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Difference between revisions of "Silk"

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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37301" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37301" /> ==
<p> The English is derived by the change of ''R'' and ''L'' from sericum , the manufacture of the Chinese (Seres ): &nbsp;Revelation 18:12. Aristotle in the fourth century B.C. is the first who positively mentions the import of the raw material to the island [[Cos]] in the [[Mediterranean]] (H. A. 5:19). In &nbsp;Proverbs 31:22 (shesh ) translated "fine linen," not silk. The texture silk was probably known much earlier in western Asia, considering its intercourse with the far East by various routes, namely, from southern China by India and the [[Persian]] gulf, or across the [[Indus]] through Persia, or by Bactria the route of central Asia, for the [[Sinim]] (&nbsp;Isaiah 49:12) are the Chinese. Μeshi , the other Hebrew term for silk, occurs in &nbsp;Ezekiel 16:10; &nbsp;Ezekiel 16:13, from maashah "to draw," fine drawn silk ''(Pliny 6:20; 11:26, Describes The Manner)'' . The Βombyx mori , the caterpillar of a sluggish moth, feeding on the mulberry tree, produces the oval-yellow cocoon of silk wound around its own body. </p>
<p> The English is derived by the change of ''R'' and ''L'' from '''''Sericum''''' , the manufacture of the Chinese ( '''''Seres''''' ): &nbsp;Revelation 18:12. Aristotle in the fourth century B.C. is the first who positively mentions the import of the raw material to the island [[Cos]] in the [[Mediterranean]] (H. A. 5:19). In &nbsp;Proverbs 31:22 ( '''''Shesh''''' ) translated "fine linen," not silk. The texture silk was probably known much earlier in western Asia, considering its intercourse with the far East by various routes, namely, from southern China by India and the [[Persian]] gulf, or across the [[Indus]] through Persia, or by Bactria the route of central Asia, for the [[Sinim]] (&nbsp;Isaiah 49:12) are the Chinese. '''''Μeshi''''' , the other Hebrew term for silk, occurs in &nbsp;Ezekiel 16:10; &nbsp;Ezekiel 16:13, from '''''Maashah''''' "to draw," fine drawn silk ''(Pliny 6:20; 11:26, Describes The Manner)'' . The '''''Βombyx Mori''''' , the caterpillar of a sluggish moth, feeding on the mulberry tree, produces the oval-yellow cocoon of silk wound around its own body. </p>
          
          
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_79178" /> ==
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_79178" /> ==
<div> '''1: σηρικός ''' (Strong'S #4596 — Adjective — serikos | sirikos — say-ree-kos' ) </div> <p> "silken," an adjective derived from the Seres, a people of India, who seem to have produced "silk" originally as a marketable commodity, is used as a noun with the article, denoting "silken fabric," &nbsp;Revelation 18:12 . </p>
<div> '''1: '''''Σηρικός''''' ''' (Strong'S #4596 Adjective serikos | sirikos say-ree-kos' ) </div> <p> "silken," an adjective derived from the Seres, a people of India, who seem to have produced "silk" originally as a marketable commodity, is used as a noun with the article, denoting "silken fabric," &nbsp;Revelation 18:12 . </p>
          
          
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_63109" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_63109" /> ==