. . . . . . "Joshua (/\u02C8d\u0292\u0252\u0283u\u02D0\u0259/) or Jehoshua (Hebrew: \u05D9\u05B0\u05D4\u05D5\u05B9\u05E9\u05BB\u05C1\u05E2\u05B7 Y\u0115h\u00F4sh\u00FAa or Hebrew: \u05D9\u05B5\u05E9\u05C1\u05D5\u05BC\u05E2\u05B7 Y\u0115sh\u00FAa; Aramaic: \u071D\u072B\u0718\u0725\u200E Isho; Greek: \u1F38\u03B7\u03C3\u03BF\u1FE6\u03C2, Arabic: \u064A\u0648\u0634\u0639 \u0628\u0646 \u0646\u0648\u0646\u200E, Latin: Iosue, Y\u016Bsha\u02BF ibn N\u016Bn, Turkish: Yu\u015Fa), is a figure in the Torah, being one of the spies for Israel (Num 13\u201314) and identified in several passages as Moses' assistant. He is the central character in the Hebrew Bible's Book of Joshua."@en . "Joshua"@en . . "Prophet"@en . . . .