senHebChalLexOTS Aleph Tregelles1857 Ggle MSFT
senHebChalLexOTS Aleph Tregelles1857 Ggle MSFT
senHebChalLexOTS Aleph Tregelles1857 Ggle MSFT
K
T^HE name of this letter of the alphabet, which, like in, to drink ; D&J}3 suddenly, from PD a moment of
those of the other letters, is of Phoenician origin, time, etc.
signifiesan ox, i. q. Heb. *!/, as we are told by When this letter is to be yet further softened, it
Plutarch (Quaest. Symp. ix. 2), who says that Aleph changes into the quiescents 1 and ', as 1HK and in*
is
placed before the other letters Sia rove 4>otVticac to join; *|?N .<Ov. to learn; DK"), Dn buffalo; "rill
ovrtit icaXelv TOV ftovv. The name of this letter is . . "
for "1N3 a well. Thus it is that many verbs NQ accord
derived from figure in the most ancient alphabet,
its
which represents the rude outlines of the head of an in signification with those iy (comp. Gesen. Gr. 76.
ox, which is still found in the remains of the Phoe-
2,6), Bta; P3K Syr. u^ to be sick.
BHK and
nician inscriptions
^,^^C*
As a numeral it As to the form of words, it should be remarked
stands for one; with two dots above it (x) a
(l) that in Hebrew N without a vowel is very often
thousand.
rejected from the beginning of a word by aphceresis,
Aleph has the softest pronunciation of the guttural as I?3S,
WH3 we; 1? >? at a later period <>> who, ;
letters, and it is uttered with a light breathing of and 10 one, Eze. 33 30 Dn-IDH
which, that; *in :
;
into
N is also prefixed to the letter Yod, as and 'B ^
Jesse, iCh. 2:12.
H and y; and generally these letters, as being very
nearly allied in pronunciation, are very often inter- construct ?8, with suffix 3, T3,
changed. Comp. in the later Hebrew TH for the pi.n'nx, const. n*n|, with suff.'rat? o^nbs, bnbi
common 'H?; 3*?^ an ear of corn, compare Syriac and DH'nbX, m. FATHER; a primitive noun (see note
? 9 p t
Lx^cn flower; HX3 and nna, HN? and HrO; also l), common to all the Phcenicio-Shemitic languages,
D?K and D3V to be sad "NX and T>y to turn (both are
;
Chaldee and Syriac
also found in ^Ethiopia); 7X3 and 7V.3 to pollute, to
(Arab. ^\ const.
j\ ^i-1,
\i\
stain; 3Nn and 3y.Jp to abhor; KC3 and yO| to suck . But the word father
"
has often a njicl
2
wider meaning (see Fesselii Adv. sacra, vi. 6) ;
it is called Seurepoc Trarr/p of Artaxerxes (Est. 3:13, LXX)
used: (l) Of any ancestor (3Cbn, 2Ct)nt)err), l Ki. 15:
Compare I Mace. 11 :32, and Turkish ijjj\j\ father-
11; 8 Ki. 14:3; 1/5:38; i6>2, etc., as of a grand- prince; also Lala, father, applied to the vizier; (see
father, Gen. 28:13; 31:42; 32:10; 37:35; great Jablonskii Opuscc. ed. te Water, torn. i. p. 206, and
grandfather, Num. 18:1, 2; 1 Kings 15:11, 24, etc.; Barhebnei Chron. Syr. p. 219, line 15). The same
Isa.43:24, KBn fltraqn yiX collectively, "thy re- was understood by some of the ancient interpreters,
motest ancestors have sinned'' [this should, how- whom Luther also has followed in the word "Hl^N
ever, be taken strictly]. So, very often in pi. H13X Gen. 41:43, which they explain, "father of the
ancestors, Gen. 15:15; Ps. 45:17. As to the phrase king," or of the land, or kingdom.
nntf-^X f]DX3 see under the word *]DN. connec-
(7) It is further used to express intimate
(a) Used of thefounder, or first ancestor, of tion and relationship; Job 17:14, T>N"Ji? ^ntST?
a nation, Gen. 10:21; 17:4,6; 19 37; 36 9,43; PtFIX '3K " I have said to the
= =
pit [rather corruption,
Josh. 24:3. Here belongs Gen. 4:21, "the father see rin^], thou art my father;" in the other hemis-
who handle the harp and the founder " and to the mother and sister."
of all pipe," i. e. tich, worms, my
of the family of music inventor of the art of music.
;
Comp. Ps. 88:19.
(3) Of the author, or maker, of anything, spe- (8) In Arabic and ^Ethiopic, the word father
cially of the Creator, Job 38: 2 8, "has the rain a is also applied to a possessor, and is used of one
father?" i. e. Creator. And in this sense God is said who is endued with any thing, or excels in it ; e. g.
to be
" the father of men," Isa. 63:16; 64:7; Deut. /li \
"father of odour," i.e. an odoriferous tree.
32:6[?] comp. Jer. 2:27. [See note a.] All these So in Hebrew, but only in pr. n. e. g.
;
tropical uses come from the notion of origin; there " fath er of
peace," i. e. peaceful.
are others taken from the love and care of a father,
Note 1. Although this word in its grammatical
from the honour due to him, etc. For
form follows the analogy of verbs H?, so that it may
(4) Father is applied to a bringer up, nou-
rish er, as bestowing his benefits like a parent, Job be said to be for H2X (Lehrg. 1 18), yet it must most
" I was a father to the
29:16, Ps. needy;" 68:6, certainly be regarded as a primitive word since ;
called ~iy *3N "eternal Father" (of the people); comp. avus, Persic [>[<. For the usual const, state (the
pater pfitrus in Latin [?].By same metaphor God
the form '?&?), there was also anciently 3K and even 3X
is calleu the Father of the righteous, and of the kings B?T), though
(like "I!, only found in compound proper
of the earth, both of whom are called sons of God, 2 Sa. names D?"}?^, E^'^> "'P'?^, although
in these also
7:14; l Ch. 17:13; 22:10; Ps. 89:27,28 [these we very often find' the form' '3, as T&W&
"WT?^-
passages refer to Christ the Son of God]. As it is a Once, Gen. 17 4, 5, in order more plainly to shew the
:
3
father's place to instruct his children
etymology of the name DC 1? ?, *? is used in the text
{ 1
1O:12; and hence, priests and prophets, as being Note 2. The interpretation of this word in Job
teachers endued with divine authority, are addressed 34:36, is uncertain; 3'l'X jniP UK,
Vulg. pater mi
father J >b be tried"].
by the name of father out of respect, even by kings, probetiir Joins, etc. [" my let
" he hath made me a fa t h e r to Pharaoh ." So I laman is 21* Chald. with suffix '?* (i per*.),
111
pi. }n:i$(the letter H inserted, comp. HOS) father, of the words "11* n 7P.P., Deut. 4:26; 11:17;
i.q. Heb.3X Dan. 2:23; Ezr.4:l5; 5:12. Perhaps 23:13,16; also used of a land and hous**? which are
used of a grandfather, Dan. 5 2. laid waste, Jer. 9:11; Am. 3:15; metaph. of
:
hope,
^^ (from wish, desires which are frustrated, Ps. 9:19; 1 12 10 :
Ges. add.]
to slay, to extirpate, Est. 3:9,13; 2K.ii:i; 13:7.
HIPHIL I^X.n, i. q. Pi. to destroy, to cut off, as
S fat. 13^ and (at the end of a clause
- (l)part. TO BE LOST, TO LOSE ONESELF, TO WAN-
men and nations, Deu. 7:10; 8:20; sometimes with
addition of the words DJJH 3^i?p Lev. 23:30; nnfip
DEK, fief) oertieren/ ftcf) oerloren t?aben/ especially used
E^P&'L', Deu. 7:24; also, to lay a land waste, Zeph.
of a lost and wandering sheep (Arabic j^l to flee 2:5; t take away hope, Job 14:19. Very rarely N
in the desert, as a wild beast, and there to in i fut. quiesces, rrV3' for rn3K'K, Jer. 46 : 8. The
away
derivatives all immediately follow ["I3X
disappear as it were, ftcf) in b?r SBufte wrlieren). rib* I"J3X].
"I3X " a lost and
wandering sheep," Ps. 119:176; "15^, fut, 13N*, Ch.
perish, Jer. 10:11.to
comp. Jer. 50:6; Eze. 34:4, 16. Used of men, Isa. APHEL 131H, fut. "13'in; inf. rn3in to destroy, 1
,
to
" those who wander in
27:13, -WBfc jnstt D '13Xn slay, Dan. 2:12,18,24.
the land of
Assyria" (are there exiled); Deut. 26:5, HOPHAL (formed as in Hebrew) "13-iri, Dan. 7:11.
13K "a wandering Syrian;" it is also used of
'EHX.
*l!l^ m. (l) one who is wretched, unfortunate
such as rivers which disappear in the desert,
things,
see the verb, No. 3.
Job6:l8; and metaph. of wisdom failing, 153.29:14. A noun
(2) participial (see Lehrg. p. 488), de-
Hence
struction,~Nn. 24:20,24.
(Syr. Sam. id.
to to be
(a) perish, destroyed
fn3^? f. (with Tzere impure). (l) some king lost,
In Arabic, in this kindred
sense, the j\j is
used); Ex. 22:8; Lev. 5:22,23.
used of men and other living creatures as perishing, (2) i.q. ITH3S. a place of destruction, abyss (used
Ps. 37: so; Job 4:11; sometimes with the addition of Hades), Pro. 27 2O ('3X :
H1K render ships of desire, i e
m. (l) destruction, Job 31: 12.
,
pare tlie roots kindred both in form and signification, (from the root H3X No. a) poverty, misery,
a word once found, Pro. 23:29, of the form /IBp, no
HIS, 38, 3XF), also 3HX, 33n Lat. aveo; hence: (l) to
Constr. with an inf., either alone, Deu. 2:30; 10:10; note r, and
15:4; 17:1; 59:13; so Abulwalid,
Isa.
willing to serve thee?" Found also with an accusative, D13X(from the root D3X), by a Syriacism, for
Pro. l :25; and absolutely, Isa. l 19, Dryo?'1 *3KPI D5$ : D-13X whence const. D-13X, Isa. 1:3;
; pi-
D "P;|aN m. :
"if ye shew yourselves willing and obey;" Pro. place where cattle are fattened, a stable, stall, Job
1:1O. With a dative of pers. to be willing towards 39:9, and in which provender is kept, Pro. 14:4.
any one, to be willing in mind, to obey (often with The signification of stable is also suitable in Isa. l :
3,
the synonym ^ J"??0, Ps. 8l:l2; Deu. 13:9; Pro. where however LXX. and Vulg. render prcesepe,
1:30. manger, \\ Inch both in this place, and Job loc. cit. is
to to to be in want a sig- s
~ i
(a) desire, long for, of;
which
not less suitable and probable. Compare Arab. f .\
nification is found, at least in the derivative
nouns, 'tag, fV3X, n:i3X ;
. Ch. XJT-1X stable and manger. So D13X is also used in
ib^ (see the root No. 3, although the Hebrew word but should be written) from the
(for so it is
to ripen, like the Gr. jrtnwv, ^)febe/ melon, from V 1 ??> ("father of knowledge," i.e.
knowing),
TrtVrw: comp. ?^3. In the Hebrew there is added [Abida, Abidafi], pr.n. of a son of Midian, Gen.
K prosthetic. From the Arabic word above cited 25:4-
the Spanish budiecas, the French pasteques, are '*1'3 (i.q. .irvn*? "whose father is Jehovah").
lerived. [Abia, Abiah, Abijah'], pr.n. (A) of men. (l) th-j
second son of Samuel, l Sa. 8:2. (2) l Ch. 7:8.
pr.n. f., the mother of Hezekiah, aK.
,
18: 2, in the parallel place, 2 Ch. 29:1, more fully (3)lK.i4:i. (4) iCh. 24:10; Neh.io:8. (5) i.q.
1n
and correctly i" '?^, which is also in some copies the
1 '?^ king of Judah see below. (JB) pr.n. of a woman,
;
l Ch. 2 24. :
reading in Kings.
"*3$ ("father of strength," i.e. strong, ^3$ ("whose father is Jehovah") and flij
from the root to be strong), [Abi-albon], (id.), pr.n. Abijah, king of Judah, the son and suc-
( Li.
cessor of Kehoboam, 2 Ch. 13:1, sqq. constantly
pr.n. of one of David's heroes, 2 Sa. 23:31, called written B'^? in Kings lK.l4:.3l; 15: 1,7, 8, "father :
is
Kish Ner
JV^IX adj. (l) needy, poor, so called from the
Saul Abner. idea of needing (see the root H3X No. 2), Dftut
15:4; 7:11. Sons of the needy, for the needy^
"P^ ??>(" father of gatheri ng," i.e. gatherer), Ps. 72:4; see 13.
\_Abiasaph~], pr.n. of a Levite of the family of often with the addi-
who (2) oppressed, wretched,
Korah, Ex. 6:24, is also called, 1 Ch. 6:8,22; tion of the synonym ?y ; Psal.4O:l8, ]V?1 *2% 31
9: 19, 19:3$. " and I (am) afflicted and wretched ;" Ps. 70:6 ;
J ?V
(from the root 33N), m., an ear of corn, a like used of one
86:l; 109:22. Specially, N>JJ,
green ear, Lev. 2:14; Ex. 9:31, 3^1N(n) rniyfe>n who suffers undeservedly, although a pious wor-
" the
barley was in the ear," i. e. the ears were God (whence Am. 2:6, p^V and ji" ?^
1
shipper of
developed. Comp. as to the syntax, Cant. 2:13, are joined) ;
used also of a whole nation succumbing
2 s nxn en'n " the month of
green ears," at a later to miseries, as of the Israelites in exile, 15.41:17;
period called fD'3, beginning at the new moon of comp. 25:4. In the same signification the sect of
April (of March, according to the Rabbins), the the Ebimiites adopted this name, as assuming that
first month of the old
year [as instituted on coming they were IK rH>v VTW^OJI- i5i' iaTiv i/ fiaaiXtta T>
?
out a Ex. 13:4; Dcu. 16:1.
Egypt], 23:15; rojy, Matt. 5 3- :
^D'SK (" father of goodness"), [Abitub], mighty one, only found in the phrase 3pJP T3^ ?
" the
Ch. 8: 11. 75Oij^ "V3X mighty one of Israel, of Jacob;"
pr. n. m., l
used of God, Gen. 49:24; Isa. 1:24.
TO*?X [ father of dew," Abital], pr.n.of one
")*3X the root 1?K).
adj. (from (l) strong,
of the wives of David, 2 Sa. 3 4. :
]W3 '"}.
H
3S "the strong ones, i.e. bulls, of Bashan;"
probably the father or founder of an Arab tribe Ps. 50:13; and metaph. of princes, Ps.68:3i.
called sKft, a trace of which was pointed out by (b) of
=|?'P J? ("father of the king," or "father (3) 37 "V3X obstinate, stubborn, a man of per-
king''), [Abimelech], pr.n. (l) of several kings in verse mind, Isa. 46:12; comp. 3? pin.
the land of the Philistines, living at different periods,
2"^5^ ("father of loftiness"), \_Abirain\,
Gen. 2O:2,sqq. 21 :22,sqq. 26:1, sqq.; Ps-34:l. As
pr.n. m. (T, Nu. 16:1, 12 1 K. 16:34.
; ;
; 26:9. (2)
the same king, who in the Ps. loc. cit. is called Abi-
melech, is in l Sa. 2l:ll, called Acliish (tf"?X), this 3Z^3N(" father oferror"),[u46isAa<7],pr.n. cf
name or title appears to have been mostly common David's concubine, 1 K. 1 :3; 2:17.
to them, like >w ^u Padishah (father king) of the J^IU^3X ("father of welfare"), [Abishua],
Persian kings, and (jfew' Atalik (father, properly pr.n. m. (l) l Ch. 8:4. (2) iCh. 5:30; Ezr. 7:5.
"VI w
*3 ^ ("fatherNof a
paternity) of the Khans of Bokhara. (<2) a son of wall"), [Abishur],
Gideon, Jud. 8:31, seq.; 9:1, seq.; 2 Sa. 11:21. pr.n. m., l Ch. 2:28, 29.
(3) l Chr. 18:16, where indeed we probably should
read ^O'nx, as 2 Sa. 8:17.
^'5^ ("father of gift" ["comp. *^." Ges.
add.]), [Abi$kai] pr.n. m. of the son of David's
t
rnriN (" noble father," or " father of sister, who was also an officer, the brother of Joab,
to interweave, to braid." Ges. add.] ; also place, a pasture, meadow, Arabic Jjl fresh and
[" ""13?
long hay, sea weed. Used as an appellative, 1 Sa.
the more harsh "=]?'?
! !!,
which
we should read f3
almost demanded by verses 14, 15,
is
^
which lifts itself up hi the air in a dense volume,
and is given by the LXX. and Syriac. It is of <ro-
not unlike water bubbling forth from the fountain;
quent use in geographical names
Isa. 9:17, j^JJ
J"NK3 '^aXJVI "and they shall be
rolled together with the
(a) rnxo-iva ^[Abel Beth-Maachah~\,\.e.
lifting up of smoke," situated near Beth Maachah (which see); a town of
t>djj e in SJaucl) aufrcalle (ba comp. Vulg., Manasseh Jordan, at the foot of Mount
25tcEtrf)t)/ to the east of
Syr. Syr.explained by grammarians, to
.. ~s)f is
Lebanon, 2 Sa. 20:14, 15; iK. 15:20; 2 K. 15:29;
}
sative, are ^X, 1?X, o>lN, *| [these two latter words 2 Ki. 5:12, in }'ro for which see.
njJDK.
are omitted in Amer. Trans.] comp. the Lat. verum,
Comp. the
;
letter 3.
vero.
|?^i. q. \^ a stone, only in dual D?3?S prop, a pair
see of stones, used
(l) of the wheel ofa potter. Jer.l8:3,of the potter,
JtS an unused root, which had, I suppose, the D^nsrr^y rot6p -man np
behold he wrought a
force of constructing and building; comp. H33 work upon his potter's wheel." ["It appears to
to build, and IPX to prop, to found, whence |OX have consisted of two stones, one above and the other
faber, an artificer, TiKruy. Hence is and is so depicted on Egyptian
below, i
very large or very small. Collect, stones, Gen. 11:3. ginally, and also for potters working in the open air,
Used of the foundation stone of a house, Isa. 28:16; itseems to have been made of stone, afterwards of
V
wood. A wooden wheel of this kind is called in the
9
of vessels of stone, Ex. 7:19; Syr. J..I"*) id., but
of rare occurrence. Talmud HP prop, trunk, stem then cippus ; then a
JEtli. JVfl^: Metaph. l Sa.
;
13Sn 1? a stony (i.e. hard) heart," Eze. 11:19; a cart made in like manner hence, from the resem-
;
36:26; used also of a bold and intrepid mind, Job blance, it comes to signify
41:16, TJ3 J3a "hail stone;" 153.30:30; whence ["(2) A low seat, stool, on which the workman
Josh. 10: 11, niVn| D^35< is used of sat, made, it would seem, of a block of wod, and fre-
great hailstones,
called a littlebelow Tjari r?3. quently represented on Egyptian monuments. A
seat of this kind was doubtless used by the midwife,
(a)fc-ar'eox'> a precious stone,a <7em,Ex.28:9,
while assisting a woman in labour lying on a bed.
qq- 35 :2 7; Jore fully fan i3a, isa. 54:12; in }3,
Pro. 17:8; !TJ3 J3K, Eze. 28: 13, which latter is also So Ex. iwhen ye do the office of midwife to the
:
16,
'
J
used of stones for building, as of marble, l K. l o a, 1 1 : .
Hebrew women (WH ]3 DN D^3Kn ?y.in^-i.1) then shall
(3) stone ore, ore (Grjflein), Job 28:2. In Arabic ye see (while yet) upon the stool, whether it be a boy,'
&c. The midwife is directed at the very moment of
"
they say in the dual ..A/.^, both stones," of gold and birth, while she yet sits upon her stool, and no one
silver. else has seen or touched the infant, to ascertain ito
(4) rock, Gen.49:24, ^TJfc f3a "the rock of sex by the sight, or rather touch, and if it be a male
Israel," e. Jehovah comp. iw.
i.
; to kill it, as she could easily do by the pressure of her
(5) a weight of the balance (from stones having hand or fingers, unknown to the parents." Ges. add.
anciently been used, as they still are in the East, for All the following part of the Lex. Manuale being
art. in
weights; compare Germ, tcin/ a large weight used rejected in Amer. Trans."]. Abulwalid, in Lex. MS.;
" The instrument double upon which the potter turns
especially in weighing wool [so also the English is
uot made of stone; 12$ 13? " divers weights," Deu. like a handmill, the one is larger, which is the lower
i5:i3; D< ? \?3a weights carried in a bag, Pro. 16:1 1 ; one, the other is smaller, and this is the upper. This
Zee. 5:8, rraiyn |3a a weight of lead," Zee. instrument is called D!3?X i.e. a pair of stones,
4:10; /*TfO 1?K also a plummet, Isa. 34:1 1 ;"He although not made of stone, because of their being
will stretch over it the line of wasting (^13 \ like a hand-null, which is generally made of rtoue
Amongst the people of this country (the Moors) it construed with QV; denom. from P3K dust, because
is not found, but it is used by the Oriental potters." is raised. So in Greek iraXaiuv
in wrestling the dust
(2) Used for a roashing-vessel of stone, in which (TVfATraXaifiv, avyKOViovaQat from 7rtiXj, KOVIQ. An
they used to wash new-born infants, Ex. l :l6; such unusual word appears to have been used by the
washing vessels appear to have resembled hand- sacred writer, in order to allude to the name of the-
mills, in being made of two stones, the lower of river p31, verse 23.
which was hollowed, the upper serving as a lid.
pjs> m., dust, specially small and fine (see my con-
Others, to reconcile these two passages, understand jecture as to the etymology [under the verb]), such
in the one the seat of a potter, in this, that of a par- as is easily scattered by the breeze, Isa. 5:24, and
turient woman. So Kimchi, rH^'H n&>K 3&n, and such as a horse raises in galloping, Eze. 26:10. It
so also Ch. and both Arabic versions. thus differs from 1SJJ thicker and heavier dust, Den.
ID33K 05? with Aleph prosthet.), with suff.
(for 28 24. " The dust of God's feet," used poet, of the
:
1P33K, pi. D'P33K m., a belt, or girdle, such as clouds on which God treads, Na. 1 :3, comp. PDK*.
sometimes called l Sa. 14:50. LXX. 'Afilwrip. hence of passing over, surpassing, see "QJJ. It is
~i.3/?&?
applied
D3N and in the Talmud, TO FEED
as in Ch. (2) to any power, and it'tpytia, see "^N, T3N.
largely, TO FATTEN cattle. (Prop., as appears to me, HIPHIL, to mount upward in flight, as a hawk,
to stamp in, comp. the kindred D-13, hence to stuff, to Job 39 26. [Derivatives, see Kal.]
:
cram, cinpfvopfen; comp. Gr. rpi^ia pr. i.q. Tn'jyyvfju.) "ON m., a wing feather, (<2rfw>ungfeber)/ with
Part. pass. Pro. 15:17. Used of geese, iK.5:3. which birds soar, such as that of the eagle, Isa. 40 31:
;
Hence are derived D13X, D-13XQ. the dove, Ps. 55:7. It is distinguished from the
"yrv - pi- f-t pustules, boils, rising up in the
- wing itself, Eze. 17:3.
skin, Ex.9:9,10; verbal from the root JW3 Chaldee rrnK f. id., Job 39:1 3; Ps. 68:14. Poetically
Pilpel y?V3 to boil up, to swell up
' '
hence Syriac ; ascribed to God, Deut. 32 :l l ;
Ps. 91 -.4.
9 . P
J^s-x-^a^is^ pustules ;
in Hebrew K prosthet. was Drn^X Abraham, pr.n., the founder and fathei
prefixed. Compare JN3, V?3. of the Jewish nation; the son of Terah, born in
Mesopotamia, which he left [as called of God], and
V ?\* an unused root, perhaps, i.q. to be
sojourned in the land of Canaan with his flocks, in a
white, whence Ch. K3K tin; hence
kind of nomadic see Gen. 12 In the
life, 25.
| 5v \_Abe z~\, pr.n. of a town in the tribe of Issa- book of Genesis until 17:5, he is
always called
char, perhaps so called from tin, Josh.l9:2O. D^3X, i.e. "father of elevation;" Gr. 'A/3paju
I V?^ "
(perhaps of t i n"), [/& z a n], pr.n. of a judge [Abram]. But in that passage in which a numerous
of the Israelites, Jud. 12 :8, 10. progeny is
promised to spring from him, he is called
by a slight alteration of his name Di?~^> i. e.
~
a root not used in Kal, which I suppose to S '
**
have had the force of to pound, to make small, "father of a multitude," (comp. Arab. *l&, a
from the onomatopoetic
syllable p3, "|3, 32, pQ, large number), or as the context itself explains it,
which, as well as p, pT (see PP." }, ^I?"^), had the
5
Di3 fion 3X. DiVttN VT^5 the God of Abraham,"
force of
pounding; comp. HD3 to drop, to distil; for "
" the seed of
Vch.
Jehovah," Ps. 30:6; 47:10: a< iq
P31, JJ33, C?33, also jriyy//, Tr/jyi'uw, Germ, potten/ bo!en Abraham," of the Israelites, Ps. 1 05 6 :
;
(comp. specially Srj pod)en). Hence P3S dust. Isa.41 In the same signification there
: 8. is
simply
Gen. 32: -25, '26, recipr. to wrestle, used rn3S, Mic. 7:20.
word uttered by the herald before (4) arched, vaulted work (ew&lbe), used of the
":J~QX a
If it were Hebrew it
vault of heaven, Am. 9:6; comp. Germ. (Mat, abea,
Joseph s chariot, Gen. 41 143.
might be thought to be the inf. abs. Hiph. (from the story of a building; from the verb gaben, gatten/
root TD?) which is for which has the sense of binding together see Ade-
properly (compare D^I^X "H"?.?!?
;
D'S^n. Jer 2.5:3), used in this place for the impera- lung Lex. hh. w.
tive, so that it might be, bow the knee. Vulg.
^f m., a nut, Cant. 6:11; Arab, and Syr.J^-,
coram eo genua Jlecterent,
clconante prcecone, ut omnes *
f f
so also Abulwalid and Kimchi, compare Lehrgeb. Hebrew word appears to be
^, Pers.J^i. This
p. 319. But it is more probable that this is a word taken from the Persic by prefixing x prosthetic;
of Egyptian origin, so inflected and altered by the N.
compare
Hebrew writer, that although a foreign word it
\_Agur\, pr.n. of a wise man, the son of
"11
should sound like Hebrew, and might be derived J^
Jakeli n i^), to whom Proverbs, chap. 30, is attri
(
from roots of their language; compare DO, nt^O^ buted in its inscription. If this name be taken as
ny~i3. And the Egyptian word which is concealed in
" let symbolic, like Koheleth, it might signify an assem-
7p3X is
probably either Au-rek, i.e. every one
bler, one of the assembly (of wise men), n fO^. ?V3
bow himself" (in an optative sense), or, as I prefer,
" bow the head." Jablonskii Ecc. 12:11.
Aperek, i. e.
Opusc. ed.
te Water, torn. i.
p. 4; Rossii Etymologise ^Egypt. I^
f., a silver coin, so called from the notion
German editions of the of collecting, from the root ">3X to collect, like the
s. v. Luther, in the later
bcr SanbcSoater. 3S he takes as father, Lat. stips in the formula, stipem colligei'e, 1 Sa. 2 36. :
Bible, btefcS tjl
all the parts, and the firm compactness; compare whence is ]^D3.X No. 1.
and rnjs: No. 4. Hence (2) Med. E. to be warm and corrupt, as walci,
TH
f (so LXX.
;
root *n| No. 2, the is t, Ex. 2 1 1 8 Isa. 58:4; :
;
of the pools of stagnant water left on the shores of and Vulg. in both places, and this word is used
by
the Nile after its inundation, Ex. 7:19; 8:1. the Rabbins in the same signification).
(a) [" i.
q. J1O3.K a reed, a cane" Ges. add.
Ezr. 1:9;
omitting the following explanation], a marsh over- u, |D3, anj *?9Ta$ LXX.,
grown with reeds, a reedy place, Jer. 51:32. Vulg., Syr. paterce aurece, paterae argenteoe, basins,
chargers of gold, of silver. In the Talmud of Jeru-
li. Jonah explains it strongholds; comp. word is said to be compounded of ">3K to
salem, this
lion's den in a marsh hence refuge, stronghold.
; and H7D a lamb, so that the bowls would be
collect,
D3K adj. once in pi. const.
K'W >D3X "sad of so called, because the blood of lambs was collected
to Isa. 9:13; 19: 15, comp. H32. from ^> to slay, JlaS to cut the throat. Some
(3) a rope of rushes, a muzzle of reeds, like the alsohave taken it for the Gr. KaoraXog, KapraXXog,
jreek a-^oit'og, Job 40 26, compare Plin. N. H. xix. 2.:
which is used in the Septuagint for a basket, fruit-
$-* i,
JjS an unused root. Arab. ij^T' is i.q. basket, whence comes the Arab. JULj, Rabb.
j ^fr* (see ^'- ?*P")i?,
f
3*), to tread with the feet, to stamp; hence to wash 9
and
Syr. jtoN^^c, might perhaps be taken in
it
done by treading them with the
clothes, to full, as is
Ezra for baskets of first-fruits but this Greek word ;
feet. [Hence the following word.] seems rather itself to be of Phcenicio-Shemitic origin,
l?^ m., prob. a trough for washing, Xovri'tp, and to be from the root ?"1| to plait.
hence any laver, basin, or bowl; const. JSK Cant-7:3; " "
!^ a word of the later Hebrew,
J"1 1
J~n.rv, f. 1
pi-
Isa. 22 24; Ex. 24:6 (Arab, and Syr. an epistle, especially used of the royal epistles and
pi. niJ|X :
28:63.
(Hesych. Kvpiog) is the name of an idol [" where it it
" miracle God," from 4__ol
7N3*|X (perhaps of applied to princes, kings, and gods, see Monumen.
of Ishmael, Gen. Phoenic. p. 346." Ges. add.], and the Chaldee, in
miracle), [Adbeef], pr.n. of a son
which some traces are preserved in the pr u. 1"]^?3,
'3*"IS
"my lord!" an address of honour to those there is this hindrance (a) that this word is never used
who are more noble, and to all to whom respect is with this very suffix, 1 pers. pi., except in a plural
due; as a father, Gen. 31 135; brother, Num. 12 :i l ;
(b) and that
sense always "my lords").
('3*"l^ is
or
royal consort, l K. 1 117, 18; especially to a prince Jehovah himself '3'lN.; Job 28: 28; Isa. 8:7:
calls
king, as ^n T%
2 Sa. 14:9; l K. 3:17. Whoever
comp. verse 5; Lehrgeb. p. 524. [In Thes. Geseniuf
thus addresses another, generally says for the pro-
adopts this opinion himself, and rightly; the difficulty
noun of the second person, " my lord;" for that of as to God '?"% is fully met by the
calling himself
the first, "thy servant;" Gen. 33:8, 13, 14, 15; Job very many MSS. read n j n and ir.
fact that in '.,
Heb. const, state, nor plural form ; but it is very often used
[?"1$ Ch. adv. afterwards, then, i.q. TS,
collect, to denote men, the human race, Gen. 1 126,27;
'!$, prop, times, from the singular tnt? (from the root
=
1
JHX3 prop.
"
at the same time," i.e. immediately; men," Job 21 =
33. Sometimes it is
put as a genitive
Dan. 2:14,35; 3:13,19,21,26, IP "from that n after adjectives, as D"1K ^? " the
needy of m
e n,*
time forth;" Ezr. 5:16, i.q. Heb. Tb. [But see TX.] i.e. needy men, Isa. 29:19; comp. Hos. 1 3 2 and :
;
HIPHIL, to be red (probably to make oneself red), ?bj5 n?jpp, which is frequently used in the names of
?
Isa. l: 18. colours, Lehrg. 120, No. 21), red, ruddy, used of
HITHPAEL, to be red (as wine in a cup), to sparkle, a garment stained with blood, Isa. 63:2; of rosy
Pro. 23:31. The derivatives immediately follow; see cheeks, Cant. 5 1O of a chesnut or bay horse (gucfyS),
:
;
also D"^. Zee. 1:8; 6:2; of a red heifer, Nu. 19:2; of the
u ;V m man redness of lentiles, Gen. 25:30; subst. what is red,
-
(l) (perhaps so called from the
redness, Isa. loc. cit.
idea of redness,
compare D^ [" The Arabs distin-
guish two races of men; one red, ruddy, which we D1NI pr. n. (l) Edom, the son of Isaac, Jacob's
enll
white, the other black.'" Gesen. add. But both elder twin brother, Gen. 25:25, more often called
'a-se races are sprung from Adam]). It has neither Esau
XIV TIN-DIN
(2) the descendants of Edom, i.e. the nation of [N an unused root, pt.b. i.
q. pi Arab. ^-
the Edomites or Idumteans; and also the country med. Waw. to be lower. Hence Jl.^-
pdumoja]. The nation is called more fully \3? D"W "
[(2) transit, i.q. I"? to judge, to command, t'
Ps. 137:7; and poet. D"1X J"G "daughter of Edom," domineer. Hence fns lord, owner, master, Mtd^TO
La. 4 2 1 22 the country is more fully called
the Lord also P ^." Ges. add.]
