Concourse
Holman Bible Dictionary [1]
Proverbs 1:21
King James Dictionary [2]
CONCOURSE, n. L., to run together, to run.
1. A moving, flowing or running together confluence as a fortuitous concourse of atoms a concourse of men.
2. A meeting an assembly of men an assemblage of things a collection formed by a voluntary or spontaneous moving and meeting in one place. Acts 19 .
3. The place or point of meeting, or a meeting the point of junction of two bodies.
The drop will begin to move towards the concourse of the glasses. This application is unusual.
Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words [3]
"a turning together" (sun, "with," trepo, "to turn"), signifies (a) that which is rolled together; hence (b) a dense mass of people, concourse, Acts 19:40 . See Banded.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [4]
kon´kōrs ( המה , hāmāh , "to hum," "to make a noise"; συστροφή , sustrophḗ , "a turning" or "twisting together"): Hāmāh , usually translated by some word signifying "sound" is rendered "concourse" in Proverbs 1:21 (perhaps from the noise made by people thronging and talking together; compare 1 Kings 1:41 , "uproar"), "She (wisdom) crieth in the chief place of concourse," the Revised Version, margin, Hebrew "at the head of the noisy (streets)"; sustrophē is translated "concourse" ( Acts 19:40 ), a riotous crowd. Compare Judith 10:18.