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Difference between revisions of "Ink"

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== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_60942" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_60942" /> ==
<p> [[Ink,]] n. [[A]] black liquor or substance used for writing, generally made of an infusion of galls, copperas and gum-arabic. </p> 1. Any liquor used for writing or forming letters, as red ink, &c. 2. [[A]] pigment. <p> Printing ink is made by boiling lintseed oil, and burning it about a minute, and mixing it with lampblack, with an addition of soap and rosin. </p> <p> [[Ink]] for the rolling press, is made with lintseed oil burnt as above,and mixed with Frankfort black. </p> <p> Indian ink, from China, is composed of lampblack, and size or animal glue. </p> <p> Sympathetic ink, a liquor used in writing, which exhibits no color or appearance till some other means are used, such as holding it to the fire, or rubbing something over it. </p> <p> [[Ink,]] To black or daub with ink. </p>
<p> INK, n. A black liquor or substance used for writing, generally made of an infusion of galls, copperas and gum-arabic. </p> 1. Any liquor used for writing or forming letters, as red ink, &c. 2. A pigment. <p> Printing ink is made by boiling lintseed oil, and burning it about a minute, and mixing it with lampblack, with an addition of soap and rosin. </p> <p> [[Ink]] for the rolling press, is made with lintseed oil burnt as above,and mixed with Frankfort black. </p> <p> Indian ink, from China, is composed of lampblack, and size or animal glue. </p> <p> Sympathetic ink, a liquor used in writing, which exhibits no color or appearance till some other means are used, such as holding it to the fire, or rubbing something over it. </p> <p> INK, To black or daub with ink. </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51836" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51836" /> ==
<p> <strong> [[Ink]] </strong> is mentioned once in [[Ot]] (&nbsp; Jeremiah 36:18 ). &nbsp; Exodus 32:33 and &nbsp; Numbers 5:23 are adduced as evidence that the old [[Hebrew]] ink (derived from lamp-black [?]) could he washed off. From the bright colours that still survive in some papyri, it is evident that the ink used by the [[Egyptians]] must have been of a superior kind. The [[Nt]] term for ‘ink,’ occurring three times ( 2Co 3:3 , &nbsp; 2 John 1:12 , &nbsp; 3 John 1:13 ), is <em> melan </em> (lit. ‘black’). See, further, under Writing. </p>
<p> <strong> INK </strong> is mentioned once in OT (&nbsp; Jeremiah 36:18 ). &nbsp; Exodus 32:33 and &nbsp; Numbers 5:23 are adduced as evidence that the old [[Hebrew]] ink (derived from lamp-black [?]) could he washed off. From the bright colours that still survive in some papyri, it is evident that the ink used by the [[Egyptians]] must have been of a superior kind. The NT term for ‘ink,’ occurring three times ( 2Co 3:3 , &nbsp; 2 John 1:12 , &nbsp; 3 John 1:13 ), is <em> melan </em> (lit. ‘black’). See, further, under Writing. </p>
          
          
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_132687" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_132687" /> ==
<p> '''(1):''' ''' (''' n.) [[A]] pigment. See India ink, under India. </p> <p> '''(2):''' ''' (''' n.) [[A]] fluid, or a viscous material or preparation of various kinds (commonly black or colored), used in writing or printing. </p> <p> '''(3):''' ''' (''' n.) The step, or socket, in which the lower end of a millstone spindle runs. </p> <p> '''(4):''' ''' (''' v. t.) To put ink upon; to supply with ink; to blacken, color, or daub with ink. </p>
<p> '''(1):''' ''' (''' n.) A pigment. See India ink, under India. </p> <p> '''(2):''' ''' (''' n.) A fluid, or a viscous material or preparation of various kinds (commonly black or colored), used in writing or printing. </p> <p> '''(3):''' ''' (''' n.) The step, or socket, in which the lower end of a millstone spindle runs. </p> <p> '''(4):''' ''' (''' v. t.) To put ink upon; to supply with ink; to blacken, color, or daub with ink. </p>
          
          
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16347" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16347" /> ==
<p> &nbsp;Jeremiah 36:18 . The ink of the ancients was thick and durable, and resembled our printer's ink. The ordinary materials were powdered charcoal, or ivory black, water, and gum. The black matter of the scuttle-fish was also used. Writers carried their inkhorns within, or suspended from, their girdles, &nbsp;Ezekiel 9:2 . See [[Girdle.]] </p>
