Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com

Hephzibah

American  
[hef-zuh-buh, -suh-, hep-suh-buh] / ˈhɛf zə bə, -sə-, ˈhɛp sə bə /

noun

  1. (in the Bible) the wife of Hezekiah and the mother of Manasseh.

  2. (in the Bible) a name applied to Jerusalem.

  3. Also Hepsiba a female given name.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Bisola Hephzibah Johnson, another former disciple, told the BBC she persuaded Marten not to return to Scoan in 2013 to carry out secret filming for her documentary, saying it would be too dangerous.

From BBC • Jul. 15, 2025

Cather was also struck by his younger sisters, writing to her nieces that the girls, Hephzibah and Yaltah, musicians too, were “almost as gifted and quite as handsome as he.”

From New York Times • Jan. 4, 2024

In 2016, writer Hephzibah Anderson connected Dahl's work with child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim's study "The Uses of Enchantment."

From Salon • Oct. 24, 2020

In her future books, I hope MacBird lets us see even more of Holmes’s female Baker Street Irregular, the street-smart, half-Irish, half-Jewish cockney Hephzibah O’Malley.

From Washington Post • Nov. 27, 2019

The subjects of these memoirs—Ann Jane Woolford, George Woolford, and Hephzibah Woolford—were born in the beautiful town of Cheltenham, August 20th, 1840, January 28th, 1842, and February 14th, 1846.

From The Little Gleaner, Vol. X. A Monthly Magazine for the Young by Various