:
, ;
; T
Gen. 36: 16; 21 :3l D'"l Am. l :6, and;
Gen. 32:4; Jud. 5:4. When it stands alone it pj^ \_Addari\, pr.n. of a man who returned tr
1:7.
:
;
Isa.
2 Sa. 20:24; i Ki. 12:18, D^nD [Hadoram], 2 O
10:18.
(3) land, region, cou n try, Gen. 28: 15; riyjS
n'VV " the land of Jehovah," i. e. Canaan, Isa. 14:2;
a root not used in Kal, prob. TO BE WII>E,
pi. ri'lOl^ lands, regions, once Ps. 49: 12. - $
(4) the earth, Gen. 4:11; 6:1; 7:4. (see "^N,
l"1
!!!- )> comp. ,jl to have hernia (prob. to
Naphtali, Josh. 19:36. swell out}; ,jj&\ inflated, sioelling (of the bell)).
<Tp"]N \_Admah~\, pr.n. of a town destroyed to- Kindred if "IT?. Hence, to be great, magnificen*
gether with Sodom and Gomorrah, Gen. 10: 19; 14:2, (see i^N).
8; Deu. 29:22; Hos.ii:8. NIPHIL,to be madtt great, glorious, Part.; Ex.
"
^10"]N & *j"]N adj. (of the form ^k"]i?), red, 15:11, and 6, n'33 'l^j n\nj yw. thy right hand.
i.e. red-haired, rotfcbaaricj/ used of Esau, Gen. 25 25 :
;
O God, has become great (i.e. is rendered illustrious)
of David, i Sa. 16: 12; 17:42; LXX. irvfipt'iw, in power." Yod in '"H^?. is paragogic.
" a wide
branching vine;" comp. "V^S No. 1.
(2) a cloak, so called from its being wide, 1 Ki.
N^T"]"]^ Ch.adv.~Ezr. 7 i^s, rightly, diligently, 2 Ki. 2:13,14; Jon. 3:6; "TJMt? nn^K "a
19:13^9;
Vulg. diligenter. It can hardly be doubted that this
O O ~f ~f Babylonish cloak," Josh. 7:21, i.e. variegated with
is a Persic word, perhaps i. Pers. v^_vw J figures, or interwoven
with various colours^ having
q. ,
rightly,
the figures of men and beasts; comp. Plin. viii. 48.
truly, uprightly.
tyb nTTK " a hairy cloak," i. q. a garment shaggy
m
p3*ng ., i Ch. 29 7 Ezr. 8:27; i.q. flDfH :
;
with hair (^elj)/ Gen. 25:25; Zee. 13:4.
a daric; a Persian coin made of pure gold, much
used by the Jews so long as they were subject to the (3) magnificence, splendour, Zee. 11:3.
rule of the Persians. The letter N is prosthetic, and It'
JtJ* i.q. K'-HTO THRESH, found in one pas-
28:28, -13^-IT E nX "threshing he will
;5
the word |13T! also occurs amongst *the Rabbinical sage, Isa'.
9 =
writers. also This thresh it."
[" Compare Syr. )jcvyi-"]
word is taken from the more ancient Persian lan-
fut. 3D?* and 3D$g ;
^l pers.
guage, in which Dara, Darab, signifiesa king ;
nK Pro. 8:17; and 3HV< Hos. 14:5; inf. 3*nK Ecc.
Dang, Dergah, a royal court. If derived from the
3:8 and n3nN.
atter, it signifies pSTl of the court, with the addi- BREATHE AFTER anything.
(l) TO DESIRE, TO
syllable ji but if from the former, it is
tion of the
of breathing after, hence of long-
;
(The signification
compounded of Dara and L___ ?X
image, although no to the and with the
ing, is
proper syllables 3n, 3n,
such coins bearing the image of a king have come
letters softened, 3K, IK, comp. the roots ?3D,
down to us. [" We
can hardly doubt that the word
is kindred to the pr.n. Darius t^VTl. Others make ^^^ > . to desire, to love; >T\X and H3K to breathe
Deu. 4:37; more rarely with ? Lev. 19:18, 34, and art)/ Almost always in this connection, 'fix. nnx_
id)je n.
3 Ecc. 5:9; i Sa. 20:i7,tonx/iB>93ri3n X"he loved njn "Ah! Lord Jehovah," Josh. 7:7; Jud. 6:22,
:
JH a companipn, Pro. 18:24; Est. 5:10, 14; Isa. ^5"!}^ [Ahava"], pr.n. of a river, Ezr. 8:21, 31;
41:8, '?D'K '7J?* V31 "the seed of Abraham my and of a bordering region, verse 15, [But see below.]
friend." where Ezra gathered together the people about to re-
(3) to delight in anything, in doing anything; turn to their country. [" The same is probably meant
construed with a gerund of the verb; Hos. 12:8, in verse 15, where we may render, the river that '
2nN pBT? "hedelightsin oppression," or to oppress ; runneth to the Ahava.' It is hardly doubtful that
Isa.56:10; Jer. 14:10. the word prop, signifies water, aqua; comp. Sanscr. ap,
NIPHAL part. 3HX.3 to be loved, amiable, 2 Sam. Pers. ab, Goth, ahva, Lat. aqua. It is hard to say what
river is meant; possibly the Euphrates, which was
PIEL part. 3HXO. (l) a friend, Zee. 13:6. called car' fE,o\{)v '
the river,' comp. "in|n." Ges. add.]
(2) a lover, especially in a bad sense; one given to TlHNI perhaps *l-inx
i.q. ("joining together"),
licentious intercourse, a debauchee, Eze. 16:33, seq.;
[Ehud], pr.n. (l) of a Hebrew judge, Jud. 3: 15,
93:5, seq. Always thus used, metaph. of idolaters. sq. 4:1; LXX. 'AwS. (2) l Ch. 7:10.
[Hence the following words.]
^^? This word which is elsewhere,
Hos. 13:10.
^H&S only in pi. D*3nX (i) loves, specially in root HVl, is here the same as
;
.
l fut. apoc. from the
a bad sense amours, amourettes, Siebfcfyaften. Tropically
;
""!.'$?, *$
iv here? unless perhaps there is a false reading
used, of fellowship entered into with foreign [idola- from verses 7, 14, and we ought to read n'X. Render
trous] nations, Hos. 8:9. it X1DX n " where then is
thy king?" and
*|^>D
(2) delight, Pro. 5:19, D'Zng rb'K "hind of X1SX *HX ivhere then;
join the words very closely,
delight," i.e. most pleasant, most lovely. this word ought clearly
[see also verse 14; where
jntf rn. love ; in sing, once for lovers, paramours, to be taken as an interrog. part, see l Cor. 15:55.
Hos. 9:lO; B'ZinX loves, " Ewald regards word (Gr.
(LXX. ol
jfyaTrr/ju/froi;) pi. this 444) as compounded
especially, illicit, licentious, Pro. 7:18. from X (i.q. rj) and *n i.e. hie, here ; comp. ^Ethiop
rUHNI f. (i) Inf. fern. gen. of the verb 3HX. With UP; there; HP; here, hither. So, too, Hupfeld.''
Ges. add.]
56:6, 'mrv DtTDX rnnx ? to love
1
(a) love, specially as between the sexes, Cant. wandering nomades, sometimes pitching their tents,
8:4; 5:8; 8:6,7; of God towards men, Hos. 3 : l ;
Gen. 13:12, sometimes removing them, Gen. 13:18.
of friends towards one another, l Sa. 18:3.
(3) love, delight, concr. of abeloved female, Cant. movens tabernaculum suum.
* '7? 3 5? an d so perhaps also verse 10 PIEL fut. ?DX' contr. ^H! i.q. Kal No. a, to pitch
=
["where :
others take it as an adj. lovely""]. a tent; Isa. 13:20. Comp. *!?*? for pi?xp.
? mountainous, comp
1J?1D " the tent of the Arab. ^;j^), Aaron, the elder brother of Moses,
congregation," commonly called
the tabernacle of the covenant, i. e. the moveable and Ex. 6 20 7:7; consecrated high priest by his bro-
:
;
"
portable temple of the Israelites in the desert, which ther, Ex. 29; Lev. 8; fnnK \3| sons of Aaron,"
is described Ex. 26 and 36; called also Josh. 21:4, 10, 13; and poet. |VVJK J"l'3 "the house
simply ^OK?
l K. i :
39. With regard to the tabernacle, when of Aaron," Psal. 115: 10,12 ; 118:3; use d f r the
^>K .is distinguished from !?^P, 'QK is the outer priests, just as Aaron, Ps. 1 33 2, is used for any high
:
days, D^S? HJ
IK or rather years;" (so t\ in Arabic,
"^V0$ [Aholibah'], pr.n. of a harlot, used Eze. o
23:4, sqq. as a symbol of the kingdom of Judah which they explain Jj). Sometimes ellipt. used for
given up to
"my tent in her," H3 for
idolatry; pr. *? IK ober (e fei)) ba^/ ober (e8 mufjte fein) ba^/ or (be
it) that, or (it must be) that, followed by a future
subjunctive in Latin it may be rendered nisi
when
/tHJ ("tent of the high place"), [Aho- G*
;
Cant. \*
4:14; pi. a kind of odoriferous Indian
tree, 27:5, "I would burn them altogether; MJH?3 pn.1
in Greek or else let them (unless they) take hold of my
dyaXXo^ov, in later writers frXaXdr/, also
called lignum Lev. 26:41; Eze.
aloes, by the moderns aloes, also lignum strength," ober fte mufjte benn$
parodist and lignum aquilce : Exccecaria Agallocha, 21 15.: Hence it becomes
Linn.; see Diosc. lib. i. 2 1 . The Hebrew name of (3) a conditional particle, prop, if one choose, if, if
the tree, as well as the which in
Greek, comes from its Indian perhaps, but if; (LXX. iav,) comp. Lat. sive,
name aghil ["the r ^1
being softened into /." Ges. add.],
Sanscr. agaru and si conditional is included. (Also the Arabic A it
aguru [" also agarukam"] ; see
b
in Hierob. torn. i.
Jdsius ^135170;
Wilson's often explained by the Grammarians ^.) So foll<m-
Sanscrit The Portuguese by mis-
Dictionary, p. 5.
take called it
formerly aquilce lignum. [" Hence they ed by a fut. i Sam. 2O:io, " who will shew me, tot
appear to have heard a form agulu or the
like."]
o if thy father should answer th
3
XVIII
anything harshly ;" LXX. tav; Vulg. siforte. (Wirier | from the earth." LXX. almost always render
tries o show more than from the context can be cor- !
Conj. V, "VIII, id., t^f\j\ (not <_>bl which misprint inflect (Arab. S\ med. Waw) ; hence, to turn, to
a water-bearer (Kam. p. 46 not uter, also to gird, tosurround, see "W. With this
by Winer) ; ;
-
(l) a bottle, so called from carrying water; see
i
kfcl
heavy, troublesome ; *y a load, a weight; <-^'U
the root No. 3. Used of wine bottles Job loc. cit. ;
J3 D*enq ntofc? like new bottles" i.e. full of new misfortune, ills, with which any one is pressed down ;
incantations and magical songs, in order to give to strengthen, to aid; jjl and jl strength, might,
ansAvers as to future or doubtful things
comp. i Sa. power, whence the Hebrew 1NO; comp. i"lE'|5 and
;
" divine to me
by the familiarspiri t," whence such i.
q ^ wood," Ges. add.].
a sorceress is called 318 n?J/3 riV"K " a woman in whom see the root No. l,
pi. prop, turnings;
isa soothsaying daemon," l Sa. 28:7, 8. (b) the. dead whence causes, circumstances, Umfldnbe, reason*,
person himself raisedvp; Isa.ag^jlYlp^gO 21X ? n
'
''and thy voice shall 1 e as of a dead man cause, from the root 3?D to
arising affairs; comp.
XIX
H3X
^ ("desire," or "habitation," i.q. ), [Evi\
Num. 31:8; Josh. 13:31
Cognate roots are aveo, and Arab, to de- pr.n. of a Midianitish king ;
l o,
i.
XH
q. Kal No.
nWK yen B^
2, to
the soul of the wicked
Prov. 23:29, fag
who hath
V ^IN "who hath lamen- ^
tation, misery?" [" want"].
Jesireth evil."
Always applied to the soul (^9?),
(a) of lamentation, alas ! with a dat.
(2) interj.
Deu. 12:20; 14:26; Job 23: 13; iSa.2:i6; 2 Sa. l 4:8; Isa. 3:9; 6:5; rarely with an ace. Eze.
Sa.
3:21, except the instances, Ps.l32:l3, 14. Isa. 26:9.
24 6, 9 and absol. Num. 24 23.
: of threatening :
7*1*5 p1 - D ^m -
l Ch.
11:17; with an ace. Deu. 5:18; Jer. 17:16;
nixn n-JK^n prop, "to 29:9; Hos. 9:7, or as is more often the case, as a
with a dat. Pro. 23:3, 6.
subst. Job 5 2 Isa. 19:11; 35:8; Pro. 7:22; 1O:
:
;
desire a desire," burn with desire, to lust
i.e. to
14; 11:29; 1 4 3i I 5 5'i opposed to the prudent
: :
comp. rqx, njx, 25*ri to long for. This signification years. As to the signification, TIIP (whict see) is
is manifest both in the noun
Jl'lS (for
ni.X) a mark, the name of a Babylonian idol, and ? 1^. in Hebrew <I
and in the words, Num. 34:10, DrWXnn 0?^ "ye signifies fool ; but it may bp taken for granted tha*
XX
some other noun of Assyrian or Persian origin is shall devour it ;
Jer. 2 1 : 2 . In like manner. Arah
-- *-
it, which the Jews moulded so
concealed in as to re-
semble their own language; perhaps pleasing them- JjI and Ou perhaps, prc-o. is ob ntdjt/ ellipt. As to
*
selves in calling, for the sake of derision, the king of and various forms and use,
" the f o o 1
its
etymology, for ^, its
their oppressors, (worshipper) of Merodach." see de Sucy, Gramm. Arab. I, 867, and the note there.
Yet more corresponding are the Talmudic particles
'
i^ with Vav moveable; an unused root, i.
q. NSu' and NOT ><: prop, ichether or no, also whether
?SO, TW
foolish, prop, to be perverse, (comp.
to be
!
first li
17; more fully njrP. D^IS, 2 Ch. 15:8; 29:17. As to
'jo
go before, .\ t \ (properly princeps,
the height of this porch, which is said to have been a
comp. Hebr. ?K*. Hence D ylK, Dy^N powerful ones, hundred and twenty cubits high, 2 Ch. 3:4, see the
leaders D7-1X the front, adv. in front, subst. vestibule
; ;
treatise of A. Hirt (Der Tempel Salomo's, Berlin,
??K No. 2, and DTX a projection of a building; rWN
1819, p. 26).
No. 3, pre-eminence.
(2) adv. prop, in front, hence opposite, and
7^ m. (l) belly, body, abdomen, so called from tropically strongly adversative particle ; but, but
s i s_ inched, ov pi)r 2t o\\a, as well given by the LXX.,
its roundness ;
see the root No. 1 ;
Arab.
.J\^
A \ . Ps.
Job 2:555:8; 13:3. More often also D7-1N) LXX. ;
hope, Gen. 16: ; Am. 5:15; Hos. 8:7, "the stalk I have not, however, found instances of it.
ibJl yield no meal, W$3! D*Tf nfe^! ^>1K perhaps (3) [tffam], pr.n. m. (a) l Ch. 7: 16. '&) 8:
t ihall
yield (if by chance it
yield), the enemies 39, 40.
XXI
TON
f.
(l) folly (from the root 71*). Very fre-
!
vain, Isa 41:29 Zee. 10:2 specially used of the
; ;
J4=7> 18,29; 15=2,14,21. (comp. ?3Q)> l Sa. 15:23, and even of the idols
tion de 1'Egypte, Antiquites, vol. v. pi. 26, 27. SouTTUjoa, called by Arrian Ov7T7ra|ua, situated in the
nearer Chersonese, v/Lere there is now the celebrated
13iX ("strong,"for jijis), \_0no~\, pr.n.of atownof
the Benjamites, Ezr. 2 33 Neh. 7:37; 1 1 35 l Ch.
:
;
:
;
emporium of Goa this place is mentioned by Ptolemy,
:
36:23. (2) iCh. 2:26. And, in the first place, Ophir, Gen. 10:29, is men-
tioned in the midst of other Joktanite regions, which,
l^lfcN (id.), [Onare], pr.n.
of a son of Judah, Gen.
as far as is known to us, are all to be sought for in
38:9; 46:12; Nu. 26:19. southern Arabia; it stands enumerated between Sa-
Uphaz, pr.n. of a region producing gold, Jer. basa and Havilah, both of them rich in gold. It
10:9; Dan. 10:5. As the letters T and T are also cannot however be denied, that even though Ophii
elsewhere interchanged (as in PJ3 and P"}| lightning, were more remote, and were situated in India, it might
.^ and t.^ to boast, to glory), TQ1X seems to be cor- in the pedigrees be referred to the same stock, the
people springing from a Joktanite colony. Also, of
rupted from "V?iS.
the articles above-mentioned, some only, namely gems
TfliK, "iSiN, T3K pr .n. Ophir, a very celebrated and apes, are found in Arabia, and that country is
region abounding in gold the sailors of Solomon
; now wholly destitute of gold. But some particidar
went thither, together with the Phoenicians, from the
regions of Arabia formerly abounded in gold, and that
ports of the ^Elanitic gulf, and brought thence every native, and unsuielted, as is mentioned both by the Old
three years, gold, precious stones, and sandal wood, Testament writers, Nu. 31:22; Jud. 8 24, 26 Ps. 72 : :
;
lKi.9:28; 10:11; 2Ch.8:i8; 9:10. According 15, and Diodorus, ii. 50; iii. 44, 47 compare under ;
to l Ki. 10: 22 (where Ophir is also to be understood, the word TD13 ; Agatharchides (ap. Phot. cod. 250);
although not mentioned by name), silver also, ivory, Artemidorus (ap. Strab.xvi.4, 22); Pliny, vi. 28,32,
" The
apes, and peacocks were brought thence. gold who ought not rashly to be doubted; for the mines
of O p h i r" is very often mentioned in the Old Testa-
may be exhausted and altogether neglected, as in
ment, as Job 28:16; Ps. 45:10; Isa. 13:12; l Ch.29: Spain, or the globules of native gold formerly found
4; once even "VD1K is put for the gold of Ophir, Job in the sand may have failed. Also, Ophir is expressly
22:24. mentioned as an island of Arabia by Eupolemus (ap.
As to the situation of Ophir, various opinions have is now a place
Euseb. praep. evang. ix. 30) and there
;
Ijeen formed. The moderns, however, have mostly Oman, two miles in-
called Ophir, in the district of
el
it to be in one of two
supposed regions, India, or some land of the city Sohar.
part of Arabia. And that we should seek for Ophir However be (for we cannot here exhaus;
it
may
in India, as among the ancients was Jc-
supposed by the whole discussion), either of these opinions has
sephus, Arch. viii. 6, 4 ; among the moderns, by much more appearance of correctness than that cf
Vitringa, Keland, and others, is sought to be main- those who understandthe eastern part of Africa, viz.
tained by these arguments: First, the Indian regions and Sofala of the Arabs (now Zariguebar,
Nigritia
abound with the above-mentioned commodities; and
Mozambique, where there is a region that produces gold
several of them, as ivory and sandal wood, are
only called Fura\ which after Grotius and Huet has been
found in India: and the words used for apes and so held by d'Anville, Bruce, Schulthess and others.
peacocks, altogether agree with those used in India
on the Malabar coast, and they are no doubt taken m. const, fate; pi. D'JQiK a wheel, Ex. 14:25,
" and he turns the
thence (see *\1p, p'!?^). Also, the LXX. translators etc.; Pro. 20:26, |WK Dn!?J! 1V$
have put for "PS'* always (except one place, Gen. 10: wheel (of his threshing wain) upon them," i e M
UK XXIII
treads on the^ and tramples them small ; comp. (3) to kindle, Mai. 1:10; Isa. 27:11 (comp. Eng
Root 19X. - &
to light and TlX fire). Arab. ,.\ to kin He. Hence
(I)TC URGE, TO PKESsanyone ON (comp. are derived the following words, and also "OXD and
Ch. l'X Cognate roots, both in sound and in signifi-
;
.
ire a sure, store, as of corn, food, provision (maga- Odyss. y, 335. (c) light of lightning, and lightning
2 Ch. 1 1 1 1 ; l Ch. 27 27 ; itself; Job 36 32,
11X HD3 D:??-^ " he covers the
especially of gold,
=
: :
zine'),
silver, and other precious things, hence used of the light of lightning upon his hands," i.e. he covers his
hands with lightning, his hands are red with light-
treasury of the temple, l Ki. 7 51 of the king, i K. :
;
14:26; i5:i8piXJV3 "atreasury,"Neh.lo:39. ning; Job 37:3, 1 1, 15. (d) light of life, Job 3:16,
2O more fully D^H 11X Ps. 56: 14. Metaphorically
(2) i.q. "tyix "3 a storehouse, Joel 1:17; a trea- ;
sury, 2 Ch. 32:27. (e) light furnishes an image of good fortune, pros-
(a)"VXn
//Q *yy
u
to en lighten any one's eyes" (which were (comp. Ps. 104: 15); Pro. 16: 15, \3S 11X? "when ^D
involved in darkness), i. e. as it were to recall him to the king's face shineth," i.e. when it is cheerful
and pleasant Ps. 4:7; 44 4.
hence, "to refresh, to
:
Ps. 13:4; ;
life, gladden,"
Pro. 29:13; Ps.l9:9; Sir.
Ezr.9:8; comp. 31 17. m. (l) i.q. lix light. Hence in pl.D^-lX
:
1*33 TXH " to make one's own face to s h i n e ;" " to cause
(b) lights, metaph. revelations,revelation, used of
one's face to shine" is God as being
especially used of the sacred lot of the Hebrews, Nu. 27:21; i Sa. 28:6;
propitious, Ps. 80 :
4, 8, 20 ;
followed by ?X Nu. 6 25 :
more fully called D^^L ! D*")Xn "revela- 1
;
generally
71? PP. 31: 17; ? Ps. 119: 135; *? Ps. 118:27; nN Ps. tion and truth," Ex. 2 8 30 Lev. 8:8; once D'P.n :
;
ligl tea, i.e. to imbue with wisdom, Ps. 1 19: 130. Btia: Luther, 2id)t unb 9led)t. These sacred lots, which
(2) to shine, to give light (leudjten/ fcfcinen)/ absoL were only consulted by the high priest in matters of
Gen. 1:15; with a dat. Ex.
13 2 1 ; Isa. 60 19. : :
great moment, were borne by him in or upon his
XXIV
16:10.
two images, put between the double cloth of the
little
trous notion of Philo is not to be regarded as throw- sign for 4_O from ,_^), PI. nin'X m. and f.
(comp.
ing any light on the subject]. sing, Gen. 9:12; Ex. 4:8, plur. Ex. 4:9; Josh. 24:
(a) brightness of fire, flame; Isa. 50:11, "UN? a sign (Ch. HN, Syr. jYj pi. flol!)). Exod. 12:
17),
&$ and fi re itself, Isa-44 1 6 47
;
:
;
: 1 4 Eze. 5:2; comp.
;
&r, as an appellative, may perhaps have signified a for- (2) a sign of something past, which serves to keep
tress, castle ; so at least, Pers. \.*\ castle ; Zend and it in memory, Ex: 13:9, 16: Deu. 6:8, hence a me-
Sansc. pura, a fortified city, after the analogy ofpemar, morial, monument, Isa. 55:13; Eze. 14:8.
Pracrit. unar, etc. See F. Bernary, in Berliner Jahrb. (3) a sign of something future, a portent, rvirot
TOV /tw'XXoiToc [?] (Rom. 5:14), i.q. ns'lO. Isa. 8:l9;
1841.1'. 146-" Ges.add.] XaXSa/wv; LXX. \<*>pu rH>v "
Alex. Polyh. ap. Euseb. de Praep. Evang. ix. 17, ex- behold, I and the children whom Jehovah hath given
XnXc((('w>' TroXir.
me are for signs and wonders in Israel from Jeho-
plains it,
perity, Est.
f.
(i) light, Ps. 139:12; metaph. of pros-
8:16.
salvation of God," ^V "God with us," Isa. 7: 14;
8:8; Shear Jashub, 7:3); God makes us types of fu-
(2) plur. nhlX herbs, green herbs, 2 Ki. 4:39; ture things as signifying future welfare. [Gesenius
from the idea of brightness being in the Phcenicio-
does not understand the true reference of the passage ;
*>:? 9! 2X1.19:29; 20:8,9; Isa. 7: ll 14; 38: Ps. 76: 8, "nfX TKO "from the time of thy auger," i.e!
7, 22; Jer. 44:29, 30, comp. Mar. 13:4; Luke l: from when once thy anger is kindled. With a finite
18; 2:12." Ges. add.] verb (for "Kfe TKO), Ex. 5 -.23, "i }N 'HKa tttt? "from
the time when I came unto Pharaoh." Gen. 39:5.
or a root not used in Kal.
["Note. Fuller forms from TK, are
^TK
(which see),
: i
pi. fut. nitf?., 3 pl.ini&o TO CONSENT, and Ch. P.I? the lattei seems to have come by soften-
;
2 Ki. 12:9; with a dat. of pers. to consent to any ing the letters from P7.H, p*in here, also there; so that
one, Gen. 34:15, 22, 23. In Arabic this power its ending seems to be plural, while in fact it is no'
nnx to come, Conj. HI. J>U Heb. so. Compare 1H& for ITIJJ. See for these panicles
belongs to J^ i.q.
and their etymology, Hupfeld in Zeitsch. f. d. Kunde
nri'lX, whence a new root n'lN appears to have arisen ;
des Morgenl. ii.
p. 434." Ges. add. J
unless it be better, by changing the points, instead of
n'lX3,
iniX' to read HIS}, 1JTI4O, which forms may be T* & HTN Ch. TO KINDLE. Comp. Arab. j\
referred to Poel of the root be a
to hot, to kindle fire; part. pass.
""ITS
by a
inf. NTO for NTNP,
or FIX only Avith suff. 'O1X, ^X ete. i.
q. Syriacism for HTK,
" Dan. 3:22; ;
with
riN No. l,
pronoun demonstr. commonly a mark of the suff. ajTD, 3:19.
accusative.
|N an unused root; whence
TK [" a demonstrative particle originally of place,
o [Ezbai\, pr.n. m., l Ch. 11:37.
in tJiat place, there, kindred with !"IT;
Arab. ^\, be-
IJO Ch. i.q. 7]^ TO GO A WAT, TO DEPART,
hold!" called in Man.]; subst. time (from the root
(comp. ftaKpvov, lacrima; iu}^\, acdpao). Hence Dan.
" the
fiTX, comp. 1JJ), hence in accusat. at that time, then, ^p Snpp out from
r
2 :5, 8, S^TX AA ord has gone
specially (l) bamalS/ then, of past time; Arabic e. Avhat I haAT e said is ratified, and Avill not be
me," i.
apodosis, behold! ftet>e ba fo j Chald. Gen. 12:6; n; ago rightly compared the Talmudic phrase KITS
Josh. 10:12; 14:11. Followed by a preterite, l Ki. 8 : rPDyta? "to go to one's opinion," i.e. to folloAv one's
OAvn opinion. As to the form, N^JTX is part. fern, from
12; 2 Ch.6:i ; 8:12, 17; and a future, used for a pre-
terite, Jos. Ex. 15:1 Deu. 4:41. the masc. ITS (of the form 7T^, 7?Di?).
1. cit. ; ; Comp. Lehrg,
P-773-
an unused root which seems to have had
(2) then, after that, of future time. Construed
the sense of to pass by, like TJ^, ^7^- Hence are
with a fut. Avhich retains its OAVU pOAver; Ps. 96: 12, %
derived TX TX time, then. [Omitted in Ges. corr.
HH| TX"then shall they rejoice;" Zeph. 3:9; Job ;
logy of the form T\. [But see Ges. corr. in TX.j accus., Gen. 4: 23 ;
Job 33 :i ; ? Job 34: 2 ; ^X Psa.
noun of the 77:2; 7J? Pro. 17:4; 1J? Num. 23:18, of person and
n]3TX fM a verbal couj. Hiphil, from
the root in the signification of sacrificing, Isa. thing. Specially, to hear and answer, used of God ;
">?T,
I.
(j^~- something spun;
IV., Syr. and Ch.
comp. the kindred ?!3 to spin and to flow, both
id.,
*?.t f. tJie
ear, from the root Jl No. I. (Arab.
^1,,
from the idea of rolling. See PUAL. : Ch. rp, Kn, contr. KJ-1K, Syr.
(2) [" intrans. to roll off, i.e."] to go away, to de-
Lj > ) Ex. 29 20 Lev. 8:23, etc. The phrases of which
:
med. Ch and Gen. 20:8; 23:16; 44: 18; Ex. 1O:2. So Isa. 5:9,
riufjiut
to depart, to flee. So in Syr.
njrv ^1X2 "in my ears (said) Jehovah." Compare
In Arabic we may compare to separate, to take
Jj-s-
22:14. "B '?.tX? D-IK' "to place in any one's ears," to
away. Prov. 20 14 =
(followed by a dat. pleon. ft, like deliver something to be perceived by the ears, and
ft t??) 36. Metaph. to fail, as water, Job
;
Jer. 2 :
^TJ'-^f (" whom Jehovah aears"), [Azaniafi], I. construct T\^, with suff. ns
("my bro-
pr. n. m., Neh. 10: 10. ther"), T, 0? pl. b'nK (with dag..occult), const
'$$, with light suff. TO**, with grave suff. CD'n^ with
chains, bonds, Jer. 40 l 4, i. q. D'jpT with
E"j5T$$
:
,
suff.3 pers. VRN for VPIK (comp. Lehrg. p. 602), A
Alcph prosthetic, which some MSS. omit in verse 1.
Root PP.T. [In Thes. root p^T in the sense of to bind.~\
BROTHER. This word is undoubtedly primitive. Arab.
si - 1 -
")JN fut. "i'T. Jer.i :i7, with suff. 731*1 Job 30:18, A const,
st.yO, ^.\
, f
gird. Conj. III. to strengthen, to aid. Cognate roots, those who are not own brothers, as those who are
all of which have the sense of to bind together, to gird, children of one father by different mothers (Gen. 42 :
any one is girded, with an ace. of pers. Job 30 :i8. (b) greater exactness is used, are called 2K |5, E&i> J| see ;
compare Lehrg. 219, l. ll; 4:18; used even of cognate peoples, e.g. of the
Edornites and Hebrews, Gen. 9: 25; 16:12; 25:18;
HITHPAEL, to gird oneself (i.e. arm oneself), to pre-
Isa. with an accus. Ps. 93:1
Num. 20:14.
pare for battle, 8:9;
(4) an ally, confederate; used of people that
(with strength).
were allied, as of the Ty rians and Hebrews, Am. 1:9;
'y i-i- ~*}
an arm (with Aleph prosthetic, com- or of the same religion. Isa. 66: 20 [here of the same
pare p. l), Jer. 32:21 ;
Job 31: 22.
nation].
m -
(f r ""H! with Aleph prosthetic)
(5) any friend; thus used of the friends of Job,
Job 6:15, perhaps also Job 19:13, and of Solomon,
(1) a native tree, not transplanted into another soil,
PS The root is fnt, in the sense of shooting who calls Hiram his brother, i Ki. 9:13; comp. Neh.
-
37 35-
=
forth.
5:10, 14.
