Exodus 12:22

a bunch.

Le 14:6,7; Nu 19:18; Ps 51:7; Heb 9:1,14,19; 11:28; 12:24; 1Pe 1:2

hyssop. The word {aizov,} which has been variously rendered, most probably denotes Hyssop; whence are derived the Chaldee {aizova,} Syriac {zupha,} Arabic {zupha,} Ethiopic {azab,} and {hushopa,} Greek [`ussopos,] hussopos ,] Latin {hyssopus,} German {usop,} and our hyssop, a name retained, with little variation, in all the western languages. It is a plant of the gymnospermia (naked seeded) order, belonging to the didynamia class. It has bushy stalks, growing a foot and a half high; small spear-shaped, close-sitting, and opposite leaves, with several smaller ones rising from the same joint; and all the stalks and branches terminated by erect whorled spikes of flowers, of different colours in the varieties of the plant. The leaves have an aromatic smell, and a warm, pungent taste. Its detersive, cleansing, and medicinal qualities were probably the reason why it was so particularly recommended in Scripture.

strike.

7

and none.

Mt 26:30

Numbers 19:18

9; Ps 51:7; Eze 36:25-27; Joh 15:2,3; 17:17,19; 1Co 1:30; Heb 9:14

Psalms 51:7

Purge.

Le 14:4-7,49-52; Nu 19:18-20; Heb 9:19

and.

Heb 9:13,14; 1Jo 1:7; Re 1:5

whiter.

Isa 1:18; Eph 5:26,27; Re 7:13,14
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