348. The preposition ta'hat comes from the noun ta'hat, "what is underneath".
352. Ta'hat of exchange (instead of, in place of). The proposition ta'hat may indicate that something is a substitute for its object. This is also referred to as the ta'hat of substitution.
"He offered it up as burnt offering in the place of his son" (Gn. 22-13)
130. Reflexive pronoun (-self). Hebrew lacks a dedicated reflexive pronoun (e.g. myself, himself) but the reflexive idea may be expressed with a verb in the Niph'al stem (§135), a verb in the Hitpa'el stem (§152, 154, 155), a pronominal suffix (particularly on L6, § 272) or with nefesh, 'soul'.