(6) any other man, united to us only by the tie
(2) a native, used in speaking of men, Lev.i6:29;
of the human race. i. q. jn Lev. 19:17. Hence
18:26, etc.
when preceded by B"S, one ... another. Gen. 13:11,
!|K patron, n. [Ezrahite], a descendant ofEz- 1n B*K VriBM " and they separated the o n e from
*?yp
rach (rnm) used of Ethan, iKi. 5:11; Ps. 89:1;
; the other," Gen. 26:31 and indeed in this phrase it
;
nd of Heman, Ps. 88 :i. Both of these are said, is even used of inanimate things resembling each other
1 Ch.
2:6, to be the descendants of Zarah (rriT) the if
they be of the masculine gender (of feminines, in
son of Judah and thus rnTS is to be taken
;
only as the same sense is used rrinx HB'K), Ex. 25 20, DH\3^ :
many compound proper names, as ''RO'nX and the 2Sam.l7:22; Zec.ll:7"]; f. nnx (for rnnX); in
like [which follow almost immediately],
pause nnX; a numeral having the power of an adj.
s~$ s $
II. II
^ interj. of lamentation (from the sound
ONE. Arab. J^>J (not Aa>-\ as in Winer); f. t_>~-*A
made),AH! ALAS! const.withadat.Eze.6:li ;
2i:2O. >
-3. <-
JEth. ftfhJ?.: ahadu (not t\(\\*: ahad, as in Winei
In Arabic there is a root derived from this, \~\ to
p-
and again: see below, under nnx. also), Ch. and Syr. in, 4 The same radical let-
^,
cry out, ah! again
s ters are found in the Pehlevi advek, one, and without
in. HN f. Arab. -\ A GREAT POT, in which a the third radical Daleth, Sansc. eka, and Pehlevi jek.
One has often the force of (l) i.
q. the same,
fire was kept burning in the king's winter apartment, Gen. 40:5; Job 31: 15.
Jer. 36:22, 23. The orientals still use pots of this
kind for warming instead of fire places, called in Pers. (2) first, but only so used in counting the days of
the months, Ezr. 10": 16, 17, V^rb inx DV? " On tlit
and Turk. ,^J They have the form of a large pitcher, first day of the month." Bnh? inx? " on the first
and they are usually placed in a cavity in the middle day of the month," Gen. 8:5, 13; comp. pia r&v adfi-
of the room. When the fire is out, a frame like a table fidruiv, Act. 20:7. In counting years, the expression
is put over the pot, covered with a carpet and those is nnx rop, just as in Germ, bag 3>ibt' Sing/ 3ici> etc.,
;
who wish to warm themselves, sit on the ground, and for bag erfle Safyr, etc., Dan. 9:1,2; Ezr. l:i. In
cover their feet, legs, and even their belly, with the other places, as Gen. 1:5; 2:11, ^nx does not lose
The root is nnx No. II. the common idea of a cardinal, and the numbers fol-
carpet.
low one another as in Lat. unus, alter, tertius
HN Ch. brother; pi.
with suff. T n ? Ezr. 7 : 18. (Suet.
Octav. lOl).
D^* only in pi. D*n'X prop, holdings; hence howl- "IHX " some one of the people;"
(3) some one, DJJH
s
ing animals (comp. *X No. II.), probably screech owls, nnx }"X,
X? no one." Hence very often -=-
Isa. 13:21. A
word imitating the sound, like the
(4) it acts the part of an indefinite article, espe-
l.'onn. Ufyu/ Sdiubut/ French hibou ; see HS No. II. and
the root nnx.
cially in the later Hebrew, i Ki. 20:13, nn ? *^
"a certain prophet," Trpo^/'/rijc TIQ;Dan. 8:3, ??X
"
a ram," ein SBibbcrj i Ki. 19:4. So also when
father's brother"),^!AaJ, pr.n. (i)
(
^K precedes, 1n^ "a certain
king of Israel, B. C. 918 897, a man remarkable for e.g. 11(5 holy one,"
his uxoriousness and idolatry, i K. 16:28 to 22:40. i.e. angel, rc ayytXoc, Dan. 8: 13. Sometimes also
Jer. in the older books, Ex. 29:3; l Sa. l : l and followed
(2) rn., 29:21. ;
by a genitive niibn
inx "one of the cisterns,"
^X ("brother of the prudent," or for |inX
some cistern, Gen. 37:20; comp. Job 2: 1O.
i.e.
s s
^ a root, derived from the numeral T}K, not 6:9 (Arab. .Xs-'j only one, incomparable; >^^; id
used in Kal, its place being supplied by "HT to unite.
A. Schultens on Job loc. cit. and 9:5).
HITHPAEL, to unite, to join oneself together, to
When repeated it is one... another,
"I nx. inx
collect oneself; Eze. 81:31, HO^n? prob. "unite (6)
Ex. 17:12; 18:3. It even occurs three times re-
thyself (sword of three edges)," i. e. ravage with united
powers, or (according to the laws of parallelism), peated, iSa. 10:3; 13:17,18. Al.so distributively
of individuals, Nu. 13:2, in tTX inx C 'X
;
regards the four first words of the verse as being those inx? T'njjrr'?} "the whole congregation together;''
of a military commander: " Conjunge te, dextrorsum ! 0.3:9; 6:20; Ecc. 11:6, 1HX? Dn^ "both
{
"
(aci'jm) stnie, sinistrorsum ! ommclt eud) redjtg flellt alike," allc bepbe. Also i.q. together, unitedly,'
I
rud) (Tf&tunj!)/ linf$!" Fall together! right! to your Isa. 65:25; in the same sense is said "inx B^X3 Jud
post left
! !
flO:8; iSa.ii:?; Ch.
XXIX
nnsi nnK Dys one root nin, used in the Hebrew onlj In Piel, but in
(8) f.
ellipt. for time, once,
8 Ki.6:lO; Ps. 62:12. Chaldee in this conjugation likewise.
another." 23:9,28.
In the passage which has been unnecessarily "nnfcs Ch. a shewing, declaration, Dan. 5:12;
Note
discussed, Isa. 66:17, we should retain the common prop. Inf. Aph., from H1IT
signification. It should
thus be rendered, " who sanc- ^HK ("brother " dweller near wa-
of," i.e.
and purify themselves . inx "IHN after one," . .
m. l Ch. 4:2.
tify ters"), [Ahumat], pr.n.
i. e. following one the hierophant who presides over
;
^ -- ^^
;
gendo, and the Gr. a^piyos denotes both rush wrought 41:23; 42:23-
into a cord, and a cord itself; but the former deriva- ninW f.
(fo r nihS, from the masc. ^, which in
tion is
preferable. Arab, and Chald. is the same as with suff.
'HK), pi.
tf
(for -WTO} "joining together"), [Ehud],
^ning Eze. 16:55 (sing. nriX), and Eze. 16; 'VW
52 which is from the masc. *H^), comp.
pr.n. of a son of Benjamin, l Ch. 8:6, written in the (sing. n^riN,
"
Rebecca, JjlX "Dinti thou art our sister." 41 :6, rV3H -Vj?3 onro -VIT |6| (that) they should
(2) one of the same tribe or people, Nu. 25: 18. not be joined (inserted) in the wall of the temple;"
(3) an ally, a confederate city or state, Eze. 16: l Ki. 6 : 6. Hence
?*
46; 23:31. (5) to shut, as the Syr. _*,) Neh. 7:3.
(4) after nfcptf one. ..another; used also of inani-
,
cover with timber, beams and boards, from
(6) to
mate things of the feminine gender, Ex. 26:3, " five the joining together of the beams and planks ; l Ki.
curtains shall be joined fining ? HK'N one to ano-
6:10, "and he covered the house with cedar wood ;"
ther;" verses 5, 6, 17; Eze. 1:9; 3:13. Hab. 2:19.
b'Ori
comp.
(5) metaph. sister is used of anything very closely take
to out, away (from a great number),
(7)
connected with us; Pro. 7:4, " say to wisdom, Ihou whence part. pass, taken, sc. by lot (like the synony-
art my sister;" Job 17: 14. Compare the rest of mous word I?;'?), Nu. 31 =30, "from the half which
the words which bear the signification of propinquity,
belongs to the children of Israel thou shalt take one
2K No. 6, n No. 7.
especially D^pqn JO Tins part takenoutof fifty;" verse 47;
(6) a s pause is lovingly so called, Cant. 4:9, seq.
1
(2) to take, e.g. by hunting, fishing, Cant. 2: 15. l6:l,seq.; 2 Ch. 28: 16, seq. Isa. 7: l, seq.; 38:8;
;
T$
" whose is the
p o s s e s s i o n of the
land. Verses 16,21,22. rWN
:
8,
land," who possesses that
the sword." Compare as to this deponent use of pas-
1?P "possession of a burying place," i. e. a burying
sive participles, Lehrg. p. 309, 310 [Ileb. Gram. 49,
place Iwlonging to a family, Gen. 23:4, 9, 20; 49:30.
3. a], and in this
very verb Syr. j holding, JEth. In connection r6q? "rfl Nu. 27:7, and njnK -V?qj
' xi taken and holding. Nu. 35:2. U<"2tf cf slaves, Lev. 25:45, 46.
XXXI
The Arabs have under the same root 22:9; Ps. 52 2), and therefore slain by Saul. Differ-
:
CfcMTO (for 3Kr high priest in the time of David, 2 Sa. 15:27, 36;
"father's brother"), [Ahi-
17:17,20; 18:19, seq. It appears to be the same
am], pr. n. m., 2 Sa. 23 33 : l Ch. 1 1 :
33.
;
who is mentioned, l K. 4: 15.
"IT^ q. Heb. HTH, with Aleph prosthetic,
Ch. i.
]T1X ("brotherly"), [Ahiari], pr.n. m., l Ch,
an enigma, Dan. 5:12. Root Tin.
TH^
(" brother," i.e. "friend of Jehovah"), OTtt? ("liberal," or "noble brother")
[Ahiah, AhijaK], pr.n. (i) of a certain priest in Ahinada&], pr.n. m., i Ki. 4:14.
the time of Saul, l Sa. 14:3,8. l Ch. 8:7.
(2)
E^rntf ("brother of grace"), [Ahinoam]
(3) 101.11:36. (4) 1X1.4:3. (5) lCh.26:20.
l Sa. 25:43; 27:3,
Ch. 2:25. pr.n.f. (i) iSa.i4-.50. (2)
-(6) i
(7) i Ki. 15: 27, 33. (8) Neh.
30:5; 2 Sa. 2:2; 3:2.
10:27. (9) a prophet living at Shiloh in the time
of Jeroboam, l Ki. 1 1 29 12:15; called H'PIX i Ki.:
;
-1
"TJDD'H^ ("brother of support," or "aid"),
14:6>8; 2 Ch. 10:15.
[Ahisamach], pr.n. m., Ex. 31:6; 35:34.
( brother," i.e."friend of the Jews," ^BTr^? ("brother of aid"), [Ahiezer], pr.n.
for -nn
TR), [Ahihutf], pr.n.m. Nu. 34:27. m .
(i) a captain of the Danites,
Nu. l 12 2 25;:
;
=
"iB^n^ ( brother of a singer," or for ifc V$ 59u^f [Ahasbai~\, pr.n. of a man, 2 Sa. 23:34.
"brother of the upright"), [Ahishar], pr.n. m., The etymology is unknown. Simonis considers it tc
l Ki 4:6. be contracted from 'H? HDHX " I flee to the Lord."
derived from the root ^711; PL D'33 n?n to stroke " He will not
the face, to to beseech. But perhaps it is
7:10, delay (punishment) to him that
caress,
hateth him."
rather compounded of HX and v = ;
!7.
(2) intr. i.q. Kal (Germ. lange mad)cn), Jud. 5:28
V^W* ("oh that"),[4AJaz],pr.n.m.andf. l Ch. "why do the wheels of his chariot tarry;" Ps. 40:18,
2:31 ; comp. ll -.41. ins^ not; Ps. 70:6; Gen. 34:19.
"tarry
(3) totarry at any thing, with ?V, Pro. 23:30,
f, Ex. 28:19, the name of a precious " who ta
LXX.
1"JI! ?J? D'TjIXP tarry long at the wine," i.e.
stone; Vulg. a^tfluorroc- Josephus (in whom who drink till late at night. Comp. Isa. 5:11; Ps.
there appears however some confusion in the order
127:2.
of words), d^nrfjc- This word appears to be a verbal
The derivatives immediately follow, except
of the conj. Hiph. from D^TI to dream, perhaps from
[the superstitious idea of] its
causing dreams to those (with Dag. forte occult) f. nnns, piur. nnms
who wore it. An idea of a similar kind gives its rise to n'nns (from the unused sing. "IHS with Kametz pure).
the name ap.i 0voroe, because of its [having the sup- -'
(l) adj. properly following, another, specially
posed power of] keeping away drunkenness from the one who follows a first, second, (from the idea of fol-
wearers compare Braun. de Vestitu Sacerdot. Heb.
; lowing [compare secundus a sequendo]); Gen. 17:21,
n^nKn H3K'3 "in the following year, next year,"
folgenbeS 3at)tj l Ki. 3 22. Hence generally, another^
:
Manuale]. The metropolis of Ancient Media, and without ^ Isa. 42:8, \R$"& inx ? -jb3* "and I will
the summer residence of the kings of Persia; situated give my
not,
glory to another (God);"
Isa. 48:11
in the same place where afterwards was, and still is Once apparently, adv. elsewhere, Psa. 16:4,
XXXIII
VVIO ins "who hasten elsewhere," sc. from the 24:4; Josh.g:i6; 23:1; more rarely "^*? '
is omitted,
true God to idols. [In Ges. corr. this passage is taken Lev. 25:48; once Tgfc? nq? J os h. 2:7.
"
as another (god)."] (4) 13T)q*$ prop, after that things had so hap-
i. e. afterwards, Gen.
fa) [A her], pr.n. of a man, i Ch. 7:12. pened, 15: 14; 23:19; 25:26,
etc. Comp. Syr. ^orKn and ^cn With the
""^U^ prop, what is behind, hinder part, extre- i>tv^>.
Gen. 22: 13, vrip_3 -qaipa rns3 ins ^s nsrn. " an d be- 10. In the later [?] Hebrew there also occurs ^qx
hold a ram behind," i. e. in the background (tm
nNT " after this," Job 42: 16; Ezr. 9:10; compare
" Chald. nri nqx Dan. 2:29, 45.
$intf rgrunbe ) caught by its horns in a thicket." Not
that Abraham behind his back, as it is
beheld the ram Comp. with other prep. (i) ^OJj^ once ^nS'JO
1 Chr. 17:7? prop, from after, from (being) after
commonly thought, with the Vulgate, but at a distance
in the part which lay before his eyes, tm intergrunbe (any thing), t)inter (etreaS) meg. It is used especially
ber cent/ and there is no occasion to read with the when one leaves what he has before followed, Num.
Sam., LXX., Syr. and 42. MSS. ins._-(J) adv. of 14:43 Deu. 7:4; 2 Sam. 20:2, also from behind,
;
time, afterwards, then, Gen. 10:18; 18:55 2 4 : after (compare \Q No. 3); Josh. 8:2; Ex. 14:19;
i etc.
Jer 9:21 used of time, Eccl. 10:14. I n ^ en 4 7>f r
;
- :
55? 3<> :
,
n?Sn "after these things," i.e. afterwards, a formula j'nnK fem nr^S. (from ins with. the adj. termi-
nation p) (i) hinder, latter, opposed to former,
of transition ; Gen.l5 :1 ;
22:1. Followed by an Infin.
Num. 6:19, i? "ins prop, so, i.e.
foremost, flt^l, Ex. 4 8 Deu. 24 3 Gen. 33 2, 0$ :
;
:
;
:
;
S -ins Eze.4O:l and with- (2) after, later, following, fnqS
(3) Conj.TJ : after that, ;
D'V
out Lev. 14:43; Job 42 7. :
generation," Ps.48:i4; Jviqs "after-lime," Pro.
I^'S.
31 :25; 30:8. PL Q'riQX those who come after,
Isa.
Note. Instead of ins there occurs far more frequently
PI. *1Q*?, for which see just below, and it is
posterity, Job 18:20.
constantly " I
used when suff. are joined with this word. (3) last, Neh. 8:18; Isa. 44:6, (God) am the
firstand I am the last;" Job 19:35. Fem. nnqs
PI. D^nS only in const, state nqs ;
with suff. nqs-. so n ?" nsa Det,t. ^
adv. at last, last, Dan. 11:29. i
going, follow
for the common H^nS, Tav of the feminine gender
any one's side, Exod. 23:2; 2 Sa. 2: 1O; comp. 1 Ki. T
H7; Pro. 28: 23, tfyp? ;n nns nns rroto "he who being cast away by apoc., as TST for n^ Kl, WpD foi
following me (i. e. my precepts) rebukes a man,
r*in Chald. adj. ["for |n ins], Dan. 4: 5,
shall find favour." Gen. 16:13;
(6) of time, after,
17:8; followed by an inf. after that, Gen. 5:4. innx properly, at the last, i.e. lastly, at length,
(3) For conj. after that, commonly "1^5? nq, Deu. is pleonastic, see this particle A, 1. ["
XXXIV
whence arose by degrees the softer irnTpd-n jc-" Ge
fi'Tj^ f. (1) the latter part, extreme paries.
1
399- More frequently used of time.
:
(a) e n d, Deu. add.]
!i:i; issue, event, latter state, Job 8 7 ; 42:12: :
P^-n^Tl^ Ch. m. pi. i.q. Heb., Dan. 3:2, 3, 2^;
Pro. 5:4, rno BJV'inX "her end (the adulterous wo- 6:2,3."
man's) is bitter," i. e. the latter state of those whom she
r'Uo Ahasjierus, apparently the Hebrew
educes comp. Pro.23 32. Sometimes used of a happy
;
:
were governed by procurators (mns), while the sa- in the words khshehioh Shah, king, khshatrap= Sa- =
ruled the whole See trap. See St. Martin in the Journal Asiatique, iii.
traps province. Brisson,De Regio
Pers. Principatu,i. 168; Heeren,Ideen,tom.i. p. 489, p. 85 Champollion, Precis du Systeme Hieroglyph. ;
lately \tecn found in an ancient Indian inscription, is spirits of the dead (see under 31X) Isa. 19:3. ?
ks'atrapa, i.e. warrior of the host; see Giitt. Gel. Anz. (2) a gentle going, a gentle flow, a gentlt
1839, p. 805, seq. ; Lassen, Zeitechr. f. d. Morgenl. iii. mode of acting, whence EN, ONp, DX?, commonly adv
161 To this harsher form correspondc the Greek ea-
.
gently, slowly,used of the gentle and slow pace of one
i0pa'jrj7c (BoeckL Corp. Ir.sci No. 2691 ,c.),
.
mourning, l K. 2 1 27 used of water flowing gently,
:
;
XXXV
[sa. 8:6. >
13^? prop. "at my slow pace," narf) metner 3:15; 20:l6, toB T
-IBK "bound in the
righi
allgemady Gen. 33: 14. Used of acting hand," i.e. who could not well use the
'macf)ltcf)fctt, right hand,
and speaking, iSa.l8: 5, T8& *? B$ "deal gently --f
lor
"and
me youth;" Job 15:11,
vrith the
a word gently spoken to thee."
^ tfc$
left-handed
jJLc to bind,
;
Arab.
which
J?\
is
V. to be hindered; compare
applied to an impediment in
speech. [So in Eng.
U an unused root. Arab, to be firm, Conj.
tongue-tied."]
|
OS r.not used; perhaps to bin d, to bind toge- urbit? as Plaut. unde gentium? Odyss.
1
*
i.
170, irddtv
'^pw*'.) (c)
nx'T ? why? wherefore? (from
thcr; kindred to the root Arab. - ,
the therefore), Jer. 5:7.
cords of a tent. Hence |-1BS Note. Some other particles have *S very closely
joined to them, so that they coalesce into one word,
vPN rut. "IBJO TO SHUT, once Ps. 69:16. Arab.
^p, nD'N, nb, nb'X, which see. This particle is
le\ to make a hedge, to inclose with a hedge. 9 P- 7
used in the same manner by the Syrians, in J._LOy|
Kindred roots are IVK, "!?, 1^. Hence 9 * p 9 V
hew? ov^) whence? J.J-.J who? what? So in
)
"K?K ("shut," "bound," perhaps "dumb"),
Ch. n8
who then? f. KT. So in JEth. h-:
\Ater], pr.n. m. (l)Ezr. 2:16; Neh.7:2l. (2) where? IIOAV? With Nun parag. |?N where? ard
Ezr.2:4a; Neh. 7:45. which
contr. }K, see. [But see above.] Pro. 31:4,
w m. adj., shut, bound, i.e. impeded; Jud. the reading in np is "9?? *K D '?Pf to be rendered
XXXVI
"
and (it is not) for princes (to say) where is strong TO BE AN ADVERSARY TO ANY ONE, TO PER-
drink?" [See 1* No. 1.] SECUTE HIM AS AN ENEMY, TO HATE. (The original
I. 'K contr. for *} (as ? for %n for T|,
comp. idea 1 believe to be that of
an
breathing, blowing, puff-
idea often applied to anger and hatred, prop.
Lehrg. p. 510), m. (f. peihaps, Isa. 23:2), pi. D^K, ing,
oncei^, Eze. 26:18. anfcfynaubenj compare my remarks on the letter n.
(1) pr. habitable, or inhabited I and (from the ["Kindred is 3nN in which the idea of breathing after
root HJS No. as opposed to water, the sea, and
I, l), passes over into that of desire and love"]). The finite
rivers; Isa. 42: 15, rir.n? nnfe "I will turn the
Q*$ verb occurs once, Ex. 23:22. But of very frequent
rivers into habitable land;" compare Isa. 43:1 9; use is the part. 3.>.1K an adversary, an enemy, a
50 : 2. Hence foe, Gen. 22:17; 49 8; ; sometimes it retains the
(2) maritime land, whether the sea coast of a proper construction of a participle, l Sa. 18:29, S.^X
II. ^ contr. for *1K from the root H1K No. com-II, times render it vulture, sometimes kite. Nor is the
pare above 'K island; (l) pr. howling, cry. Hence opinion of Bochart improbable (Hieroz. ii.
p.l93,seq.)
as a concrete, a howler, i.e. a jackal; Arab. ^j\ that it is a kind of falcon, called by the Arabs ,.4j
\y*
^.T pi. ,_c.T culiJ son, daughters of howling, [" i. e. falco cesalori"] now called smirle, emerillon [Eng.
Pers.
J'uLl
Shakal. It is so called from its nocturnal merlin]. However, the Hebrew word may perhaps
Damiri be more comprehensive, and include all the hawk or
cry, which is like the scream of an infant.
in Bochart. Hieroz. torn. i. p. 843. It only occurs falcon tribe, whence Lev. and Deu. locc. citt. there is
4:1O, where several editions read unitedly, v'K "woe (i)2Sa. 3:7; 21:8.
to him." ""1?$ i.q. *# where? with n parag., as in njn, fn
III. *tf occurs in Job 22:30, and
adv. not. It Gen. 3:9; 18:9, etc., and without an interrogation,
in proper names "rt33~*K (" i n g 1 o r i o u s"), l Sa. 4 : 2 1 , Job 15:23, " he wanders for bread HK where (it
and '3)'**. It is of more frequent use in the Rab- may be").
hinic, especially in forming adjectives with a priva- 3VX land of Uz, a man
pr. n., Job, an Arab of the
tive signification (just as in Germ, un/ ofyn [Eng. m,
remarkable both for his wealth and piety, tried by
tm], for the same purpose), and in the -/Ethiopia, in
God with calamities of every kind; mentioned otily
which is have no doubt
also prefixed to verbs. I
Test.] in the book
f\^ the Old that bears his name,
[in
that it is shortened from P** (see the root P), like a
- */
privative in Greek, and in Sansc. from an. and in Eze. 14:14,20; LXX. 'Ici/3, Arab.
^jJ.'
TQ^N ("inglorious"), [I-chabod]-, see
K The name properly signified a man persecuted (frc Ji
NTo.IIL the root3$, as 1! one born, from T) and if t
XXXVII
appears to refer to the calamities which he endured. ttrilbe 3tegen/ and in Latin they are called caprece, from
their likeness to a goat, capra. LXX. always tXa^og.
Others take it as serio resipiscens, i.q. Arab. L *\,\
'.*$ m.
(l) a ram, from its curved and twisted
(from the root 31N, c__>7 to return); comp. Kor. Sur. horns; see the root 7-1K and ?'N, which properly has
xxxviii.40 44, but see against this opinion in Thes. the sense of rolling, or twisting, Gen. 15:9; pi. Cy'N
p. 81, col. i. Ex. 25:5, and DyK Job 42:8. Intensive of this is
f.
(prob. "withotit cohabitation," i.e.
(2) a term in architecture, crepido portce, or the
Plat. p.
249, B, chaste, modest; comp. Agnes,
r,
projecting ledge surrounding a door at the top and
a very suitable female name, and not to be estimated
the two sides, often adorned with columns on each
from the conduct of the celebrated Jezebel of Tyre) :
rogative particle **? (see under that word, No. 2,) 14,16,38; comp. verses 26, 31,34,37. The ancient
and HI this. versions sometimes render it posts, sometimes columns;
Aquila K(jiw/jia, as if ram's-horn-work, i.e. the volutes
"=}
^ how? abbreviated from n ?*K, Gen. 26:9. of columns, especially those of the Corinthian order,
Often of lamentation, (alas) how! Ps. 73:19; Isa.
elseAvhere called /cpioe; see the copious remarks in
14:4; Ecc. 2: 16; without an interrogation, Ruth
Thes. p. 43 45. As to the etymology, it is either
3:18; 2 Ki. 17:28.
prop, a projection, prominence, SSorfprttng, from the root
"V \> (from *N No. 2, and H3 i.q. ri3 so, here), 71X No. 3, or else, following Aquila, we must regard
(l) how? Deu. l : 12. ??K prop, as denoting the capitals of columns, so called
(2) where? Cant. 1:7. Often used in lamenting from the volutes resembling ram's horns hence ap- ;
and deploring (as T*?), Isa. 1:21; Lam. 1:1; with- plied to the whole post or column. Comp D^N.
out an interrogation, Deu. 1 2 30. :
??^$ (Milel), how? Cant.5:3; Est.8:6; from (1) pi. mighty ones, leaders, nobles of a state,
'*? and nSBssnS^ H.3 so. Ex.l5:i5; Eze.i7:l3; 2 Ki.24:i5(in np). See ^IX
No. 2, 3.
^ ;
see the root ^-1X.
(2) a strong, robust tree, like Spve, specially, the
oak or terebinth sometimes the palm, i.
q. H7X. fl?X
\? m., a stag, hart, Deu. 12:15; 1 4 5 Isa.
! :
;
P- 21 7i 554> se q-> L6 Quien, Oriens Christ, torn. iii. root 0*??, E^n. Perhaps we should also compare D!V,
-,-c/ which see. Hence
p. 758. In Arabian writers it is called &JLH< Among
the moderns, E. Ruppell, of Frankfort,- was the first f. n: adj. terrible, formidable, Hab. l :f,
to visit its ruins, which he did lately, and mentions Cant. 6:4, 10, and
that they are now called Gelena. A neighbouring HO'N (for nrp\X ), ;
f. terror, Deu. 32:25. Followed
castle with the modern town, which is shaded by a
by a genitive of the causer of terror to others. Pro.
palm grove (compare Strab. xvi. p. 776, Casaub.), is
20:2, "H^O nD*K "terror of a king," which the royal
called -Ljir- i.e. mountain. See v. Zach, Correspond- majesty causes. Job 33:7, *np'S terror," i.e. "my
ence Astronom., vii. 464. which I cause. With n parag.
nnO'X Ex. 15:16. PI.
*
f.
i.q. ''$ prop, fortitude, strength, hence DDK
PI. (i) terrors, Ps. 88:16.
aid, Ps. 22:20. Root ^ No.l.
(2) idols, Jer. 50:38 ; so called from the terror
ETK pi. D'S^K and n'lD^K, a term in architecture which they cause to their worshippers. Comp. nV?E?D-
which it is
very difficult to define. It appears to have (3) Emim, pr.n. of a very ancient people, who are
signified projection of a pediment,
Vie cftmfe. mentioned as having occupied the land of the Moab-
It is
clearly distinguished from D?W, with which many
ites before them, Gen. 14 5 Deu. 2:11. :
;
with D^"N. See Eze. 40:16, 22,26, 29. which see. Hence
joined
[" Compare Boettcher, Proben, p. 319."] I.
|!^> const, st. PX prop, subst. nothing, emp-
2/fr$ ("trees," perhaps, palm grove), [Elim"], tiness, vacuity. Isa. 40:23, ]1^? D^P !D3 I'"who
|
were twelve wells and seventy palm trees," Ex. 15: 8:9, 0'??$?? nin^\3B> pn j'n3 p "there was no-
27; 16: l; Num. 33:9. With n parag. HO^K Ex. thing in the ark besides the two tables of stone," Ps.
15 27. Geographers compare a valley of that region,
: 19:7; Ex. 22:2.
nailed Garendel[Wady Ghurundel]. but Ehrenberg (2) not, including also the verb subst. is not, tea J
--
informed me that he found a valley, called A-J'-Cj in
.
ble that there ii a trace of the ancient name. Aram. A!^, TV ?, n^, Nup 14:42,
XXXIX
D33"lip? nin* "because Jehovah is not among you." 133'S Wnj " behold he had disappeared." Of death
"
Jud. 21 :
25, in those days 'S"}?'!? ^O PS there was Ps. 39:H-
uot a king in Israel." Gen. 37 129, "fa| |pV p " Jo- (4) It may be rendered without, i.q. 1?>?3. But pro-
seph was not in the cistern." Ps. 10:4; Ex. 12:30; perly the examples must be referred to No. 2. Joel
" and
Lev. 13:31. In those phrases in which B?. is used alii r- 1:6, "mighty and without number," prop.
matively, in the same when negative, PS is used, as there is not a number;" Deu. 32:4.
HI ?$ #
Gen. 31:29, and WT ?!? Neh. 5:5. |
(5) with prefixes (a) PS? prop, in not, in defect
" when there was n o t Pro. 8
Moreover, it should be observed (a) wherever any of, (a) ;" 24, nonjfl p3. :
personal pronoun constitutes the subject of a sentence, "when there (were) not yet any waves," i.e. before
"I
it should be suffixed to this word, as '33'S (am, was, the waves were created, comp. 019?- often
(ft)
will be), not ;" ^3'S "thou (art, wast, wilt be) not ;" ^S, "without
i.q. without,^; 26.38:11, HDiri PS?
;
My, n|3K, D? ? S, D3, and in the pi. form (as if from a wall." Pro. 5:23; 11:14.
D3) iD'3'S, torS, Ps.59:l4; 73:5. (b) When the (b) well nigh,Ps. 73:2, prop, almost
PS? almost,
verb substantive, from the usage of the language, is
nothing hence, there was nothing wanting from,
;
pS3 jy.3 PS1 and did not touch the ground," i. q. not," Isa. 40:29; "to him, to whom nothing (is),
J?33 66. Est! 3:8; 7:4; Ezr. 3:13; Ex. 5:16, J3FI Neh. 8: 10. (/3) for
nVn % so ^a t, there (was)
fri3 PS "straw was not given," i.q. IFI3 tO. Thus
not," Ezr. 9: 14.
often as a circumlocution, ?io one, Josh. 6:1, KW PS not (with a double nega-
(d) j'KQ ( a ) so that
K3 PS1 "there (was) no one going out, nor (was tion. See Lehrg. 224, note 2); Isa. 5:9, 3B>> pO
there)any one coming in," i. e. no one went out and "so that there is not an inhabitant." Isa. 6:11.
no one came in. Lev. 26:6; Isa. 5:29. Very rarely, Also because that (there is) not, Isa. 50:2. (/3)
and not without solecism, it is joined to a finite verb; no
i.q.PS with JO pleonastic (comp. '*? No.l, d),
Jer. 38:5, 1?^T D3I?$ bv TjW pS
king <3 " for the
one, Jer. 10: 6, 7; 30:7.
avails nothing against you." Job 35:15: and even
-ZVbfe. P.S, the absolute state of the noun, only occurs
the particle B, Ps. 135:17, Dn'B? n-n KTPS "there
at the end of a sentence PS ;
const, state, is always so
is no breath in their mouth." It would be more cor-
used that belongs to what follows, e.g. Num. 20:5,
it
rect to write in both places {<? In tike manner, " there is no
PS DV? water," for which also D!$ PS
however, the more modern Arabs write .^J for ^
may be said.
(c)
v pS there is not to me, for I have not, I had not.
Arab. II.
j?^ adv. interrog. where? Arabic M i.q.
Lev. 11 :
10; i Sa. l :2, like the J ,~J. Fol-
lowed by a gerund often equivalent to non licet,
it is 'S, 'S with I added, as in 'T^, PIS. [but see the note
it is not allowed, like OVK 'iariv for OVK tfca-w, and added on that word]. It occurs only with |P pref.
Arab. J .,'j~= "there is to me," for, "it is permitted PSP whence? Gen. 29:4, and frequently.