<p> &nbsp;Jeremiah 36:18 . The ink of the ancients was thick and durable, and resembled our printer's ink. The ordinary materials were powdered charcoal, or ivory black, water, and gum. The black matter of the scuttle-fish was also used. Writers carried their inkhorns within, or suspended from, their girdles, &nbsp;Ezekiel 9:2 . See GIRDLE. </p>
          
          
== Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types <ref name="term_197952" /> ==
== Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types <ref name="term_197952" /> ==
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== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_4902" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_4902" /> ==
<p> ''''' ink ''''' ( דּיו , <i> ''''' deyō ''''' </i> , from root meaning "slowly flowing," <i> Bdb </i> , 188; μέλαν , <i> ''''' mélan ''''' </i> , "black"): Any fluid substance used with pen or brush to form written characters. In this sense ink is mentioned once in the Hebrew Bible (&nbsp; Jeremiah 36:2 ) and 3 times in the Greek New [[Testament]] (&nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:3; &nbsp;2 John 1:12; &nbsp;3 John 1:13 ), and it is implied in all references to writing on papyrus or on leather. The inference from the "blotting out" of &nbsp;Exodus 32:33 and &nbsp; Numbers 5:23 that the Hebrew ink was a lamp-black and gum, or some other dry ink, is confirmed by the general usage of antiquity, by the later [[Jewish]] prejudice against other inks ( <i> [[Otjc]] </i> , 71 note) and by a Jewish receipt referring to ink-tablets (Drach, "Notice sur l'encre des Hébreux," <i> Ann. philos. chrét </i> ., 42, 45, 353). The question is, however, now being put on a wholly new basis by the study of the [[Elephantine]] Jewish documents (Meyer, Papyrusfund2, 1912, 15, 21), and above all of the Harvard [[Ostraca]] from [[Samaria]] which give actual specimens of the ink in [[Palestine]] in the time of [[Ahab]] ( <i> Harvard Theological Review </i> , Jan. 1911, 136-43). It is likely, however, that during the long period of Bible history various inks were used. The official copy of the law in the time of [[Ptolemy]] Philadelphus was, according to [[Josephus]] ( <i> Ant. </i> , Xii , ii, 11), written in gold, and the vermilion and red paints and dyes mentioned in &nbsp;Jeremiah 22:14; &nbsp;Ezekiel 23:14 , and The Wisdom of [[Solomon]] 13:14 ( <i> '''''mı́ltō kaı́ phúkei''''' </i> ) were probably used also for writing books or coloring incised inscriptions. See literature under [[Writing]]; especially Krauss, Talmud, <i> [[Arch]] </i> . 3 ,148-153; Gardthausen, <i> Greek Palestine </i> , 1911, [[I,]] 202-17, and his bibliographical references <i> passim </i> . </p>
<p> ''''' ink ''''' ( דּיו , <i> ''''' deyō ''''' </i> , from root meaning "slowly flowing," <i> Bdb </i> , 188; μέλαν , <i> ''''' mélan ''''' </i> , "black"): Any fluid substance used with pen or brush to form written characters. In this sense ink is mentioned once in the Hebrew Bible (&nbsp; Jeremiah 36:2 ) and 3 times in the Greek New [[Testament]] (&nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:3; &nbsp;2 John 1:12; &nbsp;3 John 1:13 ), and it is implied in all references to writing on papyrus or on leather. The inference from the "blotting out" of &nbsp;Exodus 32:33 and &nbsp; Numbers 5:23 that the Hebrew ink was a lamp-black and gum, or some other dry ink, is confirmed by the general usage of antiquity, by the later [[Jewish]] prejudice against other inks ( <i> OTJC </i> , 71 note) and by a Jewish receipt referring to ink-tablets (Drach, "Notice sur l'encre des Hébreux," <i> Ann. philos. chrét </i> ., 42, 45, 353). The question is, however, now being put on a wholly new basis by the study of the [[Elephantine]] Jewish documents (Meyer, Papyrusfund2, 1912, 15, 21), and above all of the Harvard [[Ostraca]] from [[Samaria]] which give actual specimens of the ink in [[Palestine]] in the time of [[Ahab]] ( <i> Harvard Theological Review </i> , Jan. 1911, 136-43). It is likely, however, that during the long period of Bible history various inks were used. The official copy of the law in the time of [[Ptolemy]] Philadelphus was, according to [[Josephus]] ( <i> Ant. </i> , Xii , ii, 11), written in gold, and the vermilion and red paints and dyes mentioned in &nbsp;Jeremiah 22:14; &nbsp;Ezekiel 23:14 , and The Wisdom of [[Solomon]] 13:14 ( <i> '''''mı́ltō kaı́ phúkei''''' </i> ) were probably used also for writing books or coloring incised inscriptions. See literature under Writing; especially Krauss, Talmud, <i> [[Arch]] </i> . 3 ,148-153; Gardthausen, <i> Greek Palestine </i> , 1911, I, 202-17, and his bibliographical references <i> passim </i> . </p>
