Teks Tafsiran/Catatan Daftar Ayat
 
Hasil pencarian 1 - 6 dari 6 ayat untuk hunted (0.001 detik)
Urutkan berdasar: Relevansi | Kitab
  Boks Temuan
(0.99868924528302) (Lam 4:18)

tn Heb “they hunted our steps.”

(0.47055223899371) (Gen 27:33)

tn Heb “Who then is he who hunted game and brought [it] to me so that I ate from all before you arrived and blessed him?”

(0.40453509433962) (Job 10:16)

sn There is some ambiguity here: Job could be the lion being hunted by God, or God could be hunting Job like a lion hunts its prey. The point of the line is clear in either case.

(0.40453509433962) (Lam 3:52)

tn The construction צוֹד צָדוּנִי (tsod tsaduni, “they have hunted me down”) is emphatic: Qal infinitive absolute of the same root of Qal perfect 3rd person common plural + 1st person common singular suffix.

(0.23949232704403) (Gen 25:29)

sn Jacob cooked some stew. There are some significant words and wordplays in this story that help clarify the points of the story. The verb “cook” is זִיד (zid), which sounds like the word for “hunter” (צַיִד, tsayid). This is deliberate, for the hunter becomes the hunted in this story. The word זִיד means “to cook, to boil,” but by the sound play with צַיִד it comes to mean “set a trap by cooking.” The usage of the word shows that it can also have the connotation of acting presumptuously (as in boiling over). This too may be a comment on the scene. For further discussion of the rhetorical devices in the Jacob narratives, see J. P. Fokkelman, Narrative Art in Genesis (SSN).

(0.23949232704403) (Pro 12:27)

tn The verb II חָרַךְ (kharakh) is a hapax legomenon, appearing in the OT only here. BDB suggests that it means “to start; to set in motion” (BDB 355 s.v.). The related Aramaic and Syriac verb means “to scorch; to parch,” and the related Arabic verb means “to roast; to scorch by burning”; so it may mean “to roast; to fry” (HALOT 353 s.v. I חרך). The lazy person can’t be bothered cooking what he has hunted. The Midrash sees an allusion to Jacob and Esau in Genesis 25. M. Dahood translates it: “the languid man will roast no game for himself, but the diligent will come on the wealth of the steppe” (“The Hapax harak in Proverbs 12:27,” Bib 63 [1982]: 60-62). This hyperbole means that the lazy person does not complete a project.



TIP #24: Gunakan Studi Kamus untuk mempelajari dan menyelidiki segala aspek dari 20,000+ istilah/kata. [SEMUA]
dibuat dalam 0.04 detik
dipersembahkan oleh
bible.org - YLSA