" it is PS
tome," Koran iv:94, x. 1OO; Est. 4: 2, NH^ pS Sa. 21:9, i.
q. PS, but interrogatively for
o. o t lawful to go in."Ruth 4 4 Ps. 40 6, T /S t"?. PS :
;
:
ns'JO a double measure (the one just, the other too 283.19:42; also l^n V'?* Gen. 24: 13. Especial)
20:10; Deu. 25:14; Amos 8 5.
small), Pro. This = in this signification sing. is
put w"X &% collectively ;
^ 3 S Josh. 9
:
word has not any Phoenicio-Shemitic root from brjfc for bfTJ^ ;
:
6, 7 ;
10 24 Jud. 7:8:
:
;
whence is uni a measure [" whence LXX. otyi, tomed to send to mourners. In like manner (i)
ber,
Arab. an Egyptian measure see Rudiger in
D'nfctf EX and with art. D'n?gn KN a man of God,
<u> , ;
i.
q. a servant and minister of God of angels, Jud. ;
nS'K (from and n*B "here"), where? Isa. of David, 2 Ch. 8:14. () followed by a genitive
49:21 ; Ruth 2:19; how? Jud. 8:18; in indirect in- which denotes attribute, virtue, vice, it designates one
terrogation, Jer. 36:19. endued tcith such an attribute, and the Hebrews were
accustomed in this manner to make a circumlocution
X13X wholly, so, therefore, Jud.
i.
q.
of adjectives. iSfl fS "a man of form," i.e. hand-
9:38; Pro. 6:3, in some editions; but it would be DW K*K " bloody;" 337 " intelli-
more correct to write N12X, which see. some; Vv'j"*
by HN or JH one another; HS
;
" our (3) any one, some one, Gen. 13:16; Ex. 16:29;
13VJ'3X men," i.e. husbands, Jer. 44:19; so in
Greek a'/p, II. xviii. 291 Lat. vir, Hor. Sat. i., 2, ;
Cant. 8:7; so Syr. _AJ) for rtc e.g. __!) L'tdj a
127. (c) opposed to an old man, it is the name of
virile age, l Sa. 8:33. Sometimes
certain Jew. [" Pl. ETJX. men, certain men, lik
(d) it denotes 9
x
manly mind, valour; (comp. verb in Hithp.) i Sa. Syr. ^-icjfcjl
i Ki. 20:17; Jer.37:lO."]
4:9, DB>3$ Vrn ipfnpn be strong and be men;" (4) each, every one; iKi. 2O:2O,
" and
every one
:
i Ki. 9:9; corap. Horn. II. v-5*g. It is (e) homo, they slew his mnn.'
say.
pn^ for \VJy m. Eze. 40:15.
np, entrance..
B"S sows of men from the root nnx i.K13 to come, to enter. In 3n3,
^6) \33 periphrastically for
pi. is
q.
inen simply, like D"JX \33; see D~}X No. 5, Psa. 4:3.
the letter Yod being transposed, it is read
Sometimes used {u^art&dc of noble men, opposed to ON Ch. i.q. Heb. E?. there is, from which it ia
DI \33 Ps. 49:3; Pro. 8:4; see D"1S No. i, letter (6). -G*
As to origin, I regard B** as a primitive word, formed. (Arab. /.^, only in a few phrases, Syr. AJ,
somewhat however softened from the harsher form in Targg. nK, Talmud. XJVK) Dan. 5:11, 13 S W
i,
which see; whence HK'S for ""l^X, and pi. ^p-IDpOS "there is a certain man in thy kingdom;"
2:28, 30; 3:25. With a negative particle 'P ^ K^
11
ishi, mistress ;
and perhaps we should compare Gr. tc,
7pn N"thou art," 2: 26; p^p * "ye are," 3: 14. And
i| 11
HITHPALEL B'E'ixnn to shew oneself or act as a used absolutely, should generally be rendered tliere
it
man (tti'Spifcadat), fid) ermannenj Isa. 46:8, -l^xnn exists, there is, il y a; Dan. 2:10, n. ? *P*X "there
"shew yourselves men," i.e. be wise, cast away the is to any one," he has, Ezr. 4: 16.
e'dldish trifles of idolatry. Rightly rendered by
Luther, feqb Scanner. (Ch. PE/Kpn and fc?B>Kpn id.)
0^ pr.n. see 'PX.
7XTO< pr.n.
[Ithiet], (for
b 'p* "God is
JiL'B u/ N (" man of shame," i.e. shaming him- with me"), Prov. 30:1. Ithiel and Ucal seem to
self,perhaps bashful), [Ish-bosheth~\, pr.n. of a son have been the children or disciples of Agur, to whom
of Saul, who after the death of his father and bro-
he addressed his instructions.
thers governed eleven tribes for two years in opposi-
tion to David. 2 Sa. 2 of palms"), \_Ithamar~\, pr.n.
4.
of the youngest son of Aaron, Ex. 6:23; 28:1.
K ("man of glory"), [18 hod], pr.n. m.
1 Ch. 7:18. |JVN & JHK (for ]r\\
with Aleph prosthetic, from
the root IP* to be perennial), adj. (i) perennial,
a little man,and
constant, especially used of water. JJVX ?ri3 "a pe-
.
(i)
followed by }*V "little man of the eye," i.e. pupil, rennial stream," constantly flowing, Deu. 21:4; Am.
inwhich as in a glass a little image of a man is seen, 5:24; and without bra i Ki. 8:2, HT DWKn the
Den. 32 1C Pro. 7:2. This
:
;
pretty figure is used in month of perennial streams" (elsewhere called
O^C-O -o
Tishri), the seventh month of the Hebrew year
,
;
ni*)
of the eye." (See Ex. 14:27. Job 33:19 in ana, |n an(3) ^W :
15, "the way of u:3 wicked is pernicious." Ren- ad Fam. viii. 23, " tan turn quod exArpinati veneram.
dered aptly enough by Luther, bringt 2Bct>e j Jerome, cum mihi a te litterae redditcc sint ;" Vellej. ii. 117.
" of the wicked
vcrago. [Explained in Thes. the way
Hence an unused root, i.q. "13X to bind\
is a perennial stream," see No. i.J "Jp.J|,
*j|^ (shortened
from J3X, from the root |-13 comp. ;
false, deceptive. Specially for 3T3.X
?m " a de-
Ch. r??, *?? and ?, which is taken from the fuller ceiving river," i.e. soon drying up and disappoint-
"
|5 : [Derivation given in Ges. corr.: kindred are ^3, J3, ing the traveller, Jer. 15:18; Mic. 1 : 14. Opposed to
I3X, see Hupfeld in Zeitschr. f. d. Morgenl. ii.
143."]). J^'X a continual river ; comp. fundus mendax, Hor.
sure ly, c ert ai nly, no doubt.
(l ) affirmative part, Canu. iii. 1,30.
Gen. 44:28, 'PB TIB ^
" no doubt he is
torn;"
TT?K (i.q. 3T?S), \_Achzib~],
pr.n. (l) of a town
Jud. 3:24; l Ki. 22:32; 2Ki. 24:3; Ps. 58:12; Job
on the sea coast in the tribe of Asher, situated be-
10:21. Hence
tween Acco and Tyre, called by the Greeks Ecdippa,
(2) adv. of limitation, only. Exod. 10:17, "HX
now Dsib; Josh. 19:29; Jud. 1:31.
"only this once;" Lev.ll :2i,^3Xh n^TlX T|X
DJ?Sn
of a town in the tribe of Judah, Josh. 15: 44;
" (2)
"only these ye may eat;" Ps. 37 8, be not angry, :
gether joyful. Isa. 16:7, D'X3? ^X "altogether 1T3X (with the adjectivial termination
^*]J?*$, i.q.
contrite ;" Isa. 19: 11. (b) before substantives, no-
'7). (l) harsh, cruel, Pro.5:9; 17:11 Jer.6:23. ;
4:5; 3 Ex. 12:43 45? Lev. 23:ii, and J9 Lev. 7: 25; the fruit of good or evil actions, sexual pleasvres,
91 25:22; Nu. 15:19; comp. iaQiuv rtvoe-
;
It is Pro. 30 20 (comp. 9:17;
: et vesci voluptatibus, Cic. Fin.
used not only (and that very frequently) of men, but 5:20).
also of beasts, Isa. 11:7; whence ??KH Jud. 14:14, (4) perhaps, to taste, to have the sense of taste,
the eater, in Samson's enigma, is the lion
(compare Deu. 4:^8.
(5) to diminish, to lessen, to take from, Eze.
1<^). The following phrases should also be noticed: 42:5, "ihe upper chambers were shorter, -v31* *3
fifD?? D'jWS for the beams or columns took away
(a) to eat a land, a field, a vine, is used for to
from them," i. e. occupied their place.
eat produce or fruit Gen.3:l7; Isa. 1:7; 36:16;
its ,
NIPHAL ^3W, fut. Typ. to be eaten, Ex. 12 =46; 13*
(comp. 37:30). (b) to devour sacrifices, is said of
3, 7 also, to be fit to be eaten, to be fit for food,
;
take a meal, to dine or sup, to feast, Gen. 31 154; consume. Job 20:26, K'K -irpD&W
(read fachlehu)
"
43:16; Jer. 41:1; 52:33; comp. <payelv aprov, Lu.
fire shall consume him," for in?3KJJl. Dagesh
7DS to live,7 Am.7:l2.
forte excluded is compensated by the long vowel Ka-
14:1. Sometimes DPI? VV - T is simply
1 J . .
(e) to devour any one's flesh, Psa. 27:2, used of PUAL, to be consumed, by fire, Neh. 2:3, 13; by
cruel and fierce enemies who thirst for one's blood. the sword, Isa. l 20. :
Compare Horn. II. vi. 2O2 ov Qvp.ov mrt(W. (g) : consume, to devour (of the sword, Eze. 21 :33), spe-
^!?y., BJJ? ?3? to eat up, to devour a people, the cially to give to eat, to feed, construed with two accus.,
one of the person, the other of the thing. Ex. 16:32;
poor, used of princes who consume the wealth of a
Nu. 11:18; Deu. 8:l6; Isa. 49:26; with JP of the
people, oppressing and impoverishing them, Ps. 1 4 4 ; :
words were found, and I did eat them," i.e. I eagerly _ for the Gr. dm/3a\Xw, Lu. 16: i ; whence
~ ~ '
devoured them, made them my own. (Compare on
Carm. Samarit. iv. 16.) Hence is the vision to be part.
J^ ^J
Ch.
devil, Arab.
J& ^ js>\ id.)
(2) to
an actual eating.]
^r^. (b]
23 ;
Isa. 49:4; 53 4- :
Hence, by abbreviation,
the Gr. p/, only in what are called subjective pro-
which see. [This obs. is omitted in Ges. corr.]
positions. Thus it is only put with the future, and
(i) TO PUT A LOAD ON (abeast of burden), differs in this respect from N?. 2 Ki. 6:27, ~/8
prop, apparently to bendjto make to bow down under qy^K PKO rrVv. ^Bn
"(if) Jehovah help thee not,
a load, kindred to the root *)??, which see. Arab. how can I help thee?" C^JT^ &> must be rendered,
" God will not
help thee." Well rendered by LXX.
II. to tie, to bind on a pack saddle, IV. to put are auaai
" I fear the Lord will not help
/u>j Kuptoc,
on a pack saddle. In the verb this signification does Gen. 21 :
16, n&O^rT'K i,1) tonnte nid)t mit
thee"). anfe^n
not occur, but in the noun ^1?^; whence "I cannot look on." 'PS. 50:3, ^7*1 ^Wfl N ^
(2) to urge to work, to impel on, like the Syr. "Our God will corne, and will not keep silence,"
he may be ex-
"*
7
In the Old Testament only found Pro. 16 26, prop, unb er mod)te rootjl ntfljt fd)n)eigen/
.ONO) :
m. a load, a burden, and metaph. weight, wurbe nie metne eete Jtjilltgen. Compare Cant. 7 3. :
" seek
authority, dignity, like "N33- Job 33:7, 'S?N] Sometimes the verb is omitted, Amos 5:14,
133'. fc6 *p!$ "and my burden (dignity) shall not good, in *?X1 and (seek) not evil." g. 8ft. 1:81, "**
be heavy upon thee." So Ch., Syr., while LXX. i] "
03^ IDC-ys) ^0 (let there) not (be) dew nor rain
Xeip fj.ov, and so Kimchi, regarding S)?^ as i.q. *]? in a upon you." Pro. 12:28, where it should be rendered,
The former explanation " the
similar place, 13:81. is
way of righteousness (giveth) life, and the right
however preferable. way r>lD'?N (giveth) not death," or calamity; or,
" a
right way never leads to death."
3N an unused root, i.q. Arab. \ Conj.V. to
(3) By far the most frequently it is a conj. of pro-
Sls$. S-<sf. hibiting, dehorting, deprecating, wishing thai
dig, especially the earth (whence^!, 'i\ a pit, a anything be not done. Always joined to a future
ditch), kindred to the roots nTS^S.-fipjTga. Hence
when it can be, apocopated when in the first person,
;
paragogic. Ex. 16:29, &' X N>T?>? " let not any one
I
^3&$ m. a digger, a husbandman; Jer. 51:23; Sam. 26:20. In the second person, Gen.
go out;" l
Am. 5:16. PL DH3K, with suff. Danatf 2 Ch. 26:10;
22:12, T n^fPI'^N "stretch not forth thy hand."
Joel i: 11; Isa. 61:5. (Chald. id.; Syr. and Zab.
r s #
IX'V'rr'pS "fear
ye not," Gen. 43:23; Jer. 7:4. In
"
the first, Ps. 25: 2, n^nX'^X let me not be asham-
J^a) Arab. Perhaps from the same source
;
js\. ed I" sc. may God so grant that I be not ashamed.
have sprung Gr. dypo'c; Latogw; Goth, akr; Germ.
It is rarely separated from the verb, Psa. 6:2, "7K
TCcfer. "
[Engl. acre.]). ^rP3in ^KS. not in thy wrath chasten me." Also
^JK ("enchantment," from the root used in imprecation, Gen. 49 4, "iritovX " excel thou :
l^3),
[Achshaph], pr. n. of a town in the tribe of Asher, not," bu folljl Ecinen SSotjug fyaben. In petitions there
Josh. 12:2O; 19:25. is added W- Gen.l3:8, 'nri Nr^K "let there not be
the Hebrews, my countrymen, live all around." [?] addition of a genitive of place or person, " whose tu-
"
From this stock is derived 7 v$$ whether the verb ;
telar
dei'y God is
[This is heathenish ; rather,
was ever used is uncertain. who God, God really is],
7KTP3 7S Gen. 31 :
13.
(6) This T^ord is much more
frequent in poetic lan-
/ ^ Ch. i.
q. Heb. No. 3 but only in the Biblical
;
Chaldee. Dan. 2:24; 4:16; 5:10. guage, where it stands very often without any adjunct,
sometimes with the art. 7n
Ps. 18:31, 33, 48; 68:
II. 7o
the Arabic article i. q. Heb. 7n prefixed ?
21; Job 8:3. (c) It takes the suffix of the first
also to some Hebrew words in the Old Test., which person, V?X "my God!" Psa. 18:3; 22:2,11. It
are either of Arabian origin, or, at least, although
never occurs with other suffixes, and for " thy God,"
name
God," are used TD^,
of gods, and it is
^%
used of idols
(d) It is a general
both with-
also,
see TflD^K, D-li^K. E^$, D*|0^* Cognate is the
out adjunct, Isa. 44:10, 15; and with an
which see. epithet, as
pron. pers. pi. 7K, npX,
^HSI 7K "another god," Ex.34: 14; 1J 7X "a strange
?&$ m. (l) prop. part, of the verb 7'X No. 2,
7-18,
god," Ps. 8l:lO.
strong, mighty, a mighty one, a Aero(comp. note), Whatever are most excellent, surpassing in their
"
comp. 7'K No. l. In sing. Eze. 31:11, &** 7K the kind, are said to be of God; as it was customary for
mighty one of the nations," used of Nebuchadnez- men anciently to refer whatever is excellent to the
zar. LXX. apxwv tQvuv. (Many copies have ^X
gods themselves [to God himself] hence 7K \T")S ;
D^3, for instance, those of Babylon.) Isa. 9:5, 7X Ps. 80 11, " cedars of God," i.e. the highest, planted
:
"
"113? mighty hero" [prop, mighty God, see No. as it were by God (compare njn *VJt?. Psa. 104:16,
3], of the Messiah; ibid. 10:21, of God. [The same n\n. II Gen. 13:10); 7N
'Tin "mountains of
God,"
" God
person is clearly meant in both places, even Ps. 36:7. Compare a\c S7a, Sla Aacoa//iwv.
with us."] Nearly connected with this is the
phrase Plur. DvX (i) heroes, mighty ones, see sing.
32:21, Q^i^jl vN (23 copies v^K) prop.
in plur. Eze. No.i.
"the strong among the mighty," i.e. the mightiest
(2) gods, in a wider sense; used of Jehovah and
heroes; comp. Lehrg. p. 678. Job 41 17, DyX, where the gods of the nations, Ex. 15:11. Comp. Ex. 18:
:
So in the phrase* *T 7S ? B*
1
that which is strong. of gods," by an idiom of the Hebrew and Syriac syn-
" it is in
the power of my hand." Gen. 31 :29, K>* "sons of Gods,"
tax, poet, for i.e. angels.
njn D?oy nVe$ >T ?sV p ro 3:27; Mic. an; and .
;
Note. Following most etymologists, I have above
negatively, Deu. 28:32, IT 7X^ J'K "there is nothing derived 7K from the root 7-1K but to <nve my opinion ;
in the powerof thy hand," i.e. thou canst avail
more exactly, it appears rather to be a primitive
nothing; Neh. 5:5. Lamed in this phrase marks
word, the etymology being however adapted to the
state or condition. The nature of this phrase has root >1X so that to Hebrews this word would present
;
been but little understood
by those who would here the notion of strength and power. However this
render ?N by God, and give the whole " may
phrase my :
of the
synonymous Hebrew names of God, as OWK, cially in swearing; npS, 4! to worship God; and
n I make the
'$> !> ^T? following remarks on the
use of this word. it is(a) In prose
scarcely ever ni?^, H7X, $\ God (compare crusj to be a father,
God without some adjunct or >
applied to KUT
eo-xj)t>,
*
attribute, frfy 7S, HP ?X, ttfj? 7, >n 7K; or without JLcn_2sJ fathers, from vTiJ). (2) besides 7X, which
some cognomen, ?&n&. *H7 7X Gen. 33 20 :
;
7n follows the analogy of verbs 1JJ, two other forms are
XLVI
Pentateuch and l Ch. 20 8. is the form of used in a good sense, Eze. 36 9. And so the part. :
:
Cognate
/ also in other places used in a good sense for
is
B?K, once Q Eze. 31:14, poet. 1DyX Psa. 2:5; ^|'7X even to exultation;" Job 3:22. (To these
prop, a noun indicative of motion, direction to any examples it will not be amiss to add the remark of
place. by the usage of the language
It is the Arabian grammarians, that Jl includes an object
U
(A) Prep., signifying in general, to tend to any- which is of the same kind, and excludes what is of
thing, to verge to or towards any place, whether it a different kind, see Cent. reg. page 44, 45.) Here
be reached and even entered or not, whether it be by also belongs its use in denoting measure, as
(a)
motion or turning and direction of the body or of the nGX-^X Gen. 6 :l6, "even to the length of a cubit," bit
mind, turning to anything in thought; Lat. ad, versus, jut ?dnge einer (5He, etne (Ue lang (not as it is generally
adversus, in; Germ, ju, gen/ nad) (etroaS) t)tn$ Gr.
explained, to the standard of a cubit), comp. Gr. elf
irpoc, ilc, to, towards. (As to its difference
into,
IviavTov, bis jur 23ollenbung etneS 3at)$/ in 3at>r tang/
from *?, which is shortened from this word, see
tc rpt'njj' fifiipai; Bast, ep. crit. page 12, 13; Schaef.
below, under that part.) Specially then it is used ell. page 108. (b) Compos. iP"^ even out of. Job
(l) of motion to a place to, towards. It is
and even out of thorns (i.e.
5:5, -13nj5* D'S-VP ^XT
;
31C* Gen.
joined to verbs of going ("=1?!?, K13, 8:9; thorn hedges enclosing fields) he taketh it." Com-
TV 2 Ki. i 15; rhyr Deu. i?:8; pT Gen. 24:29; l~y>
:
pare the similar use of the part. ? Deu. 24:5, and "W
Ex. 14:20), of putting, placing, and casting, i Sam. o ^
6:ll Lev. 16: Josh. 5:14; also of giving, Ex. 25:
i :
Jud. 4:16. (In Arabic we might
;
compare^] Koran,
16, 21 ;
of selling, Joel 4: 8; and the like (where, in
German as in Latin, a dative is used. In French xxvi. 41, prop, even out of. Indeed A seems to hav<>
and English the particle a, to). Sometimes the con- arisen from this signification of the particle before
struction pregnant, as /&
is ^3T to commit whoredom,
us.)
' when
(by going) unto, Nu. 25:1; Eze. 16:29; ^^! to (5) entered into; in, etc, in (cht>a$)
the limit is
seek an oracle (by turning) to any one, Isa. 8:19. tjincin i the more full, ^n/X.
Engl. into, i.
q.Deu.
"
Opp. is ?P, as nV|3rr7X n>;i9n'|p "from end to end," 23:25, U?ni6 ^7?~7X thou shalt not put (grapes)
Ex. 26:28; n S'^X nsp Ezr. 9:11. Used of time, into thy vessel." "^'J?^ M2 "enter into the ark,"
D'V^X DVP Nu. 30:15; iCh. 9:25. Gen. 6: 18; 7:1; 8:9. rvan-^K "into the house,"
(a) used of turning or direction to anything. Gen. 19:3; 283.5:8. DJiT^ "(to cast) into the
(a) of the body, as after a verb of turning,
Isa. 38 2 sea," Jon. i :5- H^V "^ "into the earth," Deu. 1 1 :
1
: ;
looking, Gen. 4: 4, 5; Ex. 3:6; speaking to, Ex. 19:9; 29. When used of a number or multitude, into
commanding, Nu. 36:13. (b) of the mind, as after which one enters, i.q. inter (with ace.), among; it may
a verb of desiring, Lam. 4:17 of expecting, Hos. ; be expressed more explicitly, P3."7K. Jer. 4:3, " sow
18:7; being accustomed, Jer. 10: 2. not D'ip~?K amongst thorns;" i Sa. 10:22, " be-
(3) wl en either the motion or turning is hostile ; hold, he had hid himself Dv3n~?X amongst the
adversus, contra (as tic, Trpoc, more often tVi), against. baggage."
Gen. 4:8, vnx?3n 7X pj? DjVI "and Cain rose
up (6) as seen above (No.i),
T>X is a
particle of giving;
against Abel his brother;" Isa.3:8, Dn'7?yp^ D3iE7 so also is it used in adding, superadding (comp. fppin
XLVII
together with (comp. Gr. eVi rolei, besides these; (as vice versa part. IP used of quiet tarrying at *
and Arab. \\ for u- c Koran iv. 2; Cent. reg. page place. See No. 3). Winer, who lias used in this argu-
'K'^X D*33 "let us lift up our hearts with our deny that these idioms of languages really exist. One
hands to God" (LXX. M veip<.>; Arab. ,_). After
c_
thing is true, that the signification of motion is not
wholly lost in this class of significations, namely, that
a verb of joining together, Dan. 1 1 123. More often which had preceded. Specially then it is
in this sense use is made of the particle 7j/. Meta-
(1) ad for apud, at, by, near; Germ. an. 3^
phorically jnWrHpK "to sit at the table," ju Sifck ft'fcen, lKi.13:
(7) of regarding anything, having respect or regard 2O (comp. dporovg t'Covro, Od. iv. 51). Jer. 41 12, :
to anything; hence (a) as to, in respect to, Ex. D2H D:-^ " and
they found him at the
in'S
-ISyP?!
14:5 (compare Gr. tc because of,
/ucV raura) great waters, which were near Gibeon." l Sa. 17 :3>
;
" SOSaffer.)
also l
Sa.l:27, *rP?Srin i"l;Tn "H|3n~7X concerning as in Sophocles, ec <5o/uove fttvttv.
(2) in, among,
this child I
prayed," urn bicfen .Rnaben b,abe id) gebetetij a "but
Deu.i6:6,nDBn-n nsjri D^...Dippn-^-DK
where 7$ indicates the object or end of the discourse
in that place which Jehovah thy God chooseth, there
(ben 3>t>ec). shalt thou sacrifice the passover" (Sam. cod. D1p3).
(8) Metaph. it is also as expressive of rule or
iKi.8:3o, D^rr'pK t^y? Qipp'ps yp^ri nnl"and
standard; sccundum, according to. *S ? "accord- hear thou in the place of thy habitation in heaven."
ing to the command," Josh. 15:13; 17:4- P 3 ?"- ^ " let our
5
"according to the certainty," fur g.otnfj/ i Sa. 26:4. prayers go up into heaven ;" but as the words now
i
n;)n"7X to the pipes," Psa. 5:1;
n'l7'
80 i And
"according
so after the verbs of likeness, as ^P^,
are, ^ follows a verb of rest.)
actually
" and he
Gen. 6:6,
: .
(B) More rarely, and by a kind of negligence of Note. It is a mistake to attribute to this particle
speech (although used in a good many most certain some other significations which are altogether foreign
examples), it is used of remaining at, or in a place, to its true sense, as icith, in Nu. 25: l ; Josh. 1 1 : 18
to which one tends
(comp. ? let. B;, as the Gr. tc } is
(see however above,
A
6) ; through, in Jer. 33 : 4, etc.
For i', t
So^oue Soph.Aj.8o; o'ixade f-ilveiy
fj.lveiv,
(see Passow Lex. No. 6 Bernhardy Synt. Ling. Gr. terebinth"), \ElaK], pr n. m. l
King?
;
("
*6); Germ, ju ^>aufe/ ju 4:18.
3;7tf m. hail, Eze. 13: an oath joined with imprecations Nu. 5
?3^'
11,, 13 ; 38:252, i.
q.
;
f O C.
n'l'ps
curses, Nu. 5 3 Deu. 29 1 1. :
;
:
("whom God called," see njH), (xvi. 12), an evergreen; but this is contradicted by
, pr. n. of a son of Midian, Gen. 25 14. modern botanists. The ancient versions sometimes
render it terebinth, sometimes oak (see the further re-
marks in Thes. page 50, and the word appears,
'"'
?O an unused root. Arab. d\ to
worship a l);
in a wider sense, to be used of any large tree, like the
adore; med.Kesr. to be stunned, smitten,
deit/, to
with fear. See the note on /$ I. Comp. fiv^. Gr. fyvQ. [The modern name of the terebinth is
(1) to s w ear; Arab. "}\ for A\ Conj. IV. V. prop, n?^ pron. pi. comm. these,
used as the pi. of the
to affirm
by God, l Ki. 8:31 [Hiphil]. sing. HT. The simple and less frequent form is ?^,
(2) to curse, Jud. 17:2; Hos. 4:2. which see. ^T has a demonstrative power, compare
(3) to cry out, to
lament(Germ. otterbarmen/
ott um
rbarmen anrufcn), Joel 1:8.
nan. (Arab. J5, '
JU f. Xj! ; ^Ethiop. ft<Y: hi
(I should not oppose the idea of this root being J\^: hae; Ch. ps.) It is applied either to the tilings
imomatopoetic, comp. 7?J, 7/N, and the signification which follow, Gen. 2 4 6:9; 11:10; or to those :
;
which I have put in the third place would then be which precede, Gen. 9:19; 10:20, 29, 31. It is
primary.) placed after a noun, as n|n
DniPtn Gen. 15:1 when ;
HirniL, to cause any one to swear, to bind him by placed before, there is either an ellipsis of the
it is
ten oath, construed with ace., lKi.8:3l; verb substantive, or it is used <$mk-wc, Psa. 73: l a.
2Ch.6:22;
l 83.14:24. Fut. apoc. Vl
from n^N> for njg! i Sa. Comp. nj. When twice or three times repeated, A,
Derivatives n?K and n?xn.
[" Like nj
1. cit. Isa. 12. it refers also to space,
illi, illi, 49 :
tne demonst. }X prefixed." Ges. add.], like the Syr. (B) in a singular sei'se, of one god (compare as to
the pi. majestatis or excellentice, Lehrg. page 663, 664),
Q^J)' (/> *w* /
l a Particle of the later [?] Hebrew,
Heb. Gram. 106, 2, b. Constr. with a verb (Gen.
Eccl.6:6; Est. 7:4. and adjective in the singular, as E*n?X.
1:1,3 seq.)
HV7K (with prefix and suffix
a$s6 Dan. 11:38; <D 2 Ki. 19:4,16; p! Dn^|Ps.7:lo; 57:3; 78!
56 but with a plural verb only in certain phrases.
toVV Hah. 1:11), m. GW (Anfc- 4U aft, with art.
;
the more common popular usage, Jehovah and idols (4) more rarely followed by a genitive of that over
are comprehended under this common name Ps. 86 8, :
which the god presides, or that which he created,
;
"there is none like unto thee among the gods, O just as Mars is called the god of war [No such com-
Jehovah!" Ex. l8:ll; 22:19. Elsewhere the idea parison ought to be made of the true God with phrases
of divinity is altogether denied to idols, and is at- relating to idols.], ex. gr. Y~^^\
D ?? Gen.
;
^$
" besides
"
God of the heavenly hosts,"
tributed to Jehovah alone. 44 Isa. :
6, me 24:3 ; niK3-yn rft^|
there no god;" Isa % 45:5, 14, 21; 46:9.
is Idols
Amos 3:13; or the attribute of God as f?K 'rpN
" Godof truth," Isa. 65 16. :
are even called D'rDK."^ 2 Ch. 13:9.
(5) E 'T' is used for a divine, godlike appear-
<I
36 :
15, seq. l Ch. 1:51, seq. rarely of the Jews, Zech.
Compare the Arab.
;
pr./row God, divinely, ex-
;
dJ
9:7; 12:5,6; also generally of leaders, Jer. 13:21.
Har. Cons. iv. page 38, ed. de Sacy.
ceedingly. K^l 7S (according to the Talmud, " a crowd of m e n").
As to the phrases, D'r6x E*X, Dr6x |? see under
[Alusli], pr.n.
of a station of the Israelites, Num.
^N, 1? and the other words from which they spring.
Note. Some regard E'^X to be also used in a sin-
gular sense (for as to the plural see A, 2), of one T/NI ("whom God gave'') QeoS&pog. \_Elza-
King, for D*n?X"|5 and they especially refer to Ps.
? ,pr.n.m. (l) l Ch. 26:7. (2) 12:12.
45:7, where they render 1J D/ny Dr6x ?|X D3 "thy
throne, O God O
divine King), shall stand for
(i.e.
:
I
/ N a root not used in Kal. Arab. Conj. VTII.
*
ever;" but this should no doubt [?] be construed by
to become sour, as milk.
ellipsis,
D'H^X XD3 ^p?
thy throne shall be a
divine throne" (i. e. guarded and made prosperous by NIPHAL rDS3 metaph. to be corrupted, in amoral
God), according to the accustomed canon of the lan- sense, Ps. 14:3; 53:4; Job 15:16.
guage, Lehrg. 233:6. [This passage speaks of
Christ as God, there is no ellipsis to be supplied, see n?tf ("whom God .gave"),[ EZAanan],pr.n.of J
witness (page 146), weighs ten or twelve pounds. 2:14. (2) 3:24.
Comp. Herod iii. 113; Diod. ii. 54, and others cited by whom God
Bochart,in Hieroz. pt. i. page 494, seq. Rosenmiiller,
"1JV Y^ ("to is help"), pr. n. m.,
Damascus whom Abraham
;
Eliezer. (l) a man of
altes und neues Morgenland, ii. 118. Ex. 29:22;
" let intended to be his heir before the birth of Isaac [of Ish-
Lev. 7:3; 8:25; 9:19;
3:9, him take away
the whole tail, near the back-bone." mael],Gen. 15:2; according to verses, born in his
house. (2) a son of Moses, Ex. 18 4. (3) l Ch. 7: :
("whom God hides"), \_Eliahba~\, "W78 ("to whom God is a rock"), [Eli*ur~\,
pr. n. m. of one of David's m. Num. 1:5; 2:1O; 7"*o, 35;1O:1?
mighty men, 2 Sa. 23 32. :
pr. n.
|rW^ (" whom God protects"), [Elzephan, WY ("whom God judges"),
Elizaphan], pr. n.m. (l) Num. 3:30, called i?-P? phat], pr. n. m., 2 Ch. 23:1.
Ex.6:22: Lev. 10:4. (2) Num. 34:25.
see
Isa. 19:18),
[Elishebd],vr.n.f. Ex. 6:23. LXX. HI. 7? kindred to the roots -IS & No. I, prop. HK
'FAiira/jeV, as Lu. 1:7. to roll, hence to be round, thick; whence n?S,l'li>K
oak, prop, thick tree.
1
'T ?
