. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . house in which our Lord per-formed IIis miracle have been in this condition?2. Or did not St. Luke, a native, probably of Greek !Antioch, use the expression tiles as the form ofroof most familiar to himself and to his Greek Ireaders without reference to the particular materialof the roof in question ? See, however, Bed andHouse. Til gatli-pil-no ser (Heb.) = TlOLATH-PILESER (1Chr. v. 6, 26 j 2 Chr. xxviii. 20). Tilon (Ileb. pi ft, Sim.), one of the four sons ofShimon, in the genealogies of Judah(l Chr. iv. 20). : Ti-mse us (L. fr. Gr.) = Timels. Tim


. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . house in which our Lord per-formed IIis miracle have been in this condition?2. Or did not St. Luke, a native, probably of Greek !Antioch, use the expression tiles as the form ofroof most familiar to himself and to his Greek Ireaders without reference to the particular materialof the roof in question ? See, however, Bed andHouse. Til gatli-pil-no ser (Heb.) = TlOLATH-PILESER (1Chr. v. 6, 26 j 2 Chr. xxviii. 20). Tilon (Ileb. pi ft, Sim.), one of the four sons ofShimon, in the genealogies of Judah(l Chr. iv. 20). : Ti-mse us (L. fr. Gr.) = Timels. Tim brd, Tab ret. By these words the A. the Heb. toph (Gen. xxxi. 27; Ex. xv. 20twice, &c.) and topheth (Job xvii. C only), derivedfrom an imitative root found in many languages; =Ar. and Pers. duff, and Span, adufe, a Old English tabor = a drum. (Tabeimng.) 7a-bourct and taboritie are diminutives of labor, and denote the instrument now known as the is a contraction of tabouret. