Page:A Hebrew and English Lexicon (Brown-Driver-Briggs).djvu/499

 "EN "O elusive : rd. prob. with © )W3rrDX 13) ■ after an interrog. Is 42" wlio is blind HayDX *3 but my servants (who is blind in comparison with him ?), Dt 10" Mi 6 8 Ec 5 10 2 Ch 2 b. the */ being neglected, and treated as pleonastic (cf. DX 1 c), so that the clause is no longer a limitation of the preceding clause but a con- tradiction of it : but rather, but ( = a slightly strengthened ^3), Gn 15 4 this man shall not be thy heir; 'X 15W"DN "3 but one that shall come forth from thy own bowels, he shall be thy heir (cf. I K 8 19 ), 32^ thy name shall no more be called Jacob 750S}T !3{ * *? but Israel (cf. '3 alone i? 15 ), 47 18 we will not hide it from my lord, but the money ... is all made over to, etc., Ex 1 2 9 not boiled in water, but roast with fire, Dt f 12 5 16 6 Jo 23 s 1 S 2 15 he will not take of thee boiled flesh : VTDK ^ but raw, 8 19 W% njPP $DTMt '3 t6 nay, but a king shall be over us (cf. alone, io 19 12 12 ), 21 5 2 S 5 6 1 K 18 18 2 K io 23 (fS), Is 33 21 55 1011 59 s Je 3 10 f 32 p 23 16 15 20 3 Ez 36" 44 10 Am 8" f 1" Pr23 17 (?X)-f-; with the principal verb repeated (as Gni5 4 1K8"), Lv2i 14 Ez 44 s2 Nu io 30 2 K 23* Je 39 12 Kt (Qr om. DX), cf. 7 s. Occas. in colloq. language, the neg., it seems, is left to be understood: 1 S 26 10 as '' liveth, (by no means,) DX *3 but * shall smite him, 2 S 13 33 Kt (by no means,) but Amnon alone is dead (Qr om. DX). Sq. imv. Is 65 18 EZ12 23 Je39 12 2Ch25 8. Sts. also, though rarely (and not certainly), DX '3 appears to have the force of only even without a previous neg. : Gn 40 14 ^m •JSTSfUK ♦« only have (?) me in remembrance with thyself (but rd. perh. :]X for '? ; v Dr sl,9,n -, the use of a bare pf., with- out v, or even waw consec., to express a wish or command is unexampled), Nu 24^ "DX *3
 * W
 * ?'P T "VS^? n l<y. only, nevertheless, the Kenite

shall be for extermination (cf. Di), Jb 42 s (De Di) KW nsrDX »$. c. after an oath DX '"B appears to=a strengthened '3 (cf. ^p? DX, DX IS?: DX 1 c), introducing the fact sworn to (v. *? 1 c) : 2 K 5 20 as '1 liveth, **fY"OI* "? surely I will run (pf. of certitude) after him, etc., Je 5 1 14 (Ges Hi Gf EV) surely I will fill thee with men (viz. assailants), etc. (but Ew Ke Ch treat the particles as separate ('3 as ''S 1 c) : though I have filled thee with men — i. e. increased thy population —, yet shall they — the assailants — lift up the shout against thee), 2 S 1 5 21 Kt (Qr omits DX) ; after an assever. part. Ru 3 12 Kt D3DX *? nnyi "olK 7X13 DX '3 and now, yea indeed, surely I am thy kinsman (Qr omits DX); the oath being understood, Ju 1 5' if ye do thus, 'riDgrDX ^3 surely (Ges hercle) I will avenge myself, 1 S 2 1 6 «S PTOJj ntS>X-DX '3 of a truth women have been kept from us, etc., 1 K 20" surely to- morrow I will send, etc., Pr 23 (v. De) surely there is a reward ; perh. also Jb 42'. Y2 ;V ^3 forasmuch as, a peculiar phrase found Gn 18 5 19 8 33'° 38 s6 Nu 10 s1 14 43 Ju 6 K 2 S 18 20 Qr (rightly), Je 29 s 38*— it. for there- fore, emphasizing the ground pleonastically (Ew i363 *). The orig. force of the phrase is traceable in some of the passages in which it occurs, as Gn 18 5 let me fetch a morsel of bread, and comfort your heart ; EFTay J3-?JT, 3 DS^Dy ?y for tlwrefore (sc. to partake of such hospitality) are ye come to your servant, Nu 1 4 43 the Amalekite and the Canaanite are there, and ye will fall by the sword, DR3e> fr^ST? for therefore (to encounter such a fate) have ye turned back from, etc.: but in process of time the distinct sense of its component parts was no doubt gradually obscured, and it thus came to be used conventionally, as a mere particle of causation, even where there was no preceding statement to which [3 7j> therefore could be explicitly referred. I? ?V "IB'X appears to be used similarly (cf. yfa 8 c) t Jb 34 s7 . . ^Z, branding, v. sub H13. t[T»3] n.[m.] only sf. vT3 Jb 21 20, mean- ing unknown; rd. prob. fP3 his misfortune (as 12 s etc.) TO (-/of foil.; cf. perh. Ar. SIS in sense labour, take pains, strive, or struggle with, ilS^ war). fi. ffV® n.[m.] dart, javelin (NH id)— abs/3 Jos 8 18 +6 t.; !>3 Je 50 42 ; cstr. |iT3 1 S 17 6 ; — dart, javelin (distinct fr. H'jn spear, lance, q. v.), (1)T3 iBta '33 Ht33 Jos 8 18 - 18 ,' cf. v 26 ; '3 B'yi Jb 4 1 21 the rushing sound of a dart ; 3"?n3, '331 r«rai 1 S 17 45 (weapons of Goliath), '3 vans j*a ne*ro v 6 (JVjn in v 7 ); + rwn Jb39 a also; "31 n^Je (P 50' 42 . f 11. liT2 n.pr.m. 1 Ch 13 9, ®L Xc&av, A X«Xo); = ?i3J 2S6 6 (©Na>Sa/3, A^axa). TrtT'3 v. sub TO ; TITO v. sub "H3. 1)V2 n.pr.dei Am 5 s6, prob.= As. kaivdnu, planet Satum(Ar. and Pers. ^yS, Syr. isi),