[Elishah], pr. n. of a region situated on
the Mediterranean Sea, whence purple was brought to /V- inter}, of lamenting, vce, wo e! Gr.fXeXtiJ, fol-
Tyre, Gen. 10:4; Eze. 27:7. Elis is to be under- lowed by *?i Job 10:15; Mic. 7:1. Root ^S No. H.
stood (comp. the Samaritan
copy, in which, the n
I? a root not used in Kal. (I)TO BIND, comp.
being omitted, it is written Eb>X)- The name of this
PIEL and HCyX.
place appears to have been applied by the Hebrews
to the Avhole Peloponnesus, as the names of provinces, (2) passive, to be bound, sc. the tongue, i.e. to be
when remote, are very often applied to whole dumb, besilent; see NIPH. and the nouns D?K, D?X,
to
especially %
3b?N. To be silent, dumb, as if tongue- tied (^eff^oe rijc
countries comp. JV. As to the purple not only found
;
inLaconia (Hor. Od. ii. 18, 7), but also in the gulf of yXwo-oTje, Mark 7 :35), comp. Pers. ..i**j ^.bj
to bind
Corinth, and in the islands of the ^Egean sea, see the tongue, for to be silent, and Gr. ((upovirdai.
Bochart, Phaleg. iii. 4. Others explain HC'^X by (3) to be solitary, forsaken, widowed, for a so-
Hellas, Greece ; see Michaelis, Spicil. Geogr. Hebr. t. i.
litary person is silent
as he has no companion with
p. 78. whom to talk ; comp. *j to be mute, to be unmarried.
("to whom God is salvation"), \_Eli- Hence are derived |O^, O^>K, fb^S, JWpVx.
shua\, pr. n. m., of a son of David, 2 Sa. 5: 15; l Ch. NIPHAL. (i) to be dumb, mute, Ps. 31:19; 39
:
3,
14:5- 10; Isa, 53:7.
3^^
n.m.
("whom God restored"), [Eliashib'],
(2) to be silent, Eze. 33:22.
PIEL, to bind together,Gen. 37:7.
pr. (i) i (2) Ch. 24:12; Ezr.
Ch. 3:24. l
10:6. (3) Neh. 3:1, 2O; 12:10. (4), (5) Ezr. . silence, Ps.58:2,
" do
10:24, 27,36. ye indeed speak out the silence of justice?"
i.e.
X
whom God hears"), [Elishama], do ye indeed use justice which seems to be silent and
(
mute in your decrees? [" So commonly; but it may
pr. n. m. (1)2 Sam. 5:16. (2) Num. 1:10; 2:l8.
be worth inquiry whether C?X should not be dropped,
(3)2 Ki. 25:25; Jer. 41:1. (4) l Ch. 2:41. of
(5)Ch.i7:8. having sprung perhaps from a careless repetition
D3DK." This conjecture is wholly needless. (" Maurer
pr. n.m. (for ycK "to whom God is
gives to D^$ the signification of league, law, from th
salvation"), the prophet, the disciple, com-
Eli-ilia s *-
sense of binding as JJLC league, from Ipl? to biud. ",
panion, and successor of Elijah, famous for many
;
time of which Psalm 56 was sung. Comp. my re- No. 3. Metaph. used of a state bereft of its king
marks on the word Jv'N. Isa. 47 : 8. (Compare verse 9, and 54:4.)
K?^ m. adj. mute, dumb, prop, bound as to the II.
fiiJypKf.pl. Isa. i3:a2,/mZac*,i.q.nfo1
tongue; see the root No. 2. Ex. 4: 11 Isa. 35:6; Ps. ; (which is itself the reading of some copies), the letter
38 :
14. PI. crp^S Isa. 56 : 10. >
being softened into 7 as is frequently the case.
Compare fiE"lS. Others retain the idea of a widow,
Op5 Job. 17: 10, in some editions incorrectly for
and understand desolate palaces.
E>1N, which see, but, indeed.
to 2 Ch. 2
7, growing
: on Lebanon. [" It seems
also
these.
i.q. P!?
to correspond to Sanscr. mtc'ata (from simpl. mica,
v.i
^
("whose pleasure or joy God is")
so Bohlen), with the Arab. art. sandal wood, ( ]\; [El net am], pr. n. m. l Ch. 11:46.
pterocarpus sandaliorus, Linn. red sandal wood, still K ("whom God
used in India and Persia for costly utensils and instru-
;
the Talmudists be ancient, that precious wood might Gen. 14:1, 9 \_Ellasar], the name of H
be so called from its resemblance to coral, as if cor a l- region, apparently to be sought near Babylonia and
L
wood, .RoraUentjoIj. More probable is the opinion of Elymais
J (for
\
it occurs between IVJ^
T.
and D T
.
. 'V.)-
/
Kirnchi, who takes it for the Arab. JLli which the Symm. and Vulg. Pontus; Targ. Jerus. "i^fOf;! (Isa
37:12). But some province of Persia or Assyria
Europeans call ^TX"Q Brazil wood.
is intended, as is shewn by the Assyriaco-Babylonian
TTiDpX Gen. 10=26 ;
iCh. 1:20 [Almodad], name of the king "JV'JK; compare Dan. 2 14. :
"ij/W^ (perhaps "the king's oak" for "ssn n>K), "^IV-^ ("whom God aids"), Eleazar, pr. n.
"[Alammelech~\, pr. n., a town in the tribe of Asher, m. (i) Ex. 6:23, 25; 28:1; Lev. 10:6, seq.; Nu.
Josh. 19:26. 3:2, 4, 32; 17:2,4; 19:3; 20:25, seq.; 26:3, seq.;
31:6, seq.; 32:2, 28; 34:17; Deu. 10:6; Josh. 14:
|'P
'
^ m. adj. widowed, forsaken, Jer. 51:5,
l; l Ch. 6:35. (2)2 Sa. 23:9; l Ch. ll 12.
:
(3) :
35:10), \_Eleasah~], pr. n. m. (l) l Ch. 2:39. onetofo^t?', nt?l?),Jud.6:l5; l Sam. 10:19; 23:23.
(a) l Ch. 8:37; 9'-43- (3) Jer. 29:3. Used of a town as the abode of a family, Mic. 5:1.
(4) [Elepli],pr.n. a town of the Beujamites, Jos
7^ future ^X* (Proverbs 22:25) 18:28.
i* see R/v
(1) TO ACCUSTOM ONESELF, TO BE ACCUSTOMED, V--
Si, S f.
7y?7^ ("to whom God is the reward," comp.
WONT, FAMILIAR, whence ^_jj\ and y_gj^ a friend,
?ys, n?j;3 used of reward), [-7/paa/],pr.n. m., iCh.
No. 3.
compare
and VOf
7k^ a root not used in Kal, i.q. pX, which sef.
tiac, not Assyria, although even now the Orientals This word
is
undoubtedly primitive, and, like 2N
ruake J.ij\ [el-kush^\ near Mosul, the native place (see p. B.), it imitates the first sounds of an infant
ii.
of the prophet. [" Both are very doubtful," see Thes.] beginning to prattle, like the Greek pappu, puppr),
/jKip.fj.uidj /.id~m, Copt, mau, Germ. 9J?oiua/ limme [Eng.
"1/iD/^ (perhaps, " whose race or posterity is
mamma, Welsh A
fern, form used metaphori-
mam~\.
from God"), [Eltolad], see iVlR is HGS. In Arabic there is hence formed a verb
cally
(3) used as denoting intimate relationship or Hebrew interpreters, as Kimchi, explain this DS which
intimacy, Job 17: 14 (compare 3X No. 7).
they rightly notice to be affirmative, by flDX, and
(4) of a nation, as opposed to the children, i.e.
they consider it shortened from ]P^ I should prefer ;
Eze. 21:26. Arab. +\ is the root, proposed appears to me now to be the more probable.
beginning of a
But see the note.) It becomes
Q ~c-l
thing, but- i.. U\ J\ is a royal way, and perhaps (B) adv. of interrogation (compare JD No. 2, and
& interrogative power of OX and its conditional quity in I have injured one at
my hands, if peact
sense in letter (C,, since, between sentences beginning with me ... let him
persecute me," etc. The P&almiu
with QX interrog. are interposed others beginning here denies (if we look at the object of the discourse)
>rith DX conditional, followed by an apodosis; see ver. that he has done such things, but as
though the caust
7>9i 1 3> !9> 20 > 21,25," Ges. add.] It is far more had to be tried, he leaves it as undecided, and as it
frequent in disjunctive interrogation where there pre- were, assuming it, he invokes on himself the heaviest
<* i penalty, thus wonderfully increasing the force of the
cedes Q: utrvm...an? whether ...
or; Arab. *\... \*
execration; compare Ps. 44:21; 73:15; 137:5,6;
Josh. 5: 13, Mnsjrns nnx U^q whether art thou Job 31:7, seq. Other examples in which for QX there
for us, or for 15, ?^9. DX "=10
our enemies?" l Ki. 22 :
might have been more accurately >h, are Ps. 50:12,
" whether shall we The same is 2JT]X EX "if I were hungry;" Hos. 9:12; but how-
go... or not?"
Dl-q Job 21:4, and DSl-HSD Job 34: 17; 40:8,9.
l
ever DX is not here wrong, because its usage is more
Botli are also used in a double interrogation, although widely extended. Specially to be observed (a) when
not disjunctive, as DX-n Gen. 37 8, DXV-ri Gen. 17:17. : a condition or supposition is modestly to be expressed,
(Where two questions follow each other, but without
W-DX is used, see X3. () DK-DN is put disjunctively,
n is repeated, l Sa. 23:11.) if...if=whether...or; sive... sice (tire, tire, lav rt, iav
closely cohering,
(2) in oblique interrogation, an, num, Germ, ob/ re); compare si... si, Gell.ii. 28. Ex. 19:13, non?"Ct<
Engl. (/", whether.
After verbs of interrogation, tJ*X~DN whether it were beast or man;" 283.15:21 ;
Cant. 7:13; examining, doubting, 2 Ki. 1,2; in a two- Lev. 3:1; Deu. 18:3; and with a preceding negation
fold question,
disjunctive
QX-ri Gen. 27:21 Nu. 13:20. ;
neither. ..nor; neque...neque, 2 Ki. 3:14. The same
The phrase EX inv 'D Est-4:l4,
accurately answers is
DN]DX Josh.24:l5; Ecc.ll:3; 12:14 (Arabic
to the Latin, nescio an, haud scio an, n?er ob md)t/ (.
- o -
n>eifi
o o
vp^ni. nsj? '??n DK if thou wilt go with me, I will more Ue for not.)
1, fully .'
go;" Gen. 13: 16; 28:20; Job 8:4, seq.; ll :1O; more > >
rarely by a participle, Jud. 9:15; 11:9; infinitive (for (2) part, of conceding, though, although (Arab.
a fin. verb), Job. 9:27. It also stands without a verb,
Job 8:6; 9:19. This word differs from the condi- Gr. taf (cat, KUV), followed by a pret., to express
tional particle -1^, in DX being used in a real condition,
where it is left uncertain whether something exists "though am," Job 9:15; commonly a fut. to express
I
ingenious and subtle usage, that in execrations and (4) a particle of time, when (compare the Germ,
imprecations, when conditional, instead of V? (which roenn and roann/ and Engl. when). Followed by a pre-
perhaps might have been expected), there always is terite, which often has to be rendered by a pluperfecl
DX PS. 7:4-7-6, DX '??? ^y c : DX nx> 'rvbj; ox
:
;
and fut. perfect, Isa. 24:13, ">'V? $3 DX "when
IT. "
*^9| if I have ione this, if there be ini-
. . . the harvest is ended;" Am. 7:2,^ n>3 DX nw
LVII
"and when it Lad consumed;" Isa.4:4, ^IN fQT DX beg inn ing, head, and foundation of a thing. Spe-
Ji'rnu? HNS nN when the Lord shall have washed cially
the filth of the daughters of Zion;" Gen. 38:9; Ps. (1) it is the mother of the arm, i. e. the fore-part
63:7; Job 8:4; 17:13. So in composition, as DN ~U> of the arm; cubitus, ulna, the fore-arm, Deut. 3:11.
until when, until, Gen. 24:19 DK "1^8 "HZ Gen. 28:15; ;
Hence
Num. 32:17; Isa. 6:ll. (2) The name of a measure, a cubit, an ell. Comp.
(5) It is
rarely that) quum causal, quandoquidem, the Lat. cubitus,ulna,also Germ. lie, whence Sllenbogen*
-
.
since, Arab. ^\. Gen. 47: 18, " we will not hide it Gr. TTJ/ and -n-vyiov, Arab, c \
J, Egypt. LIACI.
from my lord, that ">Np? "FIX. ^..i.*^|D && ON & The method
since all our money is is left for
of numbering cubits is this: ^D^X "two
spent. . .
nothing uhw 27:1, and so on as
cubits," Ex. 25: 10, 17; n'lSX
my lord," etc. Isa. 53 ; : 10.
far as ten; in the later Hebrew vk& JT)SK 2 Ch 6:13;
Note. Winer has of late (in his addenda to Heb.
with numbers higher than ten, in the more ancient
Lex. 1054) altogether denied the affirmative or
p.
demonstrative power of this particle (letter A), (and Hebrew, thus, nES D'B>n Gen. 6:15; in the later,
niBK 2, or bnijfjj niBN sCh. 3:4. Alsc
D'Btorj Eze. 42 :
Rosenm. is not consistent with himself; see him on Job
to numerals of kinds, and both in more ancient
all
17:13, and Hosea 12:12). Winer defends, in the
and later Hebrew it is joined by ?: HSSa y?"|K "four
passages cited, the common signification, si, ob/ if, a
whether; but his reasons are not convincing. That by cubit," i.e. four cubits; nSS<a nsp a hun-
dred cubits," Ex. 27:9, 18; 36:15; 38:9. The
the primary power was demonstrative, is strongly sup-
common Hebrew cubit was six palms, nor should the
ported by the passage in Hosea, a very early [?] writer,
a o G.
opinion be heeded which makes it only four a larger ;
and by the cognate particle ID, \', and to cubit of seven palms 7rra7ra\aioroe, is mentioned
.^ \^
* > Eze. 40:5; 43:13, comp. 2 Ch. 3:3 ["this agrees
this should be added the authority of the ancient with the royal cubit of the Babylonians ( Herod i. 178)
versions, which is not to be lightly esteemed (see and Egyptians see Bceckh, Metrol. Untersuch. p. 2 1 2,
;
Noldii Vindiciae, p. 408). seq. 265, seq." Ges. add.] and the remarks in Thes.
It is compounded with other particles p. no, 113. Metaph. Jer. 51 13, "thy end is come, :
(1)
QNn twice at the beginning of a question, when
;
the measure of thy rapine," i. e. the time when God
put affirmatively: nonne? ecce? is not? Num.i7:28; setteth bounds and measure to thy wicked gain.
Job 6: 13. (3) i.q. Q$ No. 6, metropolis. 2 Sam. 8:1, "and
(2) ?"DN (a) nonne? is not?
(where there pre- David took the bridle of the metropolis from the
cedes ?D), Isa. 10:9. unless, Ps.7:l3;
(5) if not,
hand of the Philistines," i. e. he subjected the. metro-
Gen. 24:8. Hence after formula? of swearing, it is a polis of the Philistines to himself. Comp. the Arabian
"
etrong affirmation and asseveration (see above C, l, c), proverb to give one's bridle to any one," i. e. to sub-
Num. 14: 28 Isa. 14:9; also in adjurations, Job l 1 1
; :
;
mit to his will. Schult. on Job 30: 11, and Har.
2:5; 17:2; 22:20; 30:25; Isa. 5:9. (c) It is put Cons, iv., p. 24. See Geschichte der Hebr. Sprache,
for but, sed, fonbern
(compare a /zj/, unless, Ch. p. 41.
from K^'DX), Gen. 24:37, 38. (4) foundation. Isa. 6:4, D'SDH n'lON the
s * s -&}
pi. ninip^ (by insertion of the letter n, foundations of the threshold." Comp. c^'U 7 CpWj
comp. Ch. |rn$ and Lehrg. p. 530), f. A HANDMAID, roots, beginning.
FEMALE SLAVE; *l$$ thy handmaid (for/), used 2 Sam. 2:24.
(5) [Ammah~\, pr.n. of a hill,
even by a free woman when speaking to her
superiors,
pi. pss f. Ch. a cubit, Dan. 3:1; Ezr. 6:3;
Jud.l9:9; lSam.i:il, 16525:24, seq.; 2Sam.l4:i5
(comp. ]HK). nnK-ja "son of a handmaid," i.e.
a slave, Ex. 23 1 2 Ps. 1 1 6 1 6.
:
(Hence is derived
;
:
Plin. ii. 1, Artifex omnium in the notes to German translation, second edition.
my
artifex, ojriftx, whence
natura. Quinct. ii. 15, rhetorica persuadendi ojrifex. [" See under the art. niWJ?."]
L j'*-?^*
- (l) prop. TO PROP, TO STAY, TO SUS-
20:6. TAIN, TO SUPPORT, jrufcen/ untcvftufcen/ specially (a)
to support with the arm, to carry a child, Nu. 1 1 12 :
f.
(i) firmness. Lam. 4:5. Part. IPX Trm^aywyoc, one who carries and
Ex. 17 -.12, HMOK VT W} "and his (Hoses') hands were
cares for a child, Nu. loc. cit. ;
Isa. 49:23; also, one
firm" (prop, firmness).
who guards and 2 Ki. 10: l,
% f
p:VpN ( faithful"), pr. n. i.q. fapx. a Sa. 13: and confide on any one; _<T to trust, to be secure.
(z>
o, of Amu;n tlie son of David.
NIPHAL (l) to support, to bear in the arms, at
$N (root I'PX), m .
adj./irm, ttrong, Job 9:4, children, l.-a. 60:4. Compare Kal No. 1.
(a) to be founded, firm, stable, e. g. of a house, faithful, trusty, Dan. 6:5; 8:45. Syr
iSa. 2:35; 25:28; 283.7:16; i Ki. 11:38; of a
firm place where a nail is driven in, Isa. 22 123, 25;
of a firm and stable condition, Isa. 7 9. :
.. a workman, an artificer, Cant. 7:2;
9 9 J.
(3) to be of long continuance, perennial, of compare the root No. l, b. Syr. JjJ^o), Chald.
water (opp. to 3T?N), Isa. 33:16; Jer. 15:18; of sick- JEW id., and there is an inclination to this Aramaean
ness, Deu. 28:59; f a covenant, Ps. 89:29. form in the reading, JEN omman, which was in the
(4) metaph. to be faithful, trustworthy, sure, copies of Kimchi, and Judah ben Karish.
such that any one can lean upon (ouf ben man bauen
l) verbal adj. firm, metaph. faithful
fann); of a servant, l Sa. 22: 14; Num. 12:7; a mes-
senger, Prov. 25:13; a witness, Jer. 42:5; Isa. 8:2;
(Arab. ci*"
,^c\, Syr. Lj_OO|.) Compare Apoc. 3:14.
of God, Deu. 7 9 Isa. 49:7; Hos. 12:1. : Ps. 78:8,
;
,.
ton ^n$ p*
" their &
spirit was not faithful
Neutr. fa it hfu In ess, fide I ity, Isa. 65 : 1 6.
Wounds are here used for severe re- and expresses a wish for the issue of his vows or pre-
lifegutgemeint.
bukes. Also, a man of approved wisdom, Job. 12 : 20, dictions : fiat, ita sit ;
" A m e n, s o b e it ;" LXX. well,
i Ki. i 36 Jer. 11:5; Nu. 5:22; Deu.
(5) to be sure, certain, Hos. 5:9; of the word of
:
yivoiTo. ;
God, Psa. 19:8; also, to be found true, confirmed, 27:15, seq.; Neh. 5: 13; 8:6; l Ch. 16:36.
Gen. 42:20; iKi. 8:26.
|ON m. faithfulness, truth, Isa. 25:!.
HIPHIL, lean upon, to build upon
PP^n (1) to
trusted in the Lord," Gen. 15:6; Vn3 "n K7"to watering Damascus, 2 Ki. 5:12, from which that part
have no confidence for one's life," i.e. to fear for of Lebanon was called by the same name, Cant. 4:8:
one's life, Deu. 28:66. [" most interpreters understand the river to be the
(3) to commonly followed
believe, absol. Isa. 7:9; Chrysorrhoas, now eZ-Burada"].
by h of person and 45 26 Ex. 4:1,8,9; thing, Gen. :
Pro. 14:15; Ps. 106:24; followed by '? Ex. 4:5; 2 Ki. 18:16.
Job 9: 16; also with an inf. Job 15:22, "he does not
believe (hope) that he shall escape out of darkness JM f.
(i) bringing up, tutelage, Est. 2:20.
(2) truth; adv. in truth, truly, Josh. 7:20;
(terrors)."
stand firm, Job Gen. 20: 12. [Boot 1S.]
(4) perhaps intrans. to still,
39:24, "she does not stand still where the sound pN ("faithful"), Amnon, pr.n. (i) the
of the trumpet is heard." Comp. Virg. Georg. iii. 83. eldest son of David, killed by his brother Absalom ;
From the common use of language it might be ren- 2 Sa. 3 : 2 ; 13 : Once called P^P which see.
139.
dered,"he so longs for the battle that he hardly (2) i Ch. 4:20.
believes his own ears for joy." Compare Job 9:16;
D3DN adv. (from i^X with the adverbial termina-
29:24.
tion D^-), in truth, truly, indeed, Job 9:2; 19:4.,
knees sinking, to be cast down in mind), 2 Ch.l3:l8. $3 Deu. 4: 10; lbS3 Josh. 6: 8, but 'ibX ? always
Followed by IP to prevail over any one, Gen. 25:23; 1PN\ IpxM; -with conj.
contr.; fut. ace. ">OK'l; with
Psa. 18:18; 142:7. r>PSl Piq "be strong and Aleph omitted ^llp* Ps. 139:20.
alert," i.e. of a strong and undaunted mind, Deu. (l) TO SAY, very frequent in the Old Test. (The
--* primary signification is, to bear forth; hence, to
31:7,23; Josh. 1:6 to be
bring to light, to say; compare ^3, K33T) 133, and
18. alert,
(Arab.^-jl
s-Z . Greek <prjf.Li. Hence Hithp. also "TO?X summit, and
nimble, used of a horse; whence ,js^i\ > T^ a nimble nbx pr. mountaineer.) From 131 to s/>eo&,"M?X differs,
horse.) in the former being put absolutely, while ~>PX is fol-
PIEL H?K
(l) to make
strong, prop, failing feet, lowed by the words which any one speaks thus Lev. ;
Job 4:4; Isa. 35:3. Hence, to make the mind active l 2, D? vK JjnpNI '^"^ '.??'$? "i-?"!
"
:
speak to the
and strong, Deu. 3:28; Job 16:5. children of Israel, and say to them;" Lev. 18:2;
2 Ch.
(2) to strengthen, Isa. 41:10; Psa. 89:22; 23:2,10; or Ex. 6:lO, "lbx{? ilBfo-^K njn* 13TJ1 "Je-
11:17; Pro. 31: 17; 24:5. hovah spake unto Moses, saying," i.e. in these words,
2 Ch.
(3) to restore, to repair a building, i.q. PJO thus, Exod. 13:!. Also followed by an accus., Jer.
24: 13; also, to set up, to build, Pro. 8:28. 14:17, n*n i3irrnx nn^ rn)
and thou shalt
"
(4) to harden (the heart), Deut. 2:30; 15 75 say to them this word;" Gen. 44: 16, 12N3Tlp what
=
S Ch. 36:13. shall we say?" Gen. 41 :54, lpV IDX TETga accord-
" to the
(5) to appoint, to choose. Ps. 80:18, "(whom) ing to what Joseph had said;" Gen. 22:3,
thou hast chosen for thyself," comp. verse 16; Isa. place 0*??$
i? "!PK "^r'N. of which God had
spoken
44:14. to him," i. e. pointed out to him. Rarely followed by
HIPHIL intrans. to be strong, used of the mind, Ps. *? Job 36: 10. In a few and uncertain examples, and
27:14; 31:25. those only in the later Hebrew, IPX seems to be put
HITHPAEL. (l) to be alert, followed by a gerund; absolutely for
131 2 Ch. 2 1O, n?V"j 37)33 DlfiniDK*} :
(3) to harden oneself, i.e. to be of a fixed mind, in a parenthesis, and 1OK*1 should be referred to the
Ruth 1 18. Compare PJH.
: words of the letter; 2 Ch. 32:24, iV "ip.X'1 " and he
[Derivatives, H?8, W,
H?'N n ?*, W^, Pr n
,
- -
(God) spoke with him." But this may also be ex-
plained, and he promised
to him, ft fagte (eg) tt)m ju.
ta3/Y Hos. 7:2; also simply TOX to say in oneself, to (1) to say, with a dat. of pers. Dan. 2 25 with an :
;
.Jlijj
Greek 0^/z/, in
Homer and the tragic poets.
my remarks on the Oriental usage of language on
Forster mentions that some of the nations of the Paci- Lu. 1:63, in the London Classical Journal, No. 54,
ficOcean say, " to speak in the belly," for " to think"). p.240). PI. P")PK those who say,
they are saying,
"
l 83.20:4; Gen. 44:28, and I think that he was a periphrasis for the Passive it is said. Dan. 3:4,
torn of wild beasts;" Ex. a: 14, TOK nn
" dost thou think to
W$Q KJBPX PT?K PV "unto you it is said,
people."
slay me?" LXX. p) arcXcTy yue Theod. \iytTin. On this idiom compare Lehrg. page
(TV 0'Aie 2 Sa. 2 1 16 (LXX. Sievoelro)
;
1 Ki. 5 19
:
;
:
; 798.
" meditate
1 Sa. 20:4; absol. Ps. 4:5, in your own (2) to command, to order, see the examples undei
heart upon your bed." the Heb. Kal No. 3.
(3) to command, like the Arab. <!. especially in ""fi?$ in sing, only with suff. npx Job 20:29,
P'-
E'TOX constr/TOK (for the
the language of the silver age. Construed sometimes sing. abs. is used the form
followed by a gerund, Est. 1:17, fl?Tn Wtfft
lOS TOK) (i) a word, discourse, i.q. lin but only
" he in poetic language, except Josh. 24:27.
commanded
Vashti to be brought ;" Est. 4 13; : Used es-
9: 14. ["Also followed byl and a finite verb."] Neh. pecially of the words of God ?K'npK Nu. 24:4, 16;
" and I HOK TOK Pro. 22:21; Dyi TOK Pro. 15:26;
r
13:9, nnt?*l riTO'KJ commanded, and they Ps.ig:
Prov. 6 2, etc. Gen. 49 2 1, " Naphtali is
purified," my command they purified; 2 Ch.
i.e. at 15 ;
:
fijjg
:
tan, and Arabic.) Elsewhere followed by an ace. of hind, it is to be observed, that Jflln refers to Naphtali
the thing (as in Latin, jubere legem,fccdus), 2 Ch. 29 :24. and not to H7*K a hind, and therefore we do not need
"for all Israel the king had commanded this burnt the conjecture of Bochart, who followed the LXX.,
reading n?'K and ^"P5?. [" For this use of the art. n,
1
"he commanded food for him," sc. to be furnished seeHeb. Gram. 107, init."]
him Job 22 29 with a dat. of pers. 2 Sa. 16 1 1
: : .
a command, mandate. Job 20:29, ^H?
(2)
; ;
NIPHAL TOM; fat. TOK and TOKJ 'NO np "the lot of his command from God/'
(i) to be said,
with ^ and ^
of pers. Nu. 23:23; Eze. 13:12. It Comp. TOK No. 3.
also stands like the Latin, dicitur, dicunt, Gen. 10:9;
pi. pSK m. Ch. a lamb, Ezr. 6:9, 17
7 ;
:
17.
82:14; Nu. 21:14. s* s ~* --?.
Syr. . Arab. a lamb. Root
(2) ? TO^.1 there is said to any one (this or that),
\-
.^, J^j ,1 Conj
Le. he is (so) catted, Isa.4:3; 19:18; 6l:6; 62:4;
Hos.t.1. I, IV. to make to become much; "iencf
much;^,!
LXII
(2) specially, a poem, hymn (tn-oe), Psa. 19:3; 9:26. It denotes the latter
part of the previous na-
epinicium, Ps.68 12 Hab. 3 -.9. :
;
tural day, not the conventional, i.e. yesterday even-
(3) a promise of God, Ps. 77:9. ing and night; whence it is used to denote evening
(4)0 thing, something, like "ft^, Jb 22:28. and night in general, just as words which signify to-
s^f-
morrow are often applied to the morning. For we
Arab. a thing.
^\ commonly carry in memory the end of yesterday,
while the beginning of to-morrow is impressed upon
rTTpN p l. rvnpK q IPX, -Ifc, and, like the for-
i. .
Ps. 17:6.
yesterday. Compare L~< to do at evening; and as
used of to-morrow, Heb. ~>i?.3 in the morning, and
f. id. Lam. a: 17. to-morrow, like the Germ. SXorgenj Gr. avpinv, from
s - -
(according to the probable conjecture of J. avpa the morning breeze; Arab. 'i\j>~. the time of
Simonis, prop, mountaineer, from the unused "ION
elevation, mountain, see under IPN No.l), an A mo r- the morning, j, to-morrow, ijur adv. to-morrow.
ite, collect. Amorites (LXX. 'Apoppaioi), a nation of Hence
Canaan, and apparently the greatest and most power- (2) night, darkness, generally. Job 30:3, "they
ful ofthem all, and whose name is sometimes used in the night," or"darkness
flee nxb>p-1 nxit? t?p.X into
a wider sense, so as to include all the nations of Ca- of a desolate waste." The Orientals well compare a
naan, Gen. 15: 16; 48:22; Am. 2:9, 10; Deu. l:2O. pathless desert to night and darkness. See Jer. 2 6, :
A part of them dwelt in the mountainous region which 31, and Isa. 42:16. Rosenm. renders heri desola-
was afterwards occupied by the tribe of Judah, where tionis, i. e. places long ago desolated ; btit, in opposition
were subject to five kings, Gen. 14:7, 13; Nu.
they
to this, i+*\ as the Arabian grammarians expressly
13:29; another part of them lived beyond Jordan, to ,
rrp$ (id.), [AmariaK], pr.n. (i) 2Ch.i9: DJ?ripxi "to shew sincere good will to any one,''
11. (2) lCh.24:23; called also nnOK iCh.23:ig. Gen. 24:49; 47:29; Josh. 2:14; a Sam. 8:6; 15:80.
(3) 2 Ch. 31 ". (3) probity, uprightness, integrity of rnind
nnnox LXIll
Ex. 18:21, W? *X3B> HEX. ^X "upright men, onomat. TO GROAN, TO SIGH, idfcen, jlotjnen 5 Isa.3:2G.
1
Hence derived the noi.n Gr. aria
hating covetousness.' Neh. 7:2;
Jud. 9 16, 19. Opp. :
19:8. is i"IJ3X.
to y?H Prov. 8 -.7. Specially it is integrity(of a judge), (ariaw, arta^w), and '"1J3S.F1.
" the
ju s t ic e. Ps. 1 9 l o, judgments of God are u p-
:
',
to be caused to i.e. to
PUAL, meet, light upon,
servant of God, Isa. 42 3. Hence njrP nDX " the:
constr. ninJrlpX a sack. Gen. 42:27, seq.; 43 :1 ^, Derivatives W, HJ3X, n No. II. for ri3X,
21,22.
TlpN ("true"), [_Amittai\,^r.n. of the father of whit her f see
Jonah the prophet, 2 Ki. 14:25; Jon. 1 1. :
whither? where? Used of time, how long? ]*$~W- Rabbinic) is from *?S, like n3J<, from ^?3K and from ;
With n parag. local H3X indeed, there occurs the common 13P13X, but I have no
(i) whither? also
doubt that 13X is genuine.
without an interrogation, Joshua 2:5; Neh. 2:l6.
Constr. is Isa. 10:3, D3"p23 -njyri n3X
pregnant, Ch. pron. i.q. Heb. DH they, those, Dan.
"whither (mil ye carry and where) will ye leave 2 :44, f. P|S 7: 17. [" And in this passage for sunt,
your riches?" they are. The more regular
fern, form would seem
(3) used of time, n3S"lJ7 until when? how long? Ex. 1 19, Onk. The form )-13X comes from \^$, and
:
Ex.. 16: 28; Ps. 13:2; Job 18:2, >'3j? j-iDt>ri fUK-is r.?^ or P?K, from jn?^ the demonstrative syllable JK
P?O^ "how long (until when) will ye make an end of (ecce!) being prefixed. So also in the Talmud
words?" in3S =
-ln. See under 33, and Heb. Gr. p. 292, 293,
H3X hither and
(4) without an interrogation, H3X) 13th edit." Ges. add.] In Targg. also psn f. }3n.
thither, i Ki. 2 :
36, 42. .
i.q.
