Search for: 336

1541 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. פֹּת.2

… (1886), 336, cf. 𝔙 Di.

1542 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. רְאֵם.2

… (1877), 336 ff., and illustr. bef. p. 33 Schr KGF 135 ff., 530 Hom NS 257 ff., 410, 436 f. Dr Dt 33:17; on strength and ferocity, Plin NH viii. 21; Aramaic רְאֵמָא, רֵימָא, רֵימָנָא …

1543 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. שֹׁ֫הַם.2

… 2, 336 f. onyx Taylor Hast. DB iii. 624, beryl Ridgeway Ency. Bib. 545 malachite Myres ib. 4808, etc.; cf. also Dr Gn 2:12 ( √ unknown; perhaps loan-word, cf. Assyrian sâmtu Dl WB …

1544 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. שׁוּם.2

… No. 336 Post Hast. DB ii. 110 Tristr NHB 448 (or allium Ascalonicum, cf. Buhl, after Tristr FFP 430; v. this and Post Flora 789 for many kinds of allium ); Arabic ثُومٌ, Aramaic …

1545 Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon, p. שִׁמָּמוֹן.2

† שִׁמָּמוֹן n. [ m. ] appalment, horror ( Ba NB 324, 336; another view Lag BN 202, 203 ) ;—abs. Ez 4:16 drink water בְּשׁ׳, so 12:19 .

1547 Easton’s Bible Dictionary, p. Philippi.2 (Matthew G. Easton)

… . 359-336). In the time of the Emperor Augustus this city became a Roman colony, i.e., a military settlement of Roman soldiers, there planted for the purpose of controlling …

1548 Etymology dictionary, p. antelope (n.).2

… , c. 336 C.E.), in reference to a fabulous animal haunting the banks of the Euphrates, very savage, hard to catch and having long saw-like horns capable of cutting …

1549 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Athens.4

… in 336 BC, and Alexander the Great became master. After the subjugation of Greece by the Romans, Athens was placed under the supervision of the governor of …

1550 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Darius.15

… from 336 to 330 BC, is meant by the author of Nehemiah 12:1 - 47, because he mentions Jaddua; for (a) Johanan, the father of this Jaddua, was high priest about 408 BC, as …

1551 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Genealogy, 8 Part 2.240

… Codomannus (336 to 330 BC) is the Darius here, the date may be about 330. The enumeration of families here is assigned to the time of Joiakim, before 405, and the …

1553 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Jaddua.4

… Persia (336-332 BC), who was overthrown by Alexander the Great. It is doubtless to him that Josephus refers in his romantic account of Alexander’s entrance …

1554 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Macedonia.23

… Olympias (336 BC), whose son, Alexander the Great, succeeded to the throne. After securing his hold on Thrace, Illyria and Greece, Alexander turned eastward and …

1555 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Paul, the Apostle, 4.10

… , 1912, 336) endorses this view of Deissmann and says that in the 1st century AD "one cannot speak of non-Jewish influences on Christology." One may dismiss at once …

1556 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Philip (1).3

… 359-336 BC. His influence for Greece and for mankind in general lay in hastening the decadence of the Greek city-state and in the preparations he left to Alexander …

1557 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Stoics.9

… (circa 336-264 BC), a native of Citium, a Greek colony in Cyprus. But the Semitic race predominated in Cyprus, and it has been conjectured that Zeno was of Semitic …

1558 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, p. Writing, 2.49

… , III, 336, note 1) trace as far back as Isaiah. In Vespasian’s time it is said there were in Jerusalem alone 480 synagogues each with its school, and the law that …

1559 Smith’s Bible Dictionary, p. Alexander III.2 (William Smith)

… b.c. 336. Two years afterwards he crossed the Hellespont (b.c. 334) to carry out the plans of his father, and execute the mission of Greece to the civilized world …