Sheaf = ×לומה (alumah)
sheaf is not a Hebrew word. It's an English word: sheaf/ʃif/ (noun, plural sheaves, verb) noun 1. one of the bundles in which cereal plants, as wheat, rye, etc., are bound after reaping. 2. any bundle, cluster, or collection: a sheaf of papers. verb (used with object) 3. to bind (something) into a sheaf or sheaves.
My Sheaf
The noun sheaf is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for stems of grain that have been cut and tied together; a large number of pieces of paper that are kept together; a word for a thing. The noun sheaf is also used as a collective noun for a sheaf of corn, a sheaf of wheat, a sheaf of paper, a sheaf of arrows.
The noun 'sheaf' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.The noun 'sheaf' also functions as a collective noun, for example a sheaf of wheat.
ah-loo-MAH, אלומה
Sheaf
The collective nouns are:a sheaf of wheata sheaf of corna sheaf of graina sheaf of papersa sheaf of arrows
A bundle of wheat is called a sheaf. The plural is sheaves.
carting sheaf of corn.
The Sheaf was created in 1912.
A sheaf of paper is a quantity of paper.
The past tense of sheaf is sheafed.