3:25; 4:6. It is the genitive, Dan. 7:15. See but only in poetic language. rarely used as a sin-
It is
Lehrg. p. 728. gular in sense, Ps. 55 :i4 Job ; 5:17; generally coll. of
be read anna, not onna), interj. of entreaty, the whole human race, Job 7:17; 15:14; Psal. 8:5.
8| (to
compounded of fiX and W
pr. ah, quceso! ah, I pray! [This latter passage applies to Christ solely; see Heb.
Followed by an imperative, Gen. 50:17, or a fut. apoc. 2 : 6.] The same is C^awf? Ps. 144 : 3. Specially it is
i. e. an
optative, Neh. 1:5; elsewhere absolutely, Ex. (a) a multitude, the common people; hence Isa. 8 : i ,
Gal. 3: 15. [This is no illustration at all, the apostle comp. 2Ch.8:i8; i Ki. 10:22, concr. 2 Ch.g:2l*
opposes God to man\. (6) wicked men, Ps. 9:20; Vulg. constantly, classis; Syr. ships.
56:2; 66:12. Comp. DIK No. i.
the noun of unity of the preceding, a ship,
(2) pr.n., [Enos], Enosh, the son of Seth, the
T J^f f.,
M JcS T a root not used in Kal, kindred to the roots B^enj-1 "
ships of Tarshish," Isa. 23:1; used gene-
n3SNo. i,pJK, P83. rally of large merchant ships (see B^Bhri), 2 Ch. 9:21;
Joel l:l8 ni3X #:
NlPHAL, TO GROAN, TO SIGH, Ex.2:23; Ps.48:8; Isa.2:l6; "sailors," l Kings
v
'Aram. Ethp. id.). Construed with ^H Eze.Sl:l2, 9:27.
and IP Ex. 2:23, of the thing which is the cause of
29:2. Root H3K
"l ?v Isa.
T f., sorrow, mourning,
the groaning. Hence
No.L
nn^Nt f., pi. nin3$ a groan, a sigh, Ps.3l:ll;
("sorrow of the people"), [Aniam],
Lam. 1:22; Isa.21:2, PinroX^S "all the sighing
pr.n. m., l Ch.7:ig.
on account of it (Babylon)," Isa. 35 10 51:11. :
;
n3NI Anaharath, of a place, Josh. will destroy all things as if by rule and line; com-
pr. n.
pare Isa. 34: 11; 2 Ki. 21 13. : This word seems to
19=19]
with distinctive ace. *3K be primitive, or Arab, verb t^>\ to be
at least the
*P^f, ? pers. pron. l pers.
common; /, q. *?3K which see. Pleon. it is joined
i.
thick, troublesome, slow; fcfyroerfitlig fe^n/ seems to be
to the first person of the verb, especially in the books denom. from lead, prop, to be leaden. To this an-
of the silver age, as '3$ '?>7?K Ecc. 2: 1,11,12,15,
swers the Arab.
18,20; 3:17; 4:1,2,4,7; 7:25. It is
commonly tj_j\, Syr. l^_> , ^Ethiop. transp.
the nominative, put only for the oblique cases when 9 A ft ; and even the Armen. U/ULUCJ. anak, all of
such have preceded; see Lehrg. 727. [Heb. Gramni. which comprehend both black and white lead.
It sometimes includes the verb substan-
119,4.]
tive, / (am), Gen. 15 7 :
; 24:24. D jN (Milra) in pause with the tone changed *?3K
(de Sacy, Gramm. Arabe, i. 577), whence it also has the capital letters are those found in the ancient
DO plural. The author of the Chronicles twice puts writing, and the small vowels are inserted from the
explanatorily in the plural
J"ii'3X
(see l Kings 9:26, Coptic
Pron. eep. Suffix.
angry (compare Tpn Ps. 10:5). Const, either absol
1. ANoK A, L Ps. 2 :60 3 79 5 or with ? of object, Isa. 12:1;
1 2 ;
:
;
:
;
a. f. eNTO T.
poetic language; in prose there is used
3. m. eNToF F.
HITHPAEL, prop, to show oneself angry, hence i.q.
3. f. eNToS S. Kal construed with ?, Deu. l 37 4:21; 9 8, 20.
; '
:
;
:
(a)
all the Egyptian separate pronouns are compounded
is not used in this
word) T? 3 ^ Ch. i. q. Heb. &%$
face. Dan. 2:46; 3:19. In Targ. more often contr.
by prefixing to the proper kernel of the pronoun the
which must have had ?N. ["Gen.32:30; Deu.l:l7; 34:10;
prosthetic syllable an, ant, ent,
a demonstrative meaning, and served to give more SJN
f. the name of an unclean bird of which there
body and force to the pronominal word. (b) This were several species (33/P^). Lev. 11:19; Deu. 14 18. =
prosthetic syllable, at least an, is found in the He- LXX. xapadpioc, i. e. a bird living on the hollows and
brew pronouns of the first and second persons: banks of rivers ["perhaps, sand-piper""]. Bochart
an-oki, an-i 2. an-ta (sometimes an-kci).
1. ; f.,an-ti, (Hieroz.ii. 335, sqq.) renders it, angry bird, with the
an-t. pi. l. an-ahhnu; 2. an-tem, an-ten. The third Hebrews themselves, and he understands, the bird
person has it not in biblical Hebrew, but the Talmud
J$ ^s^c i. e. a kind of eagle, so called from its
angry dis-
frequently had
-in3X
he, ipse; pi. for flnj$._( c ) ;
the demonstr. prosthetic syllable an, in (jN) has a position. Among irascible birds, is also the parrot,
clear analogy to the Heb. demonstr. }n ecce! lo.' and which is here understood by both the Arabic versions.
may originally not have been prefixed to the third
person in Hebrew, because this could not be pointed pjN - (l) prop. TO STRANGLE, BE IN
ANGUISH,
at as present. But we clearly find the same syllable hence used of cries extorted by very great anguish,
in thenun epentheticum (so called), inserted in the suf- or sorrow; (compare the common an!en).
2Cngftgcfd)ret)
a doubt that this Nun belongs strictly to the pronoun. and those which spring from them, ay-^i, ai'ayoj,
For a fuller exhibition of the pronouns, see Heb. angere, angustus, enge/ Tfngjt, more softened H3X, H3K,
Gramm. pp. 293, 294, thirteenth edit., Leipz., 1842." for a3. Ch.
P.3t, Syr, ,fijj id.
Ges. add.]
(2) from the idea of strangling (see PP.H), has
sprung the signification of collar (p3V),to adorn with
^S? notused in Kal; Ch. }3tf TO BE SAD, SORROW-
4-s. a collar (see P?V)> and of neck ,jr. From ifa
Targg. Heb. 7]|, }T), P$?5 Syr. Ethpe. ^njJLJ to (1) clamour, groaning (KnQfatffyrty), Mai. 2:13;
as of captives, Ps. 79: 1 1 ;
102 21
:
;
of the wretched,
be compelled. Pa. ifloj) for tV/3iao;uai, Sap. 14: 19. 12:6.
DJN Ch. id., Dan. 4: 6, ^ D3KT^ TT^? no mys- (2) Lev. 11:30; a kind of reptiles of the lizard
tery giveth thee trouble." race, taking their name from the groaning noise like
an exclamation of grief, which some lizards make.
^JkS fut. 5)3X TO BREATHE, also to emit breath LXX., Vulg. render it mus araneus, shrew mouse
through the nostrils, as a verb only figuratively, to be See Bochart (Hieroz. i.
1068, seq.)
LXVI
N i.
q. e|3 Syr. i.n_i (comp. Gr. voirog) TO BE / an tarased root, i.q. Arab, ^jj] (
T and B
SICK, ILL AT EASE. It occurs only in Part. pass.
being interchanged; see under T), to be harmed, to
E^JX, f.
nyu^ sick, ill, used of a disease or wound, receive hurt, and transitive to hurt. Cognate per-
uch as is scarcely curable, Jer. 15:18; Mic. 1:9;
Job 34:6; of pain, Isa. 17:11 (like n^in, r6ri3); of a haps is the Aram. KDK_, j^) to heal, i.e. to restore
calamitous day. Jer. 17:16; of malignant disposition what is hurt; compare ^c.j to be sick, Conj. HI. to
if mind, Jer. 17:9. heal. Hence pDK and KDif.
NIPHAL, to be very ill, 2 Sam. 12:15. =
m., a box for ointment, 2 Ki.4:2. Root "^D
j to anoint.
a primitive word, in sing, not used, signify-
ing A M A N, vir, hence homo, man in general. The m ., harm, mischief, from which
any one
Hebrews used for it the contracted and softer form suffers, Gen. 42: 4, 38; Ex.2i-22,23. Root nDK.
K*K (comp. Gr. 11$ for Ire, gen. troc), a man, vir, also
(from the root ">DK) pl. D^DS. m. a
I
i:38, and KBWj 5:21, and N03X 4:13, 3.7,3, Ch. analogy of the similar nouns "^Vi^, "^r], ^10-
a man, and coll. me 71,4:29, 30. tTJ^ T3 i. q. D"]^}3
*VDJ< (from the root TDK)
a son of man, i.e. a man, [?] Dan. 7:13, "behold pl. D^DK. a captive,
9 9 P'
yet alive, see cap. 46, Ms. Bodlei. and Eng. Vers. pub- ed), to heap up, to lay up ;
whence \JLCQ] an?
lished by Laurence at Oxford, 1821. Pl. KP3K. J}3
provision, store, heaping up; N*3pK store-
Dan. 2:38; 5:21.
house. Hence
PI. OT3K. (in the Hebrew form) Dan. 4: 14.
called Matmurdt L^
The form is a Hebraism, peculiar to the biblical
Chaldee, instead of the common PI3.X, FIN comm. gen.,
S a n unused and uncertain Aram, to
*nd thus it is not acknowledged by the Masorites, who root,
mark the n as redundant, and always substitute the hide; see CDX. Hence
on of Abijah, grandson of Rehoboam, who died after satrap, of the Assyrians, who is mentioned as having
a reign of forty-one years, B. C. 9 1 4. i Ki
15:934; brought colonies into Palestine.
I Ch. 14 16. (a) 1 Ch. 9: 16. rO&N [Astnath'], Egyptian pr. n of the daughtei
.
LXVI1
has some weight in Egyptian names, write it 'Avcvify NIPHAL (l) to be collected, gathered together:
MS. Alex. 'AtrtwiQ, which in Egyptian
o^ *r I would write construed with 7K Lev. 26:25; 7J? 2 Sa. 17:11; ?
AC-II6IT she who is of Neith (i.e. Minerva of the 2 Ch. 30 3 :
;
of the place to which any are gathered
Egyptians), from AC (she is), like Asisi AC-HCG she together, although ?J? in this phrase more
frequently
who is (devoted) to Isis. Differently explained by Gen. 34:30; Ps. 35:15. i3T?&i> ^19^3
signifies against,
wind), HQp; also 'IP*, and with the harsher sjpn ^2) to be received (compare Kal No. 2); used of
(which see); hence the leper, i. q. to be healed, Nu. 12: 14; Jer. 47: 6;
(1) to collect, as fruits, Ex. 23:10; ears of corn, reflect, to receive, or betake oneself (into the sheath),
Ruth 2:7; money, 2 Kings22:4; also to assemble of a sword.
men, a people, peoples, etc., Ex. 3: 16; Nu. 21:16; (3) to be taken away, to vanish, to perish, Isa.
2 Sa. 1 2 28. Const, with
: an ace., also sometimes with l6:lO; 6o:2O; Jer.48:33; Hos.4:3.
?K of the person or
place to which any one is con- PIEL (i)i-q- Kal No. i, to gather, collect, Isa.
(2) to take to oneself, to receive to oneself, espe- PuALpass. of Kal No. l,tobe </a/ieree?, Isa. 24:22;
cially to hospitality and protection, Deu. 22:2; Josh. 33:4-
20:4; njrvsp 'S^pSsKi.s^seq. "to receive any HITHPAEL, to be assembled, Deu. 33:5.
one from leprosy," i. e. to heal a leprous person, after The derivatives follow, also TP?.
which he would be again received into intercourse
with other men. pr.n. (" collector"), Asap h. (l) a Levite,
chief of the singers appointed by David,! Ch. 16:5, who
(3) to gather upto one, to contract, draw back;
is celebrated in a later age as a poet and prophet (2 Ch.
Gen. 49: 33, he drew up his feet into the bed;"
1 Sa. 14:19, T3J epS draw back thy hand," i.e. 29:30), to whom the twelve psalms 50; 73 83 are
" the ascribed in their titles, and whose descendants (\3?
stay from what thou hast begun; Joel 2:10,
stars Dn tops shall drawback their brightness," 5]pX), even in the time of E2ra and Nehemiah, are
mentioned as having occupied themselves with sacred
i.e.
they shall shine no longer. Hence
verse and song (lCh.25:l; 2 Ch.2O:l4; 29:13;
(4) to take away, especially that which any one
ha<l
previously given; Ps.iO4:29, IWW DH-IT P|ph
Ezr. 2:41; 3:10; Neh.7:44; 11:22). (2) 2 Ki.
" 18: 18; Isa.36:3.
thou takes t away their breath, (3)Neh.2:8.
they expire;" Job
34: H; Gen. 30: 23, 'np-in-nx nr6K spx God hath the form D'lN) only in pi. D'SD^ collec-
fcptf (of
taken away my shame," Isa. 4 1 10:14. tions, i.e. storehouses, iCh. 26:15, 17. B'T^n *SD^
:
;
(5) to take out of the way, to destroy, to kill, " storehouses of the
gates," Neh. 12:25.
Jud.i8:25; 1 Sa. 15:6, iEJ> ^Ep'X |3 " lest I destroy
h a rvest, especially
you with them;" 26.34:29, 3%"} 'B-1DS. " destroy- ^]DJ$ collection, gathering,
e d," i. e. killed "
offruits, Isa. 32:10; 33:4; Mic. 7:1.
by hunger ;" Jer. 8:13; Zeph. 1:2;
compare the roots HSp, f|1D. From the first signifi- ^^?^? f.
agathering together, Isa. 24:22, pleo-
cation conies
nastically,
HSDK -IDDK " they are gathered in a
(6) agmen davdere, to bring up the rear, Isa. 58 : 8.
gathering," i.e. together.
LXVIII
temblies, especially of learned and wise men dis- soners,"i.e. prison, Jud.i6:2l, 25; contr. D'"MDn JV^
D*D2n i n the other member. In Arabic it would be (4) bind, or fasten animals to a vehicle, l Sa,
to
"
6:7, rtaya nnan-n^ D?np**i and bind the kine to
:
said <LcliH f_r'xvr^ although the Arabian assem- the cart;" verse 1O; either with an ace. of the vehicle,
blies callel LJU'JU differ widely enough from these to harness a chariot, Gen. 46 29, or else absol. l Ki :
Jewish assemblies. 18:44, Til "lb$ "bind (the chariot to the horses^,
and go down."
U BpX see *]bX.
(5) ["properly to bind on, to join, hence IPX
m., collected, adj. diminutive; whence norparrnR"], to join battle, ben trcit onf&beln, mit
*)??P$
Ki. 30:14;
contemptuously, a mixed crowd, scraped together begin the fight;
jemunbem anbtnben/ to l
fctnSpX [Aspathd\, Persic pr. n. of a son of rPDX, pi. nHp5? Nu. 30: 6, 8, 15.
'
bably Sanscr. Aspaddta, Pers. yj^y^, given by the son and successor of Sennacherib, a Ki. 19:37; Isa.
horse' (i. e. by Bramah under the form of a horse), 37 38 Ezr. 4 3. Before he became king he was made
: ;
:
comp. Gr. 'Affira&if. So Benfey, Pott."] by the his father prefect of the province of Baby-
king
lonia, with royal honours. See Berosus in Eusebii
future Ibtf and
lb*g with suffix Chron. Arm. t. i. p. 42, 43, where he is called \\anp-
*n~lpSn - (l) TO BIND, TO MAKE FAST, TO BIND TO lav as in the LXX., 3 Ki. and Isa., elsewhere 2a-
ANT THINO, cognate to the root "IJS and other verbs 2ax( p3>'C ( To1x 1 :21 )' (
The first s .vllab
'
e
XepSnv,
of binding which are collected under that root. (Ch. of this word ">Pi< is also found in other Assyrian
:ind
proper names, as in Tiglath-pileser, Shalmaneser,
Syr. ;_m},
, Arab.,
.Eth. Aft4: and ftUJ4: id.) This name was,
Ex. gr. a beast of burden, Gen. 49:11; a sacrifice, perhaps it is i. q.
j\\ ^,
fire). ["
to Athro-ddna,
Ps. 118:27; a sword to the perhaps, in ancient Assyrian equivalent
thigh, Neh.4:l2; any
one wit! cords, Eze. 3 25. Pers. <^J.J\ 'gift of fire,' which comes near to Asor
i Hence :
The name of Venus, and also of good hast cast us off, and put us to shame;"
in its place. Ps.68:i7.
fortune, was suitable enough for her, as thus chosen "l^ Ch. also, Dan. 6:23.
by the king.
? ^
(l) prop, yea more that, but also, but
emphat. state NJ$; Ch. wood, Ezr.5:8; 6:4, even; Eze. 23:40, "yea more, that (fogar) they
11; Dan. 5:4; softened from the Heb. H?, V being brought men from afar;" Hab. 2:5. Hence
changed into N, and f into V see under the letters ; (2) nedum, much more, how much more, when
N, V, and V. an affirmation precedes, l Sam. 14:30; 2 Sam.
4:11:
whin a negation precedes, how much Job less, 25:6.
I. )?$ conj. (l) signifying addition, especially
of something greater, prop, even, besides, Germ, gar,
Sometimes
Dr6s
*3 is
omitted, id. (see
-IDS >3 f]S i s said for '3
^ No. l). Gen.
3:1, S|t*n "is it even
fogar, the etymology of which has also a common no- so that God hath said?" Hath God so said?
tion. It is also shewn the Ch. 'SK Gen. 27: 33,
by
(as
Targ. of Jon.) from the root ^9?> an(i like the cog-
13K,
II.
^ (for *]3S
m. prop, a breathing
from the root ^?), with
member
suff. *SN,
is DJ,
Nearly synonymous
which however in prose, and in earlier phrase- *| m Prov. 22:24, and f)X t5K Prov.
29:22, angry.
ology, is more frequent, while ^ belongs to more
Very often used of the
words.
2:11. Followed by DS1.. Repeated before a pronoun
forthe sake of emphasis; Pro. 22: .'9,
nntf ?]X T'^Vlin (3) ["meton."]/ace, countenance(Syr. j^> j, Ch
"I make known to thee, even to thee." Hence ne- Of " to
PB3.N),Gen.3: 19. frequent use in the phrase,
dum, more fully '3 *\$, see below; Job 4: 18,19, ^N prostrate oneself nyiX njSX w ith the countenance
'? nedum quum, nedum si, much less z/(uub nun gar cast down to the ground," Gen.
19: i 42 6. in SH/
S
:
;
" how much less
wenn); Job 9: 14, $ ?3 3 | before David, i Sa. 25: 23, for the more common
*$$
if! should answer him?" Job 35: 14; Eze. 15:5. (4) two persons, as if a dual, from the sing. f|K
(2) simply signifying addition, also, Lev. 26: 16, in the signification of
face and person. Comp.
28; 2Sa.2O:i4; Ps.g3:i; 108:2; Job 32: 10, etc.
and Syr. \>}. iSa.l:5, D?
There often occurs ^1 " and also," Lev. 26:39; Deu. WTTOV, D'3S,
15:17; once even Dl" 5!*?! (as in Lat. etiam quoque), " he
gave one portion of two persons," i.e. a double
Lev. 26 44. Twice or three times See my remarks on this in Thes.
:
repeated, Isa. 40 124 portion.
;
page 1 27,
41 '.26. Often put poetically, and with emphasis for Others explain it, " he gave to Hannah one
portion
LXX
with anger," pr. with sorrow of mind; since words 13*1, Xi2~l) [" properly, here, hie, and ol
ragogic (like
which signify anger are sometimes applied to sorrow. time,now. But it is always a postpositive particle,
(5) \Appaim pr. n. m. i Ch. 2:30, 31.
which gives emphasis to the preceding word." Ges
corr.], these forms in MSS. differ surprisingly; prop
J^ fut.^BX* TO GIRD ON, TO'POT ON, specially entireness, whole, hence
the
used of the ephod "I13X of the high priest, Ex. 29:5;
(1) adv. quite, altogether. In German it
may be
Lev. 8:7. Hence are derived ~113X and the following rendered very suitably according to the etymology.
words. gar/ see ^X No. l according to the usage of the lan-
; t
5*
(i. q.
lisx the ephod of the high priest"), guage, alfo (altogether so). Job9:24,i2X xVnX"if
not so." Gen. 43: 11, X1QX 13TJS "if altogether
[Ephod'], pr. n. m. Nu. 34:23.
"
so," if (it be) indeed so" [but see corr. above, and
n^|3X noun of the preceding verb,
f.
(i) active No. 2, c].
putting on, binding on (of the Ephod), Ex. 28:8. (2) from the common usage of language, this par-
(2) covering (of gold), or overlaying of a statue, ticle departs a little from its power, and it is com-
Isa. 30:22 i. q. ^3>*.
They used to make the images monly added emphatically (a) to pronouns and
of idols, of wood or earthenware, and then lay over adverbs of interrogation, like the Gr. KOTI: Lat. tan-
them plates of gold or silver (jrtpi-^vffa, Trepiapyvpa, NiEK HS3
dem, then now, Gen. 27:33. wherein
ep. Jer. 6:34). then?" Ex. 33:16. Isa. 22: l, XiQX $Tlp "what
then (is) now to thee?" N'^ nK " where then?"
Hf^ i-
9- Syr. Ljj-aJ palace, Dan. 11:45, Vv] * 1
" his tabernacles, like unto Job 17: 15; Jud. 9:38; Isa.l9:l2; Gen. 27:37, HD^
13"|3S palaces." It is
s -- 3? nb^X HD Xiex "and what shall I now do to thee,
the Arab. with the
'$ high tower, fortress, castle,
my son?" (b) in exhortations and wishes. Job 19:6,
prefix of Aleph prosthetic, followed by Dagesh forte, N13X 1JH. "know then," nriffet alfo/ LXX. yi-wrt ovv.
comp. I'VISX, and Ch. m, Dn D^X blood, |1, J3S, JJX :, 2 Ki. io:lO; Pro. 6: 3. [" (c) to negative and affir-
constr.st.
(l Sam. 2: 18); Syr. |L,_a, a word formed
'3N HDX No. 9
(I y a Syriacism for teK., from from the Hebrew [Root 1? x ], Ephod, a garment of
! but see below, No. 2, c]), and N13NI with Aleph pa- the high priest, worn over the tunic and lobo
LXXI
of gold, set with precious stones. This garment reach- /SN m. darkness, especially th ick, a poet, word,
ed down to the middle of the thighs, and was bound Job3:6; 10:22; 28:3; 30:26. M-itaph. of misery
to the body by a girdle ("rtan 3KTI), Ex. 28:6 12. misfortune, also of a place of ambush, Ps. ll:2.
Besides the high priest, others also wore this garment ;
- thick and dense darkness, Ex. 10:22
David, for instance, when leading the sacred dance,
Comp. ?SS. It often furnishes an image of wretched-
2 Sam. 6:14; and Samuel, the servant of the high 1
(3) [written defectively, see "1B&?J, [Ephod~\, pr.n. ing, compare "in, nQ-lpJj^ irtpio^oc, and many words
of a man, Nu. 34:23. which denote a year, all of which properly signify a
circle, as annus, whence annulus, tviavroq.
root
IT3K ("rekindled," "refreshed," from the
H3K q. n-13, y to breathe, to blow), [Aphiali],
i.
.
Prov.25:ll, V3B-^? 1^
" a W0rd
spoken in
W
Hence
p^S^
m. (l) a channel, tube, so called from the idea of Syr.^v^-i and Ji^Jb^^^s^.:^ on a wheel, i.e.
containing (see P?X No. l). Job 40: 1 8, n^-in? 'j^BX. quickly.
"tubes of brass." (a) a channel, bed of a stream, DDS i. q. DOS TO CEASE, TO FAIL, TO COME T<
Isa.8:7; Eze. 32:6; also, the bottom of the sea, 2 Sa. AN END,Gen.47:l5,i6;Ps.77:9;Isa.i6:4. Hence
22:l6. (b) a brook, a stream, Ps. 42:2; 126:4;
Joel i: 2O. BY!?} P*BB5 " stream of the vallies," Job 6: cessation, hence
?^! pr.
m.
(A)' subst. (i) end, extremity.
15. Hence (c) a valley itself, especially as watered
Arab. ^jj\ t \_wddy~\, Eze.6:3; "ends of the earth," poet, and hyperbol.usedof the
by a stream, i.
q. ?H3,
extreme limits of the earth, Ps. 2:8; 22:28, and
34:13; 35:8; 36:4,6.
elsewhere.
(2) strong, robust, see the root No. 2. Job 41:7,
of the extremities, i.e. the soles
'i^BK "the strong of shields," i.e. (2) Dual DtPSK
E*!?'? strong " water of the
of the feet. Thus Eze. 47 3, D!P? *8 :
(1) pr. to set as the sun (comp. the kindred roots Tiy 'DBK1. ^S " I am, and there is none besides."
(4) adv. of restraining only, Nu. 22:35 (comp. 3N ("strength," "fortress," "fortified
;
conjunction however, nevertheless, Num. 13:28; This can hardly be any other than Aphaca, a city of
Deut. 15:4; Am. 9:8.
Lebanon famous for its temple of Venus, whose ruin*
D'EPl DStf still called Afka, stand between Byblus and Hello-
[Ephes-dammim~\, pr.n. of a place
in the tribe of Judah, l Sa. 17 : 1, called l Ch. 1 1 : 13, polis (Baalbec); see Burckhardt, Travels, 70, 493
Germ, trans.
to the context, in which and Burckhardt under the ancient name (p. 438, 539,
idols are said to be able to do
Germ. ed.).
nothing. Read with Vulg., Chald., Saad. DQXD, which
isfound in the similar passages, Isa. 40:1 7; 41 :12,2Q, (3) in the tribe of Issachar, near Jezreel, there ap-
and is of very frequent occurrence in these chapters. pears to have been an Aphek, remarkable for several
battles with the Philistines, l Sa. 4: l ; 29: i ; comp.
'V : ^ comm. (f.
Isa. 59: 5), a viper, & poisonous l Sa. 28 4. : Either this or No. l was a royal city of
*^ the Canaanites, Josh. 12:18.
serpent, Arab. ^1, from the root njJS, which see.
of a
Job 20: 16; Isa. 30:6; 59:5. pSSI ("strength"), [Aphekah], pr.n.
town in the mountains of Judah, Josh. 15:53.
i.
q.
33D TO SURROUND, but
only poet. )DNk a root of uncertain
construed with an ace., Ps. 18:5; 116:3; signification, perhaps
280.22:5;
Jon. 2:6; with 7JJ, Ps. 40 : 1 3. In flection it is not con- kindred to the root">?SJ
'
to cover, i.
q.Ji compare
tracted, whence a, n?K for T8.
["II. to be whitish; Arab. JLc, whence "13S ashes.
*? a root not used in Kal. (i) TO HOLD, TO
HOLD FAST, i.q. pTH, p\T.nn, see p'SK No. i, and HITH- unless this comes from the idea of grinding, pulveris-
PAEL. ing,
TBK i. q. Tia. Compare 1SJJ. "W]
(2) to be Strong, mighty, see P'3$ No. 2! For a primitive, kin-
ashes.
(Perhaps
. this is
the signification of holding,
especially holding firmly dred to the word ~>SJJ, and pr. denotes dust and earth,
--*
is often applied to strength. Arab.
^\ is to over- compare cinis, from the Gr. KOVIC, and the etymology
of the pr. n. E?"]??, n l?^. Similar is the Gr. r%>a.
come, to conquer; ^jj\ to excel (prop, to be very [or from "1?K II. Num. 19:9, 10;
2 Sa. 13:19. It
j).
s ___ is used principally in speaking of mourning, Jer. 6:
strong) in liberality, eloquence; .j\ excellent, sur-
26; Lam. 3:16; to which belong the phrases, Psal.
1 02 l O,
" I have eaten ashes like bread." Est.
passing. : 4:1,
HITHPAEL, hold oneself fast, to restrain
to 1QK1 pb> 1^>.J " and he put on sackcloth and ashes,"
oneself from giving way to the impulses of love, Gen. compare Est. 4:3; Isa. 58:5. Paronomastically put
43 '-Si; 45:M grief, Isa. 42: 14; anger, Est.5:lO; together, "1S$J 1?JJ "dust and ashes," Job 30:19;
conscience, l Sam. 13:12. Gen. 45 l " and Joseph :
, 42 6. Metaph. used of anything light and fallacious.
:
could no longer restrain himself;" Isa. 63:1 5, T'Pin Job 13: 12, 1?X \?y'9 " maxims of ashes," i.e. vain
JpSKJ^ri vK "thy love towards me restrains itself;" and fallacious. Isa. 44:20, ~l| njJV) " he follows after
" I forced
1 Sa. loc. cit. of Saul, myself, and offered ashes," sc. as driven by the wind; i.q. elsewhere,
the burnt offering" (although I knew that I was for- " to follow after the As to ib
wind," compare '"Xjn.
the former riliSyp, the latter j> jLjc, i.e. a cap, a helmet.
Hiller understands the Parr hasii, a nation of eastern
The same word is found hi Syriac J;_2i^OO i. e. a mitre Media; I prefer to understand the Persians them-
selves (comp. D"lf ). Aleph is prosthetic, as it is in
of a priest and bishops. Others take it as transp. for
the words which follow.
~tt?3 ornament of the head.
nrn3. Deu. 22:6; Ps. 84:4. The root rns to germi- iOnplfiX, [Apharsathc'hites^Ezr.t'.g, Ch.pl.
pr. n. of two Assyrian nations, otherwise unknown, un-
nate, is in Hebrew only used of plants but in Arabic, ;
less indeed they be taken as the same. Some have suit-
is also used of animals producing young.
ably enough compared the Parcetaceni, dwelling
a litter, palanquin, once found Cant.
. between Persia and Media, as to whom see Herod, i. 1 1 .
3:9; LXX., Vulg. <popt~iov (litter, comp.
Athen. v. 5),
n3& and more
[EphratJi], Gen. 48:7; often
ferculum. [" Talmud pnBg and T ^a
bed."] It an- with n parag.
swers to the Syriac L,os, which is rendered by
although without giving
Castell, solium, sella, lectulum,
(land, region).
his authority (prob. out of Barbahlul); also, Chald.
(1) pr. n. of a town in the tribe of Judah, elsewhere
KJT-13S (with Aleph prosthetic), which is also given
called Bethlehem (Gen. 48:7); more fully Beth-
in this place by the Targumist, and Cant. 1 16 for :
lehem Ephratah (Mic. 5:1).
the Heb. &~$l. The root n-13, Ch. K"J? to run, prop.
(2) i.
q. DnaK Ps. 132:6; comp. ^"ISX No. 2.
to be borne, borne quickly (compare ""QS, <j>tpo>,
to be
(3) pr. n. f. iCh. 2:19,50; 4:4.
fero), like currus a currendo, Tpoxpg from rpt-^etv,
tyoptiov, ferculum from ^Ineiv, ferre.
Those who m -
(0 an Ephrathite, or Bethlehemite,
impugn etymology of this Hebrew word, should
this 1 Sa. 17 : 1 2. 0?n?K Euth l 2.
PI. :
also have something to oppose to the similar, and, at (2) an Ephraimite, Jud. 12:5; l Sa. l : l ;
i Ki.
the same time, most certain etymology of the Greek 11:26.
and Latin words just cited. To me II'HBX and (/tope'iov
yvS adv. Ch. perhaps at length, in the end.
and ferculum appear to come from one and the same
the Pers. J jj end, at length, comp. Pehlevi, Afdom,
original stock (iT}?, S")?, (j>tpw,fei-o, fafyren).
end. It occurs once, Ezr. 4:13,
p^njjl D*3^O ChJ<
(perhaps, "double land," "twin land," " and at to the kings," comp.
length bring damage
pr. n.
the younger son
comp. DyYjfb), (i)Ephraim, verses 15, 22, where DhSX is not found. The ancient
of Joseph, ancestor of the tribe of Ephraim (0)1?? *??
versions [" LXX.DinSXI mi rouro,PeshitOoCn cSjo"]
Num. 10:22 and simply D?!? Josh. 16 10), the :
pass it
by ["Aben Ezra and"] others
in translating;
boundaries of which, about the middle of the Holy
conjecture from the context, and interpret it treasury,
Land are described, Josh. 16:5. seq. In this region revenue (of kings).
was B^aS in " mount," or " the mountain region of
Ephraim," Josh. 19:50; 20:7; 21:21; Jud. 2:9; -N an uncertain root, perhaps i.
q. 3JJ to la-
"
3:27. But different from this is the wood of Eph- bour, to toil. Hence
raim," 2 Sa. 18:6; which, from the narrative, must
be beyond Jordan (comp. 2 Sa.l7 24 29) probably :
;
^ [Ezbon], pr.n. (i) a son of Gad, Gen.
so called from the 46:16; also called VI which see. (2) l Ch.7:7
slaughter of the Ephrahnites, Jud.
