Boil

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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [1]

(verb) (בּשׁל , bāshal , רתח , rāthaḥ ): "Boil" is the translation of bāshal , "to bubble up," "to boil," "to be cooked," Piēl , "to cause to boil," "to cook" ( Leviticus 8:31;  1 Kings 19:21;  2 Kings 6:29;  Ezekiel 46:20 ,  Ezekiel 46:24 bis ); of rāthaḥ , to be hot," "to boil," "to be made to boil," "to be greatly moved" under strong emotion (the bowels), Hiphil "to cause to boil" ( Job 30:27 the King James Version "My bowels boiled, and rested not," the English Revised Version "My bowels boil." the American Standard Revised Version "My heart is troubled";   Job 41:31 , "He maketh the deep to boil like a pot";  Ezekiel 24:5 , "make it boil well"); of bā‛āh , "to bubble" or "well up" ( Isaiah 64:2 (1, in Hebrew) "The fire causeth the waters to boil"); in King James Version, margin of   Psalm 45:1 ("My heart is inditing a good matter") we have Hebrew "boileth" or "bubbleth up" ( rāḥash , "to boil" or "bubble up," the Revised Version (British and American) text, "My heart overfloweth with a goodly matter").

"Boiling-places," occurs in  Ezekiel 46:23 as the translation of mebhashshelōth , "hearths," "boiling-places." The American Standard Revised Version has "boiling-houses" for "places of them that boil" ( Ezekiel 46:24 ), "boil well" for "consume" ( Ezekiel 24:10 ); the American Standard Revised Version has "boiling over" for "unstable" ( Genesis 49:4; the English Revised Version, margin "bubbling over").

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]

( שְׁחַין , Shechin', rendered "botch" in  Deuteronomy 28:27;  Deuteronomy 28:35), a burning sore or inflamed ulcer of an aggravated description, either local (as in the case of Hezekiah,  2 Kings 20:7;  Isaiah 38:21), or covering an extensive surface (as in the case of the Egyptians,  Exodus 9:9-11;  Deuteronomy 28:27;  Deuteronomy 28:35). (See Blains). It is also applied to the ulcerated spots indicative of leprosy ( Leviticus 13:18-20;  Leviticus 13:23), and is the term used to designate the disease of Job ( Job 2:7), probably the Elephantiasis, or black leprosy. (See Leprosy).

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