Search for: flesh foods

2541 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. קֹ֫דֶשׁ.2

… :6; flesh Je 11:15; Mal 2:11; priests cleanse thus, 1 Ch 23:13, 28; בין (ה)קדשׁ לחל Ez 22:26; 42:20; 44:23; בין הק׳ ובין החל Lv 10:10; דֶּרֶךְ הק׳ Is 35:8 way of the clean; שְׂאוּ יְדֵכֶם …

2542 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. שְׁאֵר.2

… :26 flesh ( perhaps orig. the inner flesh, full of blood, next the bones, cf. Hoffm ZAW iii (1883), 107, and בָּשָׂר = (orig.) flesh next the skin ) ;— שׁ׳ abs. ψ 78:20, 27, cstr. Mi 3:3 +, sf …

2543 Easton’s Bible Dictionary, p. Kibroth-hattaavah.3 (Matthew G. Easton)

… , no flesh, no fish, no high-flavoured vegetables, no luscious fruits … The people loathed the ‘light food,’ and cried out to Moses, ‘Give us flesh, give us flesh, that …

2544 Easton’s Bible Dictionary, p. Ossifrage.2 (Matthew G. Easton)

… the flesh off any animal, he comes in at the end of the feast, and swallows the bones, or breaks them, and swallows the pieces if he cannot otherwise extract the …

2545 Easton’s Bible Dictionary, p. Raven.2 (Matthew G. Easton)

… and flesh in the morning, and bread and flesh in the evening” ( 1 Kings 17:3-6 ). (See ELIJAH .)

2546 Etymology dictionary, p. beef (n.).2

… the flesh of one when killed, used as food, from Old French buef "ox; beef; ox hide" (11c., Modern French boeuf ), from Latin bovem (nominative bos, genitive bovis ) "ox, cow …

2547 Etymology dictionary, p. carnivorous (adj.).2

… on flesh," 1640s, from Latin carnivorus "flesh-eating, feeding on flesh," from caro (genitive carnis ) "flesh" (originally "a piece of flesh," from PIE root *sker- (1) "to cut …

2548 Etymology dictionary, p. conch (n.).3

… the flesh of the conch as food; the preferred pronunciation there ("kongk") preserves the classical one. Related: Conchate; conchiform; conchoidal .

2549 Etymology dictionary, p. dog's meat (n.).2

"horse flesh, offal, scraps, etc., used as food for dogs," 1590s.

2550 Etymology dictionary, p. horse-meat (n.).2

c. 1400, "food for horses," from horse (n.) + meat (n.). From 1853 as "horse-flesh."

2551 Etymology dictionary, p. maigre (adj.).2

"meatless, made without flesh; abstaining from flesh," 1680s, from French maigre "lean, spare, meager," as a noun, "lean meat, food other than meat or gravy" (see meager ).

2552 Etymology dictionary, p. meat (n.).3

… of "flesh of warm-blooded animals killed and used as food" is attested from c. 1300 (earlier this was flesh-meat, early 12c.). There is a similar sense evolution in …

2553 Etymology dictionary, p. mutton (n.).2

"flesh of sheep used as food," c. 1300, mouton (c. 1200 as a surname), from Old French moton "mutton; ram, wether, sheep" (12c., Modern French mouton ), from Medieval Latin multonem …

2554 Etymology dictionary, p. omophagous (adj.).2

… raw food," especially raw flesh, 1857, from omophagia (1706), from Greek, "eating raw flesh," from ōmos "raw" (see omo- ) + phagein "to eat" (from PIE root *bhag- "to share out, apportion …

2555 Etymology dictionary, p. pancreas (n.).2

… as food), pancreas," literally "entirely flesh," from pan- "all" (see pan- ) + kreas "flesh" (from PIE root *kreue- "raw flesh"), probably so called for the homogeneous substance …

2556 Etymology dictionary, p. pork (n.).2

c. 1300 (early 13c. in surname Porkuiller ), "flesh of a pig as food," from Old French porc "pig, swine, boar," and directly from Latin porcus "pig, tame swine," from PIE root *porko- "young pig." Also in Middle English "a swine, a hog" (c. 1400).

2557 Etymology dictionary, p. sweetbread (n.).2

"pancreas of an animal used as food" 1560s, from sweet (adj.); the -bread element may be from Old English bræd "flesh" (for which see brawn ).

2558 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Abomination, Birds of.3

… their flesh partook of the odor of their food. Young ostriches have sweet, tender flesh and the eggs are edible also. In putting these birds among the abominations …

2559 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Agriculture.25

… both food and raiment. The milk of camels, sheep and goats was eaten fresh or made into curdled milk, butter or cheese. More rarely was the flesh of these animals …

2560 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Birds, Unclean.2

… the flesh of these birds, the Divine command endorsing the instincts which were repelled by such food. For particulars, see separate articles on each of these …