12:16. 2 Sa. 13:23, Ona? DV "at Ephraim," (but compare 8:3).
i. within the boundaries of the tribe.
e.
y?y$ f., with suff. r?3v; Pl. niyayx (for y?v ;
jll)
Arab. _-u^, Syr. ^fc^-t > especially the fore-finger,
Barhebr. p. 2 15, line 11.) with suff. V*? m. (i)a side, i.q. VK
No. i, so called from joining together (see the root
ySVK also Ch. ; pi. BJ3VK used of the fingers, Dan. No. l). l Sa. 20:41, 33|n 7VND "from the south
5:5; of the toes, Dan. 2: 41, 42. "B ?XKQ "from one's side," 1 Ki. 3:20, and
side ;"
T5K*m.(i) a side, i.q. Ws ; Isa.4i:9, S'8 i.q. at any one's, side (see J9 No. 3), Eze. 40 17. Far
Kj^n "sides (i. e. limits, extremities) of the earth"
more frequently
(as elsewhere H ??5
'Offi, HW "i 3 ??)- In the other (2) prep, at the side, near, juxta (which is itself
member p* ajungendo), Gen.4i :3; Lev.i 16; 6:3; 10: 12 i Sa. :
;
Arab. Ju^l prop. deep-rooted, strik- 5:2; 20 19. It is joined also with verbs of motion
:
from an ancient and noble stock, noble, Ex. 24: 1 1. ^HvV^ (" whom Jehovah has reserved"),
(Compare as to both words, the Hebrew and the [Azaliah~], pr.n. m., 2 Ch. 34:8.
Arabic, the root?? No. i.) The Germans [and other ^^ an uncertain root, i.q. DJ to be strong,
nations] in the same sense take the image from the Hence
mighty.
stock and trunk, the Hebrews from the root.
DV& [Ozem], pr.n. m. (l) lCh.2:i5- (2)
' -W$ m.
(from the root ?VK No. l), a joining, a
i Ch. 2:25.
jo in t ; hence nft'SS,
D?TJ 7VB "joints of the hands,"
i.e. the knuckles at which the fingers are -?5 f.
i.q. rnjJV
with Aleph prosthetic, prop.
(jtn&cfyel)
joined to the hand, Jer. 38: 12; Eze. 41:8. In the a leg-chain (from 1KV), a fetter; hence, without re-
passage Eze. 13:18, the context requires that the fore garding the etymology, a bracelet, Nu-31 :5O; 2 Sa
arm should be understood, although others understand 1:10.
the wrist, or the armpit. [" The same are to be un-
derstood in Eze. 13:18, where the sewing of cushions UP, TO STORE, TO HEAP OP, TO
TO LAY
'for all the joints o the hands' is put hyperboli-
TREASURE (The primary idea is that of shut-
UP.
ting up, enclosing, restraining; compare the cognate
cally to express the extreme luxury of the females, _ -t
since usually cushions are placed at most under the and Arab.
roots iVn, >?, also IT?, lp ^\ to shut
elbow." Ges. add.]
up, to restrain, kindred to which are _j) and _^^.)
/Sifr* (l) i.q. J*. TO JOIN, TO CONNECT TO- 2Ki.2O:l7; Isa.39:6; Am. 3: 1O.
VT
q anfc; piur. n'nnx constr.
nb-) oy
.
n
nuns only
"he
'
The common reading with Dagesh has doubtless 25:11, ini^i ^s'f (God)
arisen from another interpretation adopted anciently ;
will humble his (Moab's) pride, with the ambush oi'
his hands," i.e. which his hands have framed. Am-
by which D7X1X was regarded as contracted from
BD/i" ^"^, 1 ri
?~ ?~)?
D
see Symm., Theod., Chald., ;
bushes are here appositely applied to the hands with
which they are framed, and as it were, woven (comp.
Jerome; comp. my Comment, on Isa. loc. cit. [" and
the root No. l).
Thes.pp-146, 1248"].
-1 N i^n^ f.
prop, interwoven work, or net-work, lat-
J fut. 3~1X' 1) prop. TO KNOT, TO WEAVE, TO Once in sing. Hos. 13:3, elsewhere
( tices. always in
INTERTWINE, whence ""^"TO a net, net-work. (Kindred
rtang.
pi. [Root an.]
is 3^iJJ to mingle. Arab. e_J.1 to tie a knot, II. id., (1) a window (as being closed with lattice- work,
not with glass), Ecc. 12:3.
&j.\ a knot.) (2) a dove-house, as being shut in with lattice-
- i
60 8 and for the same cause
(2) to lie in wait. (Arab. ^ ,\
to be cunning, work,
(3) a
Isa.
chimney
:
;
Constr. followed by p, Ps. 59:4; Pro. 24:15; Josh. and nyanx constr. st. nyans m. (comp.
^5"]^ f.
8:4; followed by an ace., Prov. 12:6; ?y Jud. 9:34.
Gramm. 95:1).
Elsewhere put absolutely, for to watch in ambush,
(l)four, for y3") with Aleph prosthetic, which is
Jud. 9 2O followed by a gerund, Pro. loc. cit.
:
34 ;
2 1 :
; ;
omitted in the derivatives; as in &n, 'J^3"|, y^l, etc.,
Ps. 10:9. Part. 3"YIX, 3TIXH a Her in wait, often coll.
with suff. DRV31.X those four, Eze. 1:8, 1O. Often
Hers in wait, a body of soldiers set in ambush, Josh.
for the ordinal fourth, when years and months are
8:14, 19, 21 Jud. 20:33, seq.; hence construed with
;
counted (see Lehrg. p. 701), Isa. 36: l ;
Zech. 7:1.
a plur., loc. verse 37.
cit.
Dual D^aTS f u r-f W, a Sa. 1 a 6.
: Plur. Dya-K
PIEL, i.
q. Kal, construed followed by ?V_, 2Ch.20 22,
:
absol. Jud. forty, Gen.8 :6. This number,like seven, and seventy,
9:25.
set an ambush. Fut. 3^*1 for
is used
by the Orientals as a round number, Gen. 7 :17 ,
HIPHIL, to 3^y, Jon. 3:4; Mat.4:2; compare Chil minor, forty towers,
lSa.l 5 5 : .
V:a,3,6, 17.
(2) an// thing dyed with purple, purple cloths.,
- fat. Jhig (Isa.
59:5), (Jud. 16:13).
>3->xri Ex. 25:26, 27; Eze. 27:16; Pro. 31:22; Jer. 10:9.
(l) TO PLAIT, Jud. loc. Cit. The origin is uncertain. If it properly denotes the
(2) to weave, ex. gr. used of the spider (hence muscle, from which the reddish purple is procured
Gr. apa\vri), Isa. 59:5. Part. 3TJX one weaving, Isa. (and this is probable, since ^P?^ also properly sig-
19:9, and subst. a weaver, Ex. 28:32; Isa. 38:12. nifiesa shell-fish), one might understand a ridged or
D'jni* 11 JZ? a weavers' beam, l Sa. 17:7. pointed muscle (such as is the form of the purpura),
The primary syllable of this root is 3"), which had from 03^,
^ (
to heap; if the name refer to the co-
the power of swift motion and agitation, lour, D3Tmay IK the same as Dj?^ to variegate, to dye
comp. .
Syria,
to move and in the western languages
;
regere, regcn. (tof)
(2) a weaver's shuttle. Job 7 6, 3-iX^|D D : ^ purple colour; but there can be no doubt that this
word has been borrowed from the Phoenicio-Shemitic
"my days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle."
languages.
(Compare Job 9 25.) :
(Gr. iropQvpa, Lat. purpurd), found on the shores of fruits,herbs and ft 44 to reap.)
;
'
the Mediterranean sea (l Mace. 4: 23 ; Plin. N. H. ix. (a) to eat down, by plucking, cropping, in the
60, seq.). Compare under the word HS'^S, and Bo- manner of cattle. Hence nj~|X and np_K a manger;
chart, Hieroz. ii. 740, eeq. ; Braunius, De Vestitu Sa- Germ. SKaufe, from the verb rupfe n $ '"}$ a lion, prop.
oerdotum, page 211, seq. Amati, De Restitutione ; plucking, pulling to pieces ; J"l?.J"}$ a hare, prop, crop-
Purpurarum, third edition, Cesenae, 1784; Heeren, ping the grass. So also other names of animals an
Hist Werke, xi. p. 84. Different from this is bluish taken from the idea of plucking, or cropping, as 'If
LXXVI1
^ Ch. lol behold! or rather, see ye, Dan. 7: 6, H i5>adj. made of cedar (denom. from H)*), Eze.
7,13; and with the roughness of the letter "i soften- 27 24. Others explain
:
it, firm, stable, comp. PX.
ed, -17$ (which see), in the Talmud *"}!. Several
^'s. nX & i"O""}J$ (in some copies, in some
take this word from the Arabic imperative \ ,\ (of but contradicted by the Masora, see J. H. Mich.
n3"!)X,
L.~.f
on Jer. 30:17), f.
the form \.lil); but they should attend to this, which
i
( )
a long bandage, applied by a physician in order
is of much importance in the matter, that the Arabic
to heal a woitnd (see the root No', l). ? n>1~lS nripj?
imperative of the verb ^\. is \. .. I prefer, there- "a bandage is
applied to any one,"i7e. his wound is
fore, regarding -1"1^ as being with the letters trans- healed; Jer. 8:22; Neh. 4:1; 2 Chr. 24:13; and in
posed for -IX"). [" Not found in other Chaldee books ; Hiph. ? na-Y")^ npyn "toapply a bandage toany one,"
but cognate with it are in Ch. and Talmud. ^ID. lo / or to heal his wound, Jer. 30:17; 33:6. Always
*1X lo! then for, because (like Ch. ID lo! if), and metaph., to restore a state, Jer. loc. cit. to repair walls ;
mology just given). Eze. 27:8, 11. The Arabian of a moneychest, 2 Ki. 12: 1O, ll of a coffin, Gen. ;
l^ & HD^
(of the form nK^Pl),. PI. absolute 18, in ana, nj3TS; in Chron. \r$ [Oman'].
"JX (by a Syriacism for J"linK, like D9nfo for D
_^
8 Ch. 32:28, const, n'm i
Ki.5:6, and nins
T"l^ an unused root. Arab. .\ to contract one-
;
JJ s ^
self, to make oneself compact and firm; :. firm.
Jjl ^
,!
made ft r m, Ezr. 2 7 : 24. But almost all the old trans- id.). Gen. 49 1 7 Jud. 5:6; Psal. 19:6; : ;
ators have rendered D*M~i^ made of cedar (from TT8, p ninns " paths of the seas," Ps. 8:9; compare
jf the form B^H3 brazen, Lehrg. 512), and to these I vypot KtXtvda, Horn. H. a, 312; D^O nns the way
Jo not hesitate to accede. Henoe TPD for T11XD and Hence
to life or happiness," Pro. 5:6. (a) metaph.
course of living and acting, i.q. TH. 1^ fT**
O.^ pi. 0*n^ *J"H$ m cedar, so called from the
-
the pine kind (Theophr. Hist. Plant, ii. The cedi-us 119:104; njn* ryim.X "mode of action pleasing to
7).
God," Ps. 25 4 1 19 1 5 Isa. 2 3. The metaphor of a
:
;
:
;
:
f- wood-work
"M7 -
of cedar, cedar-work,Zep}i. H M "1^ f. a band of travellers, see under the
2:14. The feminine has a collective power, as in root No. 1.
nyj? timber; Lehrg. 477.
" f-> anjippointed portion, ration offood, or
I. jN TO WALK, TO GO, as a finite verb, once provision, given out daily or at some regular time
Job 34:8. (Ch. rnx. id. To this answers the Gr. (from HIS No. II.), Jer. 40:5; 52:34; 2^.25:30;
tp^opui, and softened forms of the same stock are whence, generally, a portion of food, Pro. 15:17.
1
^I? ?, ^"V) Part, nnx a traveller, Jud. 19:17;
'"!** pl-D'HS iKi.io:20; elsewhere nV"m.(iKL
8 Sam. 12:4; Jer. 14:8. PI. Jer. 9:1. Fern, nrnx
10:19; 2 Ch-9:i8, 19), a lion, as if, plucking, tear-
collect, (seeLehrgeb. 477) a company, or band of
ing abroad (see nn I., No. 2); Nu.24:9; l 83.17:34,
travellers, especially of merchants, a caravan, avv- " a
seq.; 2 Sa. 23:20, etc.; Fli^. ~PE3 young lion,"
otia, Gen. 37:25; Isa. 21:13. See HIX, "IH'jte.
Jud. 14:5; nint?-VI3 "lion's whelp," Jer. 51: 38. It
II TO DECREE, TO APPOINT, i.q. PpH furnishes an image both of strength, Nu. 23:24, ami
II. 1J* / *- T / r ~g
of fierceness and cruelty, Pro. 28: 15; see Bochart,
whence n!
7^? i-
q- pin a statute. To this answers the * r
- -* s - a. .
Hieroz. 5.715, seq. Syr. \/i\.
Arab. to appoint a time, whence >.
^\ t\ appointed
^'IN m. (comp. of >^ and ^?).
time, an era, an epoch; ,1 to date a letter; ^* <,\J (l) lion of God, i.e. very mighty hero. Collect
C^ ^_" -
"
chronicle, annals. Perhaps it is kindred to the root
2 83.23:20, 3Kto VHS
Tf two heroes of Moab;'
TD? which see. ^XTS and
see *"!^ l Ch. 11 :28. (Compare Arab.
T
(perhaps for rn.K "wandering"), [Arah~\, and lion of God, an epithet of brav
pr.n. m. (l) Ezr.2:5; Neh-7:io. (2) 101.7:39.
rrirnx constr. nirm with suff.
men, and Pers. \ j^
--i Shiri khoda, lion of God.)
pi. 'n'rnx,
DnrpS, instead of which there are often found
Isa.29: 1,2, used of Jerusalem as the "city of he-
in MSS. and
printed editions 'rfrn'X, TD'n~^,
(see J. H. Mich,on Job 13:27) comm. (m. Pro. 2 115,
D^ roes," which is to be unconquered; although others,
comparing the passage of Ezekiel about to be cited
render it hearth, i. e. altar of God.
comp. Job 6: 18, 19; f. Pro.
15:19), a poetical word, s-
(Ch. rnfc, Syr. l-w'o), Sam (2^ hearth of God (compare hearth, chunn**
way, path, i.q. TT?. ,!
LXXIX
fi-om the root nn No. II.), used of the altar of burnt- 40; 5 =
3; 17:2O; 22:7; Isa.63:lo; also withouf
Qo; Pro. 28:2; 00.7:15; 8:12.
offerbg, Eze.43: 15, 16.
(3) pr.n. of a
[Ariel], man, Ezr. 8: 16. (2) intrans. to be long, i Ki. 8:8, especially used
of time VDJ ttngn " to be 1 o n g-1 i v e d," Ex. SO 1 2 :
long life, i Ki.3:i4; on the other hand VOJ 'n "to 3^.5^ Gent. n. [Archites"], inhabitants of the
prolong one's own life," to be long-lived, Deu. 4:26, town or region to be sought on the borders of
"n'JX,
-
i Ki. 20:26;
pi. 2 Sa. 10:17, J 9; l Ki. 20:20; more f. "I'Onjjl l Ch. 7:14. PI. D'B1$ 2Ki. 8:29, and by
rarely with sing. f. Isa. 7:2. This ancient and do- Aphseresis DVjnn for cnpngn
2 Ch. 22:5.
mestic name of Syria, was not altogether unknown to *
JD")^ (as if Palatinus), [Armoni], pr. n. ra. 2 Sa.
the Greeks, see Horn. II. ii. 783 Hesiod. Theog. 304;
;
21:8.
Strabo xiii. 4, 6; xvi. 4, 27. The name of Ara-
mcea however extends more widely than that of Syria, it ever was used,
uncertain root, which if
and also includes ]"1^ an
Mesopotamia, although Pliny (v. 15, I suspect to have had, like \^, nrj the sense of a
12), and Mela (i. li), give the same more extended tremulous and tinkling or creaking sound; Gena.
limit to Syria. When it simply stands we should Q^ fd>nrirren, as of a tall
tree vibrating in the air; comp.
generally understand western Syria, or that properly
so called; Jud.3: 10; iKi. 10:29; 11:25; 15:18;
through Kemuel (Gen. 22:21), who seems to have (2) [Oren], pr.n. m, l Ch. 2:25.
given his name to the region of Syria. Comp. 0*1. f. a hare, Lev. 11:6; Deu. 14:7.
epicen.
(6)1 Ch.7:34.
See Bochart, Hieroz. i.
m . PI. const, napnx a fortress, palace,
Arab. ^-^j\ Syr. )^ji) id.
"}&
994, seq., who regards
this quadriliteral as being
BO called from being lofty (see the root) ; Isa. 25:2;
JV3 f\Q-$ i Ki. 16:18; compounded of nnx to pluck, to crop, and 3'3 produce
39:14; Pro. 18: 19, etc. ^Sn
"
3Ki. 15:25, is "the citadel of the palace," its in- ji3"]tf (for P3~> rushing," "roaring,"i.e. roar-
nermost part, the highest and strongest. None of the ing stream), pr. n. of a stream ( 'D3) with a valley
ancients rendered the word women's apartment, as of the same name, emptying itself into the east of the
very many of late have done, after J. D. Michaelis Dead Sea; it formerly was the northern boundary of
LXXXI
the Moabites, the soifthern of the Amorites (now d, as in the vulgs^ dre. To this also answers the
Num. 21:13, 22:36; Grj, CPS, certs, see No. 6).
^~=>~y<&\ el-Mojib). seq.;
Deu. 2:24,36; 3:8, seq.; 4:48; Isa. 16:2, and see Specially(l) the earth, orbis terrarum, opp. to
Burckharclt, Travels in Syria, p. 372 (Germ, trans.
heaven. r$?$l D^lfn Gen. l:l; 2:1,4, and f!$.
and my remarLs on Isa. 16:2. D?l?>1 Gen. 2:4, "heaven and earth," used of the
p. 633),
;
P"1N (" nimble"), [^rnan], pr.n. m., l Ch. 3:21. (2) earth, land, continent, opp. to sea, Gen.i :28.
aland, country, Ex. 3:8; 13:5; Q" ^?? Y~$
1
PI*?, y and V being interchanged (see under y). Dan. " his native
1O; 28:12; or was born, land," Gen.
2 35,39; 3:31, etc.
=
own kings, to be distinguished from T]K (which see) ground, as ""^"IX -inPl^l Gen. 33:3; 37:10. Hence
poet., things that creep on the ground, i.q. Kl^? B>"T..
*Ki.i8:34; 19=135 Isa.iO:9; Jer.4Q:23.
Job 12:8, }HK? !Tb> speak to the ground," i.e. to
"T&^DrT]^ Genesis 10:22, 24; 11:10 13 \_Ar- the reptiles of the ground followed fishes of the
; by
phaxacf], pr.n. of the third son of Shem, designating sea; compare Gen. 9:2
iKi./J:l3. ;
i.
q. Po-rus, near the Russians."] 22:15; 20:32: 22:4.
Note. n paragogic in ny"lX is commonly local,
y v v comm. (more rarely masc., as Gen. 13:6; but sometimes also poetical, so that ^V"!^ is not diffe-
especially when a land is put for the in- rent from n$> Job. 34: 13 37 12 Isa. 8 23 (comp.
Isa. 9:18, ;
:
;
:
'
habitants, Isa. 26:18; 66:8) with suff. T1*?, with nj$ for *?).'
16:9.
J>j\, Ch. and Syr. Kin*, The Arabic form UJ-
nearly resembled the Sanscr. dhara [Welsh, daear}, emphat. st. Kg"i8 Ch. i.q. NyT"iS, EAETH,
Pehlev. arta, whence terra, Goth, Grbej the letter y being changed into the harder p, Jer. 1O
airtha, earth,
tl'.ft iatler passes over to *he Gr. tpa, anc very often in Targg.
by casting away 1 1 ;
7
LXXXII
their imprecations ;
Gen. 3:14, "thou art cursed of several kings of Persia; in Greek written
'Apra~
above all cattle," i. e. all animals shall shun thee as an
Zipfyg, called by the Armenians tunintua^u Artashir,
accursed beast. [This explanation is wholly unsuit-
Deu. 27:15, seq; 28:16, seq. by the modern Persians, ^lj.1, _,yU&j Ardeshfr, ( \
able.]
NIPIIAL, pass. part. D'~)X3 Mai. 3:9. by the ancient Persians, on the inscriptions Nakshi
Tl0 Rustam in Niebuhr (Travels, t. ii. tab. 27), as in-
PIEL, -HK part. (i) i. q. Kal, Gen. 5:29.
terpreted by Silv. de Sacy, inBTimK Artachshetr,
(2) to cause, or produce a curse. Nu. 5:22,
D*Y!Kl?n DV3H the waters which when drunk, would
Artachshatra whence, by the permutation of r and s
;
361. As to the region, see Wahl, Asien, p. 518, 806, (2) Artaxerxes Longimanus, in the seventh
seq. Morier, Second Journey, p. 312. Ker Porter, year of whose reign Ezra led his colony into Pales-
tine, Ezr. 7:1,7, 11, 12, 21; 8:i; and from whose
Travels, vol. i.
p. 178, seq. ["Smith and Dwight's
twentieth to the thirty-second year Nehemiah go-
Researches in Armenia, vol. ii.
p. 73, &c. The root
is Sanscr. Arjawarta ' verned Jiidrea, Neh. 2 i 5 1 4 13:6.
: See my fur-
;
:
;
I* J N a root not used in Kal, as rightly observed lltfS an unused root, probably i.q. IpX to bind.
Hence
by Manger on Hos. 2:21 pr.i.q.Knj; ^ ,. TO ERECT,
TO BUILD, whence ^^ a bed, couch with a canopy.
-
'Nlf ("whom God has bound," sc.
by a
S l Ch. 4:16.
vow), iAsareel"], pr.n. m.,
From the idea of a bed-fellow
(j*.c
a husband or
S *"
wife, tjw.yC one espoused; hence
7gT1$ ("vow of God"), [Asriet], pr.n. w.,
Num. 26:31; Josh. 17:2; l Chr. 7: 14.
Patronymic
KHX
PIEL, to espouse a woman;
Constr. with HK'N Bn$< Deu. 20:7; 28:30;
pr. to make a W*^ [Asrielitea], Num. loc. cit.
spouse.
ne>K b bn Hos. 2:21,22; 2 Sam. 3:14. There is with suff. Job 18:5; D??'K Isa. 50: 11.
added 3 of price [paid for the wife] 2 Sa. loc. cit. comm. (but rarely masc., Job 20 26; Ps. 104:4; Jer. :
PUAL, BT)fc f. in Pause nbn'K to be betrothed, 48:45; comp. as to the gender of words signifying
Ex. 22:15; Deu.22 s8 Part. nbn'ND, Deu. 22:23,
: .
fire, Lehrg. 546, note), FIRE. (Amongst the cognate
25, 97. (Ch. Dn F?. and Pa. id). languages, thn Chaldee has N|^> NtJ'l$ fire, fever;
LXXXIII
9 9*
the Syr. jth. ^ftT Arab. 2 (for p" opinion of God"), 'Ash-
JA^J fever; : fire; Jt_..,_.\\
,
"
14, 16 comp. Stat. Theb. ii. 276, arcano florentes
; -i --*
igne smaragdi." See the derivative nB>N- rTli'JN an unused root, i.q. Arab. U'
B'B'X'
$$ Ch. emphat. st. K N
;
id. Dan. 7:11. (1) to prop, sustain, i.
q.
&K (dsk)- Pl.p?fc Ch. foundations, Ezr.4:i2; like vvpa from vvp, as if the food for the sacred fire,
to be burned for God (with n parag., like *!!, "TjK,
5:16; from the root Bfefc. (Arab. 1
Ii!
1 It comprehends all kinds of sacrifices, and
i
?."!
1
,).
is even once used of sacrifices not burned [?] Lev.
an unused root, perh. i.q.
24:7, 9. It is of very frequent occurrence in some
n to
mingle, to think. Hence ritual phrases, as nin^p n'lT3 nn nt^N "a sacrific*
LXXXIV
of a sweet smell to the Lord," Lev. i :g, 13, 17 ; 2:2, Note. In Ch. woman is KF)K emphat. state NnijlN
"
9 P <l
9; 3=5; njn$ n|fc nn3nnp Ex.ag:4i; Lev.8:ai; KnJj)3X; pi. pE>3. Syriac JL^jJ, pi. \-M~I- Arabic
" an
ellipt. nirr^ n^X (acceptable) sacrifice to the
Lord," Lev. 2 :'l 6; Ex. 29: 18,25; pi- )
n n :
^"sa- iXr! i'^ ^, pi. >y*J-> ^y^Jj iv)}**^'
a^so c^ 1 ' woman,
crifices offered to the Lord," Lev. 2:3, 10.
onset), which
X
(for nOTX, of the form EOK), in const.
fern, also as a plural stands for women.
;>
state n'JK (fern, of the form B* for n? K); some-
see
times also put absol. Deut.
.58:9; with
Ps. 128:3;
suff.
pi.
2 1 1 1 ;
l Sam. 28:7; Ps.
:
34:4, seq. ; T?N ^8- "thy father's wife," i.e. thy VltJ'N. a step; const, with a
(i) i.q. fern.,
btep-mother, Lev. i8:ll; compare l Cor. 5:1. Of Job 31:7.
r? HIT? " to
very frequent use are the phrases n&PK?
(i Ch.5:6), with n local
IBfot H-VIB'K
(2) rarely
take to oneself (a woman) to wife," Gen. 4: 19; 6:2.
(Gen. 25: 18), pr. n. Assyria \_Asshur~\, (Hos.9:3;
Also used of a concubine, Gen. 30 4 of one espoused,
10:6; Zec.iO:io); more fully "W ^X
:
;
Isa.7:l8, V$
Gen. 29:21. (c) as a man is praised for valour, con- and f^e Assyrians, (const, with a masc. Isa. 19:23,
stancy, and intrepid mind, so woman is used as a 23:3; 30:3i; 3i:8; Ps.Ssig; Hos. 14:4). ["In
tarm of reproach to a cowardly man, one who is timid,
the arrow-headed inscriptions it is written Asura ; see
undecided, Isa. 19:16; 3:12; Jer.5l :3O; Nah-3: 13;
Lassen, liber d. Persepol. Keilschriften, p. 71 79-"]
compare Homer, 'A^nu^tc OVK ir' 'A^nto/, Virg. Mn. The name of Assyria is used in various senses by the
ix.6l7. (d) It is joined by apposition to various
a harlot, Josh. 2 Hebrews, e. g. (a) A ssyria ancient and proper (Gen.
nouns, n3'n n^S : l ; 55>3^B H^X a
lo lO 12,22), and it appears to have comprehended
:
6:22, where Darius is called "HE'S "^Q. [" Hitzig loc. cit.
i.
figs pressed together into a cake.
e. The primary
support, column, from the root idea should be sought apparently in that of pressing
No. i.' PI. with suff. n'fli'fK Jer. 5O:i5,np. LXX.
together (see the root, and comp. pi? cakes, from M?
tti/n/c. More correctly Vulg. fundamenta to make firm, and JVfVBX from nsy to spread out),
yus; comp. the Arab. column. In aD3 there and not in the idea of fire (&$), as being cakes baked
with fire. The same word is found in Pseudojon.
is rprp-iK% from rn&?s.
Ex. 16: 31, where \WV$ is for the nWBX, and
Hebr.
in the Mishnah (Nedarim, vi. where DT'B'H ig
^P^frf [Ashima], 2 Ki. 17:30, a domestic di- 10),
men of Hamath, of doubtful origin. It used for food made of len tiles, no doubt cakes made
vinity of the
seems probable to me that we should compare the of boiled lentiles.
planet is not called Achuma but Anliuma (Zendavesta, to inform; whence ftflf^; index, informer. It is,
I am
sorry that this error has
Paris, ii.
356). p. therefore, equivalent to the Lat. testis, testiculus, nor
been adopted and increased by Winer, page 97, who was there any cause for doubting as to the origin, as
writes it Aschiana. has been done by the editors of Simonis' Lexicon.
palm branch; JEth. t\t\t\\ ; grape, vine; whence fails is put with .? Nu. 5:7; Lev. 5: 19; the thing ii
f
which guilt is contracted, with ? Lev. 5:5; and with
the verb f]f\ A I to be*1 grapes ; Syr. and Ch. JJ cx>^-cr ,
"
Jer.
("
m .
for"O!p with Aleph prosthetic, a gift, D^^ with suff. iO^ :
PI. with suff. WXK fault,
Eze. 7 15 Psa. 72 10.
:
;
: Root ~&V No. H. i. q. "gfr guilt, b la me, which any one incurs, Gen. 26:10;
to hire, to reward. Jer. 51:5. Hence
L ~* (1) that by which any one contracts guilt, Num.
' IK N an unused root. Arab. <Jj> and <J^' i-
q- 5:7,8.
- *1 S-^'t.
(2) sacrifice for transgression, l Sam. 6:3, seq. ;
stock. Hence
law there is a careful distinction between these sa-
/
(according to Kimchi ?X, with six points), crifices for trespass (D'P'^)j and sacrifices for sin
s^f.
(nitfisn).
Not only were the ceremonies used in the
Lq. Arab. Jjl tamarisk, myrica (Tamarix orientalis, two cases different (see Lev. 5:1 26, Engl. Ver.
Linn.). i Sa. 22:6, ?Kn nrm "under a tamarisk 1 19; and 6:1 7; 7:1 7; compare 4:1 35:
tree." l Sa. 31 : 13
(in the parallel place, l Chr. 10: 6:17 23, Engl. Ver. 24 30), but in one and the
12. n .?Nn nnri " under a terebinth," or " a tree" same offering both kinds of victims were sometimes
generally).Hence, perhaps, any large tree (like i"l?K, joined (as Lev. 14: 10, seq. Num. 6:12, seq. comp. ; ;
very exact description of the tree ,)j\ is given by which were to be expiated by the one or the other
J. E. Faber in Fab. et Reiskii Opuscc. Med. ex Monum. offering are carefully laid down in the law (see Levit.
Arabum, 137; Ker Porter's Travels, ii. 5:14; 12:24; 19:20 22; Nu.6:ll, 12); although
p. also, 311.
the exact difference between each kind of sin has
Lev.5:i9; Nu.5:7,and D&?N Lev. 4:13; hitherto been vainly inquired[?]. See Joseph. Antiquit.
5:2,3,4, 17; fut.DCW. iii.
9) 3 Philo, De Victimis, ii. page 247
! Mang., ;
(l) TO FAIL IN DUTY, TO BECOME GUILTY. (Arab. Rosenm. on Lev. 5:6; Carpzov, Antiquit. S. Cod.
* "* s -i s -
page 707, seq.
Ji\ id.; ^\ causat. to judge as guilty; and +^\
^\ m. verbal
DC'ltf adj. (l) in fault, one who hat
fault, guilt. Comp. ^Eth. fhUJ^: fault; ArhUJ^: contracted guilt, Gen. 42:21; 2 Sa. 14:13.
to do amiss. The primaYy idea is to be sought in
(2) one who brings a sacrifice for trespass, Ezr
that of negligence, especially in going, in
gait; 10:19.
whence Jj\ a slow-paced camel, faltering and weary.
C^N f.
(i) prop. Infin. of the verb DC'K, like
Compare KOfl, n^>.) Lev. 4-. 13, fla>
Tho person towards whom any one
S7 ; 5: a, 3, 4, Lev. 5: 26, nn npe K *&q 5
^ nTX' :
17; Jer. 50:7. "of all that he hath done in trespassing therein.*
LXXXVII
Lev. 4:3, Dj;n ntDEW. "like as the people contract calledfrom the idea of hiding (see the root), I*a
guilt." 22:6; 49:2; Jer. 5:16; 1*8.127:5; Job 39:23; Lam.
" sons of his
(2) fault, guilt, lCh.2l:3; aCh. 24:18; 28:13; 3:13, 'ins^tf \33 quiver," i.e. arrows.
Ain. 8: 14, l'ni?S5 np52>N the guilt of Samaria," for
ite idols. PL flto$$ 2 Ch. 28 o Ps. 6.
