the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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Bible Lexicons
Old Testament Hebrew Lexical Dictionary Hebrew Lexicon
Strong's #7192 - קְשִׂיטָה
- Brown-Driver-Briggs
- Strong
- a unit of unknown value
- perhaps weight, money
- Book
- Word
did not use
this Strong's Number
2739) usq (קסהתה QShTh) AC: Weigh CO: ? AB: Truth: A weighing in a balance scale.
bf1) euisq (קסהיתהה QShYThH) - Qeshiytah: A unit of value, money. KJV (3): money, silver - Strongs: H7192 (קְשִׂיטָה)
cm) ufsq (קסהותה QShWTh) - Truth: In the sense of weighing. KJV (2): truth - Strongs: H7187 (קְשֹׁט)
gm) usfq (קוסהתה QWShTh) - Truth: In the sense of weighing. KJV (2): certainty, truth - Strongs: H7189 (קֹשְׁטְ)
Jeff Benner, Ancient Hebrew Research Center Used by permission of the author.
קשׂשׂ (√ of following; Late Hebrew קַשְׂקֶשֶׂת scale; compare Arabic skim off fat, IV. scale off (Berggren), be healed form small-pox, etc. ( Muƒi‰; i.e. scale off), compare get well from leanness, Frey (†am Golius); also sweep (up débris) Dozy ii. 347).
קְשִׂיטָה f. Genesis 33:19; Joshua 24:32; Job 42:11, pr. something weighed out; hence used of some certain weight (compare כִּבְרָה, שֶׁקֶל, מָנֶה) of gold and silver, which, like the shekel, was used for money in the age of the patriarchs. It may be supposed to have been heavier than the shekel, and to have contained about four shekels, from the passages Genesis 33:19, 23:16, compared together. According to Rabbi Akiba (in Bochart, in Hieroz. t. i, 3, c. 43), a certain coin was also in a later age called in Africa Kesita. The ancient interpreters almost all understand a lamb; but for this signification there is no support either in the etymology or in the cognate languages; nor does it accord with patriarchal manners, since in their age merchandise was no longer exchanged, and real sales were common for money either weighed or counted (Genesis 23:16, 47:16 ); see the arguments against Frid. Spanheim in Hist. Jobi (Opp. III, page 84), well brought forward by Bochart, loc. cit. A coin bearing the figure of a lamb, which was thought of late to be the Kesita by Frid. Münter (in a Dissertation in Danish, on the Kesita, Copenhagen, 1824), I consider to be a coin struck in Cyprus, of which kind more are extant.
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