בֵּית הַמֶּרְחָק
Bêyth ham-Merchâq
Modern Summary of Strong’s Concordance (1890)
Beth-ham-Merchak refers to a location in ancient Israel. The name combines words meaning "house" and "breadth" or "distance," suggesting it was a place characterized by being far away or spacious. The King James Version translates it as "place that was far off."
Beth-ham-Merchak, a place in Palestine
The Hebrew word Bêyth ham-Merchâq means "Beth-ham-Merchak, a place in Palestine," used in Scripture in contexts that reveal its full semantic depth.
Lexical data derived from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance. See full disclaimer
Word DNA
Origin
This word acts as a root form.
Did this word study enrich your reading or teaching? Lemmalink is entirely funded by users like you. Help us keep this tool free and open for the global church.
