Exodus 15:20-21

prophetess.

Jud 4:4; 1Sa 10:5; 2Ki 22:14; Lu 2:36; Ac 21:9; 1Co 11:5; 14:34

sister.

2:4; Nu 12:1; 20:1; 26:59; Mic 6:4

a timbrel.{Toph,} in Arabic called {duff} or {diff,} and in Spanish {adduffa,} is the {tabret} used in the East; being a thin, broad, wooden hoop, with parchment extended over one side of it, to which small pieces of brass, tin, etc., are attached, which make a jingling noise: it is held up with one hand and beaten upon with the other, and is precisely the same as the tambourine.

all the.

Jud 11:34; 21:21; 1Sa 18:6; 2Sa 6:5,14,16; Ps 68:11,25; 81:2; 149:3

Ps 150:4

answered.

1Sa 18:7; 2Ch 5:13; Ps 24:7-10; 134:1-3

Sing ye.

1; Jud 5:3; Isa 5:1-30; Re 7:10-12; 5:9; 14:3; 15:3; 19:1-6

2 Samuel 19:35

can I discern.

Job 6:30; 12:11; Heb 5:14; 1Pe 2:3

taste.

Ec 12:1-5

I hear.

Ezr 2:65; Ne 7:67; Ex 2:8; 12:4

a burden.

13:25; 15:33

Nehemiah 7:67

their man-servants.

Isa 45:1,2; Jer 27:7

two hundred.

Ezr 2:65

200.

Psalms 68:25

the players.

87:7; 150:3-5; Re 14:2,3; 15:2,3

among.

148:12,13; Ex 15:20; Jud 11:34; 1Sa 18:6; Jer 31:4,13

Psalms 148:12-13

young men.

8:2; 68:25; Jer 31:13; Zec 9:17; Mt 21:15,16; Lu 19:37; Tit 2:4-6

for his name.

8:1,9; 99:3,4,9; So 5:9,16; Isa 6:3; Zec 9:17; Php 3:8

excellent. Heb. exalted.

1Ch 29:11; Isa 12:4; 33:5; Mt 6:13

glory.

57:6; 72:19; 108:4; 113:4; Eph 4:10; 1Pe 3:22

Ecclesiastes 2:8

silver.

1Ki 9:14,28; 10:10; 14:21,22,27; 2Ch 9:11,15-21

men singers.

2Sa 19:35; Ezr 2:65

musical instruments, etc. Heb. musical instrument andinstruments.

1Ch 25:1,6; Job 21:11,12; Ps 150:3-5; Da 3:5,7,15; Am 6:5The difficult words {shiddah weshiddoth} are variously rendered. The LXX. have [oinocoon kai oinochoas,] "male and female cup-bearers," with which the Syriac and Arabic and Parkhurst agree; Aquila, [kulikon kai kulikia,] "a cup and smaller cups;" Jerome, {scyphos et urceolos, (Vulg. {urceos,}) "goblets and pots;" Targum, "warm and cold baths;" others, as M. Desvoeux, "male and female captives;" others, "cooks and confectioners;" others, "a species of musical compositions," derived from Sido, a celebrated Phoenician woman, to whom Sanchoniatho attributes the invention of music; but others, with more probability, "wives and concubines;" and {siddoth} may be in this sense synonymous with the Arabic {seedat, domina, conjux} from {sada,} in {Conj. V. conjugium inivit.} Of the former, Solomon had three hundred, and of the latter, seven hundred; and if they are not mentioned here they are not mentioned at all, which is wholly unaccountable.
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