the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
Click here to learn more!
Bible Lexicons
Old Testament Hebrew Lexical Dictionary Hebrew Lexicon
Strong's #5085 - נִדְנֶה
- Brown-Driver-Briggs
- Strong
- sheath
- meaning uncertain
- Book
- Word
did not use
this Strong's Number
did not use
this Strong's Number
did not use
this Strong's Number
did not use
this Strong's Number
did not use
this Strong's Number
did not use
this Strong's Number
2382) ndn (נדנ NDN) AC: ? CO: Sheath AB: ?: A covering for a knife or sword.
Nm) ndn (נדנ NDN) - Sheath: KJV (1): sheath - Strongs: H5084 (נָדָן)
ef1) endin (נידנה NYDNH) - Body: As a sheath for the soul. KJV (1): body - Strongs: H5085 (נִדְנֶה)
Jeff Benner, Ancient Hebrew Research Center Used by permission of the author.
preposition on account of (so Galilean Aramaic, D§ 47,3), read perhaps in Daniel 7:15: see נִדְגֵה.
נִדְנֵ֑ה (Masora Baer) noun [masculine] sheath (ᵑ7נְדָן, לְדָן; see Biblical Hebrew (late) נָדָן, Persian loan-word); — ׳בְּ֗֗֗נ Daniel 7:15 my spirit in (its) sheath, i.e. my body; < נִדְנָה emphatic, or suffix נִדְנַהּ (K§ 54,3. β)); or (Nö GGA. 1884,1022 Bev) נְדָנַהּ; but expression at best strange; read probably בְּגִין דְּנָה on account of this (בְּגִין as ᵑ7 J; D§ 47. 3 (2nd ed. 47. 10)), M72* compare Buhl Dr.
נִדְנֶה m. Chald. the sheath of a sword (so called from its flexibility, see the root. [In Thes. this word is not referred to any root, and the etymology which had been here suggested is spoken of slightingly]; there are also found in Ch. נְדַן, and נִדְנָה, and לְדַן, לִדְנָא, with He parag, of the form לִבְנֶה, אַרְיֵה). Used figuratively of the body, as being the sheath and envelope of the soul, Daniel 7:15 “my spirit was grieved in the midst of my sheath,” i.e. body, בְּגוֹ נִדְנֶה. The same metaphor is used by Plin. H.N. vii. 52 s. 53, “donec cremato eo inimici remeanti animœ velut vaginam ademerint;” and also by a certain philosopher, who was despised by Alexander the Great on account of the ugliness of his face; who is said to have answered, “the body of a man is nothing but the sheath of a sword, in which the soul is hidden as in a sheath;” see d’Herbelot, Biblioth. Orientale, p. 642. A similar use is made of the word σκεῦος by Ælian. Hist. Anim. xvii. 11.