineyard (to hoe); hence, to muster and so to miss (or find wanting):--dig, fail, keep (rank), lack.
Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon:
‛âdar
1) to help
1a) (Qal) to help
2) to hoe
2a) (Niphal) to be hoed
3) to be lacking, fail
3a) (Niphal)
3b1) to be lacking
3b1) to leave lacking
3b) (Piel) to leave lacking
Part of Speech: verb
Relation: a primitive root
Same Word by TWOT Number: 1570, 1571, 1572
Usage:
This word is used 11 times:
1 Samuel 30:19: "And there was nothing lacking to them, neither small nor great, neither sons"
2 Samuel 17:22: "by the morning light there lacked not one of them that was not"
1 Kings 4:27: "table, every man in his month: they lacked nothing."
1 Chronicles 12:33: "instruments of war, fifty thousand, which could keep rank: they were not of double heart."
1 Chronicles 12:38: "these men of war, that could keep rank, came with a perfect heart"
Isaiah 5:6: "it shall not be pruned, nor digged; but there shall come up briers and thorns: I will also command"
Isaiah 7:25: "And on all hills that shall be digged with the mattock, there shall not come thither"
Isaiah 34:16: "and read: no one of these shall fail, none"
Isaiah 40:26: "for that he is strong in power; not one faileth."
Isaiah 59:15: "Yea, truth faileth; and he that departeth from evil maketh himself a prey: and the LORD"
Zephaniah 3:5: "every morning doth he bring his judgment to light, he faileth not; but the unjust knoweth"