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_45009" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_45009" /> ==
<p> (דְּיוֹ, ''deyo','' so called from its ''blackness,'' &nbsp;Jeremiah 36:18; Gr. μέλαν, black, &nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:3; &nbsp;2 John 1:12; &nbsp;3 John 1:13). The most simple, and hence probably the most ancient mode of preparing ink was a mixture of water with charcoal powdered, or with soot, to which gum was added. The Hebrews made use of different colors for writing, as did also the ancient Egyptians, and some of the books of the former are stated by Josephus to have been written in gold. The mode of writing mentioned in Numbers 5, 23, where it is said that "the priest shall write the curses in a book and blot them out with the bitter water," was with a kind of ink prepared for the purpose, without any calx of iron or other material that could make a permanent dye; these maledictions were then washed off the parchment into the water, which the woman was obliged to drink: so that she drank the very words of the execration. The ink still used in the East is almost all of this kind; a wet sponge will completely obliterate the finest of their writings. The ancients used several kinds of tinctures as ink; among them that extracted from the cuttle-fish, called in Hebrew תְּכֵֵֶלת, ''tekeleth.'' </p> <p> Their ink was not so fluid as ours. Demosthenes reproaches AEschines with laboring in the grinding of ink, as painters do in the grinding of their colors. The substance found in an inkstand at [[Herculaneum]] looks like a thick oil or paint, with which the manuscripts had been written in a sort of relievo, visible in the letters when a leaf is held to the light in a horizontal direction. Such vitriolic ink as has been used on the old parchment manuscripts would have corroded the delicate leaves of the papyrus, as it has done the skins of the most ancient manuscripts of Virgil and [[Terence]] in the library of the Vatican;' the letters are sunk into the parchment, and some have eaten quite through it, in consequence of the corrosive acid of the vitriolic ink with which they were written. (See [[Writing]]). </p>
<p> (דְּיוֹ, ''Deyo','' so called from its ''Blackness,'' &nbsp;Jeremiah 36:18; Gr. μέλαν, black, &nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:3; &nbsp;2 John 1:12; &nbsp;3 John 1:13). The most simple, and hence probably the most ancient mode of preparing ink was a mixture of water with charcoal powdered, or with soot, to which gum was added. The Hebrews made use of different colors for writing, as did also the ancient Egyptians, and some of the books of the former are stated by Josephus to have been written in gold. The mode of writing mentioned in Numbers 5, 23, where it is said that "the priest shall write the curses in a book and blot them out with the bitter water," was with a kind of ink prepared for the purpose, without any calx of iron or other material that could make a permanent dye; these maledictions were then washed off the parchment into the water, which the woman was obliged to drink: so that she drank the very words of the execration. The ink still used in the East is almost all of this kind; a wet sponge will completely obliterate the finest of their writings. The ancients used several kinds of tinctures as ink; among them that extracted from the cuttle-fish, called in Hebrew תְּכֵֵֶלת, ''Tekeleth.'' </p> <p> Their ink was not so fluid as ours. Demosthenes reproaches AEschines with laboring in the grinding of ink, as painters do in the grinding of their colors. The substance found in an inkstand at [[Herculaneum]] looks like a thick oil or paint, with which the manuscripts had been written in a sort of relievo, visible in the letters when a leaf is held to the light in a horizontal direction. Such vitriolic ink as has been used on the old parchment manuscripts would have corroded the delicate leaves of the papyrus, as it has done the skins of the most ancient manuscripts of Virgil and [[Terence]] in the library of the Vatican;' the letters are sunk into the parchment, and some have eaten quite through it, in consequence of the corrosive acid of the vitriolic ink with which they were written. (See Writing). </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15897" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15897" /> ==
<p> [[Inkhorn]] </p> <p> Ink, Inkhorn [[[Writing]]] </p>
<p> Inkhorn </p> <p> Ink, Inkhorn [WRITING] </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==