T^J^'N \_Ashpenaz~\, pr. n. of a chief eunuch in
: i ; 69 :
7:6. Root 33^, which see. thedunghill;" Ps. l3:7- Comp. Arab, ye dung,
PlJBte ( strong," "mighty"), \_AshnaK], pr.n. mud, used of extreme poverty.
of two towns in the tribe of Judah, Josh. 15:33, 43. Plur. rrinatpx (from the unused sing. njjlS^S or
K (perhaps "migration," from the root note.) The varied use of the relative belongs in full
to syntax, the following remarks only are here given
y, Aram, to migrate; comp. n^p9), pr.n. Ascalon,
^Askelon, Ashkelon~\, a. maritime
city of the Phi- (1) Before the relative, the pronoun he, she, it, it
"
listines, Jud. l: 18; 14:19; iSa. 6:17; 2 Sa. 1:20. often omitted, e.g. Num. 22:6, "l&Pl 1 ??'S! "and hi
whom thou cursest;" Ru.2:2; Ex.4:i2; Josh.2:lo.
Arab. .Ujjv,^ \^Askuldn~\, which name is still re-
The same pronoun has also to be supplied whenever
tained by the little village standing in the ruins of the
ancient city. The Gent, noun is *n ???' prepositions are prefixed to the relative, "^V "to him
\_Eshka- Gen. " to those Gen.
who," 43:16; who," 47:24;
lonites], Josh. 13:3. "him who," "that which;"
TB/g-n$ TB/gO "from
those who," Isa. 47: 13. Sometimes the omitted pro-
or (comp. pr.n. noun applies to place, as "TB/fcT^X "to that place
(1) TO BE STRAIGHT, BIGHT, i. q. ~&l especially which," Exod. 32:34; "iB/g3 "where" pr. "in that
used of a straight way, hence also of what is uprigli t,
(place) which," liu. l 17; Lehrg. :
198.
whence comes the signification of firmness and
erect, (2) IK'S? is often merely, the sign of relation, which
strength, in the Talmud. serves to give to substantives, adverbs, and pronouns,
(2) to go straight on, and generally to go, Pro. a relative power, as ISJTJIS "ti?S "which dust," Gen.
9 = 6.
13:16; rnbn-ri$ "which field," Gen. 49:30
T& ;
(3) * pronounce happy, or fortunate, Gen. (3) ? ^t? is used as a circumlocution of the geni-
30:13; Ps. 72: 17; Pro.3i:28; Cant.6:g; Job 29:11. tive (like theTalmudic ?^), especially where many
PUAL "KF and I^-IX (i) to be led, Isa. 9: 15. genitives depend upon one governing noun, and in the
^2) to be made fortunate, Ps. 41 :3; Pro. 3:18. later Hebrew, as l Sa. 21:8, TB/8 D'jhn T3N *$
" the chief of the herdsmen of
Derivative nouns are Tg'K, nT5&, I^S, TK/K, Saul;" Cant. 1:1,
nbV^> Dn^n 1^ tlie song of songs of Solo-
"IK*^
mon." See Lehrg. p. 672, 673.
"K^l^ ("fortunate," "happy," compare Gen. (4) In the later Hebrew ~W$. is sometimes redun-
(l) of a son of Jacob and Aram. *% ^ e. g. Est. i 12, "^n "la" 5
30:13), \_Asher~\, pr.n. dant, like the : ?
his concubine Zilpah (Gen. 30:13; 35:26), ancestor D*pnpn T^l ~M'$, compare verse 13, where ">'$? is
of the tribe of the samename (Nu. l :4O, 41), whose omitted. Comp. 2 Sam. 9:8. See below under the
boundaries are described as on the northern border word "I.
of the holy land, Josh. 19 24 31. The Gentile noun :
(B) It becomes a conjunction like the Hebrew *?,
is '"^ Jud. l 32. (2) a town to the east of Shechem,
: Aram. % ^Ethiop. H
,
Gr. on, Lat. quod, Germ,
;
Josh. 17:17. ba^/ fo (which latter word had also in the ancient
:
nx uypB' "we have ?? Jer. 33 22. Also how, in
: whut way, Job 37 :
17.
heard that which Jehovah "
dried up, the waters of (knowest thou) D'BH ^naa TB/S5 in what way thj
.he Eed sea;" l 83.24:11, 19; 2 Sa. 11:20; 2 Ki. 8:
garments become warm?"
; Deu. 29
"
>
15 Isa. 38 7, let this be for a sign to
:
;
:
(8) As sign of apodosis, like '? No. 6, Germ, fd
a.
thee which" (that), etc. No. 11. then, so. Preceded by DN Isa. 8: 20, I^N' *6 D
Comp.
(2) ut, that, in order that, indicating design and -vyy tfrpK "*fe n*n -OX* if they speak not accord-
" and his
purpose, followed by a future ; Deu. 4 40, :
ing to this word, then there is to them no dawn."
statutes which I command thee this
day, observe di- Like 1 ? and \ (see Lehrg. 723), it is put also when
ligently, T"in
XT.3?/-1 I/' 29" -1B $ that it may be
;
;
there precedes a nominative absolute; 2 Sa. 2:4, " the
well with theeand thy children after thee ;" Deu. 6:3; men of Jabesh-Gilead ^KB/VIS nag TZfo (they) bu-
Ruth 3:1; Gen. 11:7; 22:14; 21^.9:37; Ps. 144:12. ried Saul;" and with other absolute cases,
especially
Also after a verb of asking, Dan. l :8. More fully, when denoting time and place. Zee. 8:23, Q'P'3
~V'$ }y.ti?
in order that (see ffi); once T^'nK Eze. *P'IE "IB/K. nsnn in those days then they shall take
beginning of an answer, assigning a reason where one to have overlooked the particles *?, f, "?, German fo
has been demanded; 183.15:19, 'wherefore then of altogether the same origin and signification nor ;
didst not thou obey the voice of the Lord, but didst should he have given the passage in Isaiah without
"
fly upon the spoil .? 20, And Saul said unto Sa-
. .
regard to the context, let us turn to the law, so
muel because that ("^K) I have obeyed the voice may they say, in whom there is no dawn," i.e. those
of the Lord, and have brought Agag
. . . and have . . . who despair. Also ellipsis of the words let there be,
utterly destroyed the Amalekites,' i.e. because in there are, is unsuitable, which is brought forward
doing as 1 have done, I have obeyed (I think) the di- in other examples, as Zee. 8:23; 2 Sa.
2:4.)
vine command. Vulgate imo audivi vocem Domini.' " '
(9) It is prefixed to a direct citation of something
Ges. add.J Sometimes it may be more
suitably ren- said, like? No.?, r, on. 1 Sa. 15: 19, nyOB? *6 HS^
"
dered nam, for, Deut. 3: 24 (LXX., Vulg.,
Syr.). njrV ?ip3 why hast thou not hearkened to the voice
Here belongs HE? "IK'fc Dan. 1 10 (compare HDpB' : of Jehovah ? 2O, And Saul said to Samuel IK'N ;
Cant, l :7); prop, namquare? for why? wherefore? n'liT7ip3 ^riy??^ Vulg. imo audivi vocem Domini, yea
I have hearkened to the voice of Jehovah."
see under HD. [But
hence, i.
q. ne, lest, Syr. Jv>\* ;
see above, No. 3.] It seems to be strongly affirmative
(4) conditional, if (compare Germ, f o bu geijeft). and even intensifying the sentence. There are also
Lev.4:22 (comp. DX verses 3, 27); Deu. 11 :27 (comp. other examples in which
Diverse 28); l8:22; lKi.8:3l (comp. 2 Ch. 6: 22);
(10) it appears to mark gradation, yea, even, for
aCh.6:29; followed by a future, Gen. 30: 38; Isa. the more full 1^. IK until that, wfie on, fcgar. Job
31:4; Josh. 4: 21. Earely it is concessive, etsi, a l-
5:5, ^3K 3JTJ Wyip X;vs y ea even his own har-
though (Germ, fo aud), for roenn aud)), Ecc. 8: 12.
what
vest the hungry man eateth." In the other member
(5) at time, when, quum,
by a ore, followed "
inni?*D*J$D"^t not his posterity only (ver. 4), but he
pret., Deu. 1 1 :6, "when the earth opened its mouth ;"
himself is threatened with destruction ;" compare Job
i Ki.8:9; Ps.
139:15; 2 01.35:20, ny?& pan TB/K. 9:15; 19:27; Ps.8:2; 10:6.
n??Tns " when Josiah had repaired the
temple" (l l) Prepositions to which it is joined are converted
(compare Syr. 5; Mark 11:3; Mat.26:54; 28:1). into conjunctions, as l^N "IHX afterwards,
(6) where, ubi, ov, for DB> -IB'$. Nu.2O:l3; Ps. until that, ~qfeo 1&
besides that (Est 4:11),
9.^:9: Isa. 64: 10; and for nBB/
Tg^ whither, whi- S in order that,
*/2ersoever,Nu.i3:27; Ps. 84:45183.55:11. (Comp.
Syr.j; Heb.3:9 for ov.) 1B/K y^y. in that, because; compare Lehrg. p. 636.
(7) i-q- ~>?^? as, like as (fo rote), in protasis, Ex. Once 1^ :
is prefixed, I? ^"Wfe Job 34: 27, i. q. }3 7J
4:i3 (LXX. ov TpoTov)} l Ki. 8:24. Followed
by "^ and i? ?j> ^3 because that, because.
xc
Jud.5:27; 17:9; followed by DB> there, Job 39:30. taken from demonstratives (sometimes from inter-
Fully DBHs^a Gea. 21 17, and QB? IB/i* DlpM 2 Sa. :
rogatives), rt'ith a slight change; see above letter A),
15:21. The same sense may be retained, i Sa. 2 3 1 3 :
; also Arab. ^-jjl.
9 Ki 8:1, where it is commonly rendered whither,
u-iiihersoever, for HEB> TJ J. (2) in that, be-
;
'TV ni happiness, found only in plur. constr.
-
aspiration, to which is
commonly added a simple vowel,
and sometimes, besides, a final consonant
H"1^ rarely H^^N
Micah 5:13; Deut. 7:5.
(1, n, r, s, t). PI. DnB/K and nhB ^, J
Jud. 3:7; 2 Ch. 33:3, f. [seo
Com p. a) K^J, '"1, "n, ro, Goth.tho,the, and with an added
below] pr. fortune, i.e. in the idolatry of the Phoeni-
consonant; Sanscr. tad, Goth, that; Anglo-Sax, thocre cians and Aramaeans, Astai'te or the planut Venus,
(who),Swed.<Aer;ter; Ch.n,T3; r ij roc: also with a pre- elsewhere called rnflB'J? (see under that word, also my
fixed vowel ns (which see), flfc, ai/rdc
) npr, -IT, Arab. :
Comment, on Isa. 65:11, and vol.ii. p. 337, seq.); ap-
J, ^4, L\ -<Eth. H : c) Sanscr. sas,sa (tad); Goth.
parently the companion and consort of Baal : and her
90, so (that) = 6, >, ro, Germ, (qua), Engl. she,
fte/ fo image; in images of Astarte, and perhaps generally
pi.
Hebr. ?& IPS; d) WH, ton, js s Hebr. and images of idols, at least those of a particular kind
(compare 'Eppai of the Greeks). The signification
Ch. in, X J, CK ; ^ XJt J|,
; art.
(nw?), Engl. and
K of grove, which from theLXX. and Vulgate has found
lower Germ, fe,Swed. and Iceland, aer, Germ, er, e/ its
way into the Lexicons and Commentaries of the
Lat. is, /. These words might easily be added to modems, is altogether unsuitable to the context in
and enlarged, compare under the word HN No. I. many places, and in some it is almost absurd I have ;
an older form than T.?X 'although it ; must be acknow- tas, for happiness, Ter. Hec. 5,4,8, 1 8, and Sylla's
ledged that in the monuments of the Hebrew tongue cognomen 'Effa0pt52troc, Felix. As Venus answered
which we have, the fuller form appears to be the more to Asherah, and as Hercules, who was worshipped b)
ancient, and the shorter almost peculiar to the later the Romans as also presiding over and granting for-
books. As to the signification , it appears to be an tune, answered to Baal, 1 have not any doubt that
error to regard it
(as I did myself in the larger Lex. the origin of this mythology was in the East; SHJ,
XCI
among other passages, l Ki. 15:13; 2 Ki 21:7; 23:6; and in Appendix), referring !"nB>X. to the nature and
Jud. 6: 25, 26, 28, 30. In several places Asherah qualities of the goddess herself; though I admit that
is
joined to a male idol, Baal, just as Ashtoreth is in the proper and primary signification of the word waa
other places, see l Ki. 18:19; 2 Ki. 23:4; Jud. 3:7. afterwards neglected and obliterated, as is not uncom-
["(l)Asherah, a goddess of the Hebr. idolaters, to mon. According to this view, rntPK is prop, fortune,
whom they made statues, images (JlSPpD), i Ki.15: 13; happiness (compare "V? No. 3, Ig'X Gen. 30:13,
2 Ch. 15: 16, and whom they often worshipped together especially '"K^N), and hence became an attribute ol
with Baal, as at other times Baal and Astarte (Jud. Astarte, or Venus as Fortuna Datrix, which was made
3:13; 10:6; l Sa.7:4; 12:10). l Ki. 18: 19, prophets great account of among the Hebrew idolaters ;
see the
of Baalprophets ofAsherah;2
. . . Ki. 2 3 4, of Baal, of
: artt. 1J, '3D. To this we may add that the Romans
Asherah, and of all the host of heaven. Jud. 3:7, and too regarded Venus
as the giver of good fortune and
served nnB^rrnKI. D^arrn$ "Baals and Ashe- a happy comp. the expressions, venerem jacere,
lot ;
rahs;" comp. 2 Ki. 17:16; 21 :3; 2 Ch. 33:3; Jud. Suet. venereus jactus, Cic., and others. And I am still
;
6: 25. Once, where in the same chapter mention is induced to regard this view with favour, by the analogy
made of nngfc, a Ki. 23:6; 14: I5;&ndalsoof TVp&l of other similar names derived obviously fuom the
verse 1 3, the latter seems to pertain to the idolatrous nature and qualities of heathen gods, and very rarely,
worship of the Sidonians, and the former to that of if ever, from the form of their statues or images*
the Hebrews. e.g. Dv}?2, rvnritJ'J?, Q^Bn. It is, however, very pos-
["(2) A statue, image of Asherah made of wood, a sible that the proper signification of n ^{?, E*")^
wooden pillar of great size, Jud. 6:25 27, which being afterwards neglected, these words might come
on account of its height, was fixed or planted in the to be used of rude pillars and wooden statues just ;
ground, Deu. 16:21. An Asherah or statue of this as the Gr. 'Ep/jj/ewas used of any human statue
Baal at Samaria, from the
sort stood near the altar of which terminated below the breast in a square column,
time of Ahab, l Ki. 16: 32,33; 2 Ki. 10:26; 17:16; although it might represent any thing or every thing
on the high place of Bethel, 2 Ki. 23: 15; at Ophra, but Mercury." Ges. add.]
Jud. 6 25, and even in the temple at Jerusalem, from
:
KinE^X Ch. a wa 1 1, so called from its being erected^
Manasseh until Josiah, 2 Ki. 2 1 37 23 6 PI. D" :
;
:
;
1
from the fact, that whenever they are destroyed they treading or in any other way; comp. Arab. \J^i\ to
are always said to be cut down and burned, Ex. 34: tread, to trample on, to subdue (kindred to Y^$ to
*!>S* with a
accent FIX pers. pron. 2 pers. f.
dist. by reading nx't, as in verse 20 but the similar pas- ;
itself (the calf) be carried into Assyria;" the peo- grammarians interpret the word J^,. In the Arabic
rt
ple and priests had already preceded. Josh. 7:15; there answers to this also used reflectively c^o J>
\j\,
l Sa. l?r34, in a place where the reading has cause-
lessly been questioned, 3'nrrnXI. nx.n K31 there I have beaten myself. As to the origin, I have
c _^\j\
came a lion with the bear itself;"
(in Greek it may no doubt but that this word, like the other pronouns,
be rendered avv UVTU ru UOKTU, mit fammt bem 33&ren is primitive and very ancient (see ">*$ p. Lxxxvm, A),
unb bcr S3ar obenbretn/ and a bear besides comp.
airy ; nor should I object if any one were to compare riS, niX
avv fdpmyyi, II. ix. 194, and Passow,Lex. Gr. v. ai/ro'c, with the Sanscr. Gr. auroc- To
etat, hie ; give my
i.
6). Joshua 22:17, "it is not sufficient for you, own more probable than what
opinion now, this is I
lj/9 Ityrnx this same
iniquity of Peor?" as being .
*
the greatest that could be; Hag. 2 : 17, ^S D3J1K p lately supposed, that 1"IK, HK, \j\ are i.q. D1X a sigtif
"yet ye yourselves turned not to me;" Dan. 9:13, which, however, is also the opinion of Ewald, Gramm
" as it is written in the law
of Moses nyvr^S n$ 593)-
P-
GSJf HK3 n*n all this very evil (as declaVed "Lev. (2) This word by degrees lost much of its primi-
26, and Deut. 28) has come upon us;" Jer. 38:16, tive force, so that as set before nouns and pronouns
PDSn-riK $> Tfo% IE* ns ^n the same who has JJ already definite, it
scarcely increases the demonstra-
" as
given us life;" 2X1.6:5, one of them was felling tive power; "O^n J"IS
i.q. Germ, biefelbe acly/ biefelbigt
ftbeam, the iron (7J"l2rm) fell into the water." Sad)c/ fclbige Sadie/ the thing itself, the same thing;
(The word iron should here be pronounced with em- often redundantly for the simple bufe adjo this thi uj
XCIII
t is rarely (a) put before a nominative (Gen.l 7 15, Egyptian language is prefixed to the personal pro
"
O^QIS ^p^TlSl "Iiy ^1i^! K? thy name shall be no nouns, as ent-oten, ye ent-sen, they ent-of, he.
;
Here ;
definite (compare the pronouns auroe, ipse, bcrfelbe, Sanscr. etat, Gr. avr-oc. Others refer J"IK, nitf, to the
which, especially in the oblique cases, avrov, avrw, avrov, Aram. 1VN, *0^,Lq.^!; so Hupfeld on the demonstr.
ipsum, ipsi, beSfelben/ benfclben/ lose their strongly de- power of the letter n, see Hupfeld, in Zeitschr. f. d.
monstrative power in some degree), thus it becomes Morgenl. Lit. ii.
page 135." Ges. add.]
a particle pointing out a determinate object. In Hebrew
DVMPnviK properly therefore signifies, i. q. avrbr TOV
II. followed by Makk.-nK,with suff. ',
in pause and ^flS-Gen. 6:18 comp. 2O:l6,i^,
f.
0vpa?ov, but from the common use of language is the
DflX more
same as TOI> ovpavov, like in Gr. aur//i/ XpwniSa, II. i. DpJjIX Gen. 9:9, 11, rarely and chiefly in
the books of Joshua, K ings, eremiah, and Ezekiel,
143, without emphasis for Xpvanioa: IJjtt* pr. avrdr
^jryx, Pin'X, Dn'X(so that it seems to be confounded with
(reav-ov, hence the simple ye. In this manner J"IS
ITS,
the mark of ace. riK), pr. subst. denoting nearness,
is
frequently put before substantives made definite
and propinquity, prob. for fl3S (from the root H3S
with the article (VI/J ? Q!P^'1 ^X Gen. l l comp.
^}
1
:
;
No. II. to draw near, as n?3 from ""^3) from the com-
D?P^) Y 1? Gen. 2 4), or with the addition of a geni-
:
exercised the inquiries of very ancient Rabbins, WylJ; Ps. 4:7. besides (compare
(c) It isi. q. prater,
may Ex. iKi. ll:l, 25.
be seen in Olshausen loc. cit. Ewald (Hebr. Gramm. vapa ravra, prceter ista), 1:14;
;
ipse ; but these are of rare see Handii Tursell. page 414, 415), but it may, and
occurrence. Cognate are the JE,th. enta, Avho (prop, even ought, in every case to retain the notion oi
demonstr. like all
relatives), Egypt, ent, who ;
and es- nearness, i Sa.7 16, " he judged Israel, ntopp^S'n^
:
pecially the demonstrative syllable ent, which in the ""WC at all those places;" the courts of justice bean*
1
XCJV rim-
and thus by or near the towns.
in the gates of towns, utensils; but indeed I should prefer tegarding HN as for
*-*
i
Ki.9:25, JVJl^ ta
f^
-M?f?ni "and Solomon of- n
(like ny for JVJK from nnj/)
= Arab. i'LM an
fered incense at that (altar) which was before Je-
hovah." Compare Suet. Aug. 35, tit thure et mero instrument, ^jj\ apparatus, instrument, specially of
tupplicaret apud arameius del, etc., and Dent. 16:6, -i.
rajF) CV ... DipSrr'pN. One
offered properly at the war, from the root HIX \j\ to aid, also to be furnished
altar,and in l Ki. loc. cit-this phrase is used as the cus- with instruments, apparatus; and 1 should suppose the
tomary expression for offering incense. (I do not see general word to be used for some particular instru.
with Winer, how in this passage WR may refer to >^\.) ment, perhaps for a plough-share.
(a) cum, with (compare EJJ No. l), used of ac-
companying, Gen. 6:13; 43:16; Jud. l :
16; Jer. 51 : ("living with Baal," i.e. enjoying the
of connection Ki. 3 : of a cove- favour and help of Baal), \_Ethbaal~], pr. n. of a king
59 ; by marriage, l l ;
'3VI$ non n^j; "to act kindly with any one," Zee. 7:9;-
21:12; 56:9. 12 (almost all of these
(for -Vn^.) Isa.
forms imitate the Aramaean).
compare Ruth 2:20; 2 Sa. 16:17. Noldius, in his
(1) to come, a poetic word ["instead of 1^3"]
Concordance, under this word always confounds J"1R
No. I. and II, which it may suffice thus briefly to Ch. XnR., Syr. Arab, which are of common
JL), li'^,
mention. use in these languages. Const, followed by ? (Jer.
riRD i.
q. DVP pr.from with, from near by any 3:22) and 1J? 4:8) of the person fowhom any
(Mic.
9
one; Syr. Lo^ ^.iO, Arab. Ai cr<,/rom(iKi.6:33), one comes. Part. pi. fern, ni'nisn things to come,
after verbs and nouns of departing, Gen. 26:31 ; i. e. future, Isa. 41:23; 44:7; 45:11. Arab. e^>T
sending from any place, Gen. 8:8; also of receiving, s _ *
Job 2:1O; buying, Gen.i7:27; 23:20; asking from for J'| future.
any one, iSa. 1:17; performance, Ex. 29:28, etc. (2) to happen to any one, to come upon him (as
Other examples are, Josh, ll :2O, nn>n ^ DSO " by
evil), Job 3 25, : i.
q. \j\ with ace.
Jehovah was this instituted;" Ex. 29:28, " this shall
to go, to pass by, Job 16:22. Vulg. transeunt.
(3)
be to Aaron ... a perpetual statute 'B* '33 r>KD to
HIPHIL, to bring, i. q. X'?n. Pret. plur. Vnn (for
be performed by the children of Israel;" Ps. 22:26,
"from " ^V?.??) Isa. 21:14, and the same form for imp., Jer
rn>nj;l I^ISO thee my praise," e. I owe to
i.
12:9.
thee salvation, the cause of praise." ^RO Isa. 44: 24,
Deriv. fiJVX.
np is i. q. Gr. air ipavrov, John 5 30, from myself, or :
by my own authority. Arabic ^A-r- .*<, Syriac ^ Ch., Dan. 7: 22, inf. np Dan. 3: 2, i.q. Hel
lA^tff ^-S),
and Heb. '|ED Hos. 8:4. Compare as to tocome; with of pers. Ezr. 4:12; 5:3.
/>JJ
this, Anecdota Orientt. i. p. 66. APHEL n?n inf. nn;n (by a Hebraism) (l) to
HI. J"\N with toK DTlK cause to come, Dan. 6:1 7, 25.
suff. i Sa. 13:20, pi. ibid.
verse 21, and DTIK Isa. 2:4; Mic. 4:3; Joel 4: 10, an to bring, to fetch, Dan. 5:3, 23.
(2) Syr. wtw).
iron implement used in agriculture, with an edge, and HOPHAL, borrowed from the Hebrew, but anoma-
ometimes requiring to be sharpened (l Sa. loc. cit.), lous TVH, 3 fem. rvrpn, Dan. 6: 18; pi. VJVn Dan.
according to most of the old versions a plough-share 3:13, to be caused to come, to be brought.
(but in Sa. it is joined with >"lS5nD.9), according to
nN pers. pron. 9 pers. m. THOU; with dist
Symm. and the Hebr. intpp. a mattock. The more nn
LXX. in the book accent (Milel), Gen. 3:11; 4:11; 27:32, with-
general word antvoc is used by the
out n five times in aro $$ l Sa. 24:19; Ps. 6:4;
rf SB. Some compare household-stuff, flocks, Ecc. 7:22; Job. l :
1O; Neh. 9:6. In the oblique cases
xcv
>f thee, thine, i Ki. 21:19; thec, Pro. 22:19; see m. Eze. 41 15 (np), 16, 42:3, 5, a kind oj
:
Lehrgeb. p. 727. (Instead of the doubled Tav, in columns [see below]; (see especially Eze. 42:5
Arabic and ^Ethiopia there is nt, ^*j\ f. c^-ol v^g- comp. verse 6). LXX. and Vulg. chap. 42, render it
Trtpi<rrv\oi>, portions. Root PDS-
( Ji>\> AYt" :
fem A^"t;
- .'
i Q Syriac there is Nun ["A term in architecture, signifying a decrement',
V f where a story or portico is drawn in, an offset, ledge,
occult AuJ f. cA-ij; and the same appears also in terrace. It is a verbal Hiph. from PD? to tear away,
Egyptian in f. HOOK
lieo thou. [" All of which are cut off: So Bottcher recently (Proben, page 350);
compounded of the demonstrative syllable en, and the but so too Abulwalid long before, i. q. J^^x) seg-
'33X note Hebr.
simple pronouns ta, to, tok. (See in ;
ment, increment. See his words quoted in Thes.
Gram. p. 293,1 3th ed.)" Ges. add. omitting the follow-
Append, s. h. v." Ges. add.]
i
ng paragraph ] The principal letter however is n and
.
,
this alone predominates in the Indo-Germanic stock pers. pron. 2 pers. pi. you, m. Inaccurately
of languages. (See the Sanscrit, tuam, the stock of joined to a feminine, Eze. 13 20. It comes from HJjlS :
which is tu, Pehlev. and Pers. tu V ? Gr. TV, av, Lat. which see, with the 'addition of D, the mark of mul-
o-.<,S
tu, Goth, thu, Germ., Dan. and Swed. bu.) titude. Arab. \'i Aram.
n!S Ex. 13:20; Nu. 33:6,
|inS a she-ass, so called from its slowness; see
f. \Etham\, the name
s -5. of a place on the borders of Egypt and the Arabian
the root 1HX. (Arab. .'j'\ a she-ass, and the female desert, from which the neighbouring part of the de-
sert, as far as Marah, received the same name. Nu.
of the wild ass; Aram. WH^, JLiLJ id.) Nu. 22:23, LXX.
33:8. 'O0Jy/.Jablonsky (Opuscc. ii. 157)
seq.
UnX '33 " the son of his ass," i. e. his ass. Gen. it as the Egyptian ATlOU, i.e. boundary of
regards
49:11. PL'n'uhfij Gen. 12:16; 32:16. the sea.
V>
j-irlN
comm. Chald. a furnace, i. q. Syr. JLJO!.). TICJIItf & /^Qr^ once /IftJjlK i Sa. 10:11 i.q.
Dan. 3:6, 11, 15, seq. The form |WX is for ]W?$, 71DPI with Aleph prostheticj adv.
from the root |3J;I to smoke; like P'T for p'pT.
(1) yesterday, 183.4:7; 14:21; 19:7; Ps.90:4.
Eze. 41 :
15, in ana for pJ?K. (2) formerly, used generally of time long past,
Mic. 2:8; Isa. 30 33. The same form is also found
:
T\$ i.
q. ny> pers. pron. 2 pers. sing. fern. thou. in Syr., Ch.,and in Cod. Nasar. [" There exists like-
Although this form is rare in the Old Test, (it is >
wise a form ?1O^, which see. Also, Syr. ^iDL) ;
found only seven times in aro, i Ki. 14: 2 2 Ki. ;
Chald. ^i^n^, y.?nS' The form seems compounded
*
4:16,23; 8:l; Jud.l7:2; Jer.4 3O; 76.36:13; =
and it is even primary and a more ancient form, which to delay. Hence PHX a she-ass.
compare ^\
afterwards the more negligent pronunciation of the
common 18 in some MSS. and printed editions for
people shortened into J;l>?. Yod added at the
end is a mark of the feminine, as in YPpH ; nor constancy, Mic. 6:2; Job 33:19.
should we listen to Ewald (Heb. Gramm. page 177),
!&$ pers. pron. 2 pers. pi. i. you, ye. Once found
who, apart from analogy, conjectures
'FIX to be
all
Eze. 34 3 1 where other copies have ]$$
:
,
With n
for pflX, of which no trace exists in the Phoenicio-
it is written HJriN Gen .31:6; Eze. 13:11, 2O ;
parag.
Shcmitic languages.
34:17; and ibid. 13:20. niiriX, according to the
O^ "
(perhaps, neighbouring," from HX near- analogy of the forms nEPj nsn. Nun at the end,
and the termination V), like Mem, is a mark of multitude, especially in the
ness, \_Ittai~\, pr. n. (l)
of one of David's fern. comp. TT, \~,
generals, 2 Sa. 15:19, 22; l8:2.
;
')T)K ("bountiful," "munificent," from nar)K 1^ with suiF. ni.J^X m. Ch. (i) A PLACE
a gift), [Ethni], pr. n. m. l Ch.6:26. Dan. 2 35 :
;
Ezr. 5 15 :
;
6 :
5, 7. (In Targg. very frc-
9 r
Isa. 23:17, 18. hhZ :. Hence 1HX3 for 1^3 Dan. 7 :6, 7, after;
(2) [Et hnan], pr. n. m. l Ch. 4:7.
i.q. ^ <j> jl ,1s in the track; with affix TIOJ
p Q
jj* an unused
Dan. 2:39. Syr. and Samar. U\J5.
root, perhaps i.
q. PDJJ, <jj^c to
"
be beautiful. Hence P'flN. E*"!0^ (" places," regions"), pr.n. of a place
Nu. " in
[Rejected in Ges. corr. ; the deriv. being referred to the south of Palestine. 2 1 : l , D^rii? i\~W
to pro.] the way which leads to Atharim."
JSeth (fi'3), the second letter of the alphabet when ; positicn, prop,and originally (see the note as to its
used as a numeral, i.q. two. The Hebrew name is origin) denoting tarryance in a place (Greek iv, Latin
contracted from TV? a house, a tent, and the most m), afterwards applied to neighbourhood and asso-
ancient form of this letter (whatever it may have ciation (Germ, an, mit), at, by, with, and joined with
been) appears to have imitated this figure. [" SeeHeb. verbs of motion. The various significations of this
Gramm. p. 291, 13th edit.; Monumen. Phoen. p. 21."] muck-denoting word, in part proper, in part figura-
The form of a tent is still that which it bears in the tive, may be arranged in three classes, which are
./Ethiopia alphabet, f|. called by the Rabbins ^3H JV2 (Germ, in [Engl. tw]),
As to its permutation, 2 changes into other labials, njP:j:n)V3 (Germ, an [Engl.a,&y]),"lTyn JV3 (Germ,
namely (
i
)
into S, as 1T3 and "1T3 to disperse, yi?3 and mit [Engl. with]), although it is not to be denied that
*wo<* to cleave, 7.H3 Aram. the third class depends upon the second (see below).
?J"j?, JJ );_> iron, ">?S
V Thus it denotes
and i^j^ to be feeble. (2) rarely into as 313/1,
J
1,
(A) pr. in, with ablat. Gr. iv. Specially (l) in,
F
.C5O< great, and even into a quiescent 1, as J?-1BTi3 pr. of place [" which might be fully and pre- more
3T as "1^2 in the city,
for IDt^Ti? compare in the western languages /Soovw,
; cisely expressed by "=1^3, '53"], 1
V Q
comp. 1^3, "HV? also of the condition
;
in which we
Babylonians, 1D3 .^U: to search, JPT ^sj time, "lOT are: Di/K'3 i Sa. 29:7; and, in the later Hebrew, it
to prune a vine, P3H and flO'"
5
! pr.n. of a river, iseven prefixed pleon. to adverbs: n'33, |D3. By a
y:
peculiar idiom of language, it is used of the foun-
DFDp i. 3F13D a writing, a poem, Arabic <&j for
q. and material whence any thing is drawn,
tain, origin,
" to
<Ce Mecca; compare /jA/jrw for /wX/rrw (from //At, ismade, or comes forth; as (a) hi the phrase,
drink in a cup," i.e. to drink what is in the cup; for
honey) scamnum, scabeUum, marmor, French marbre
"out of the cup'' (like the French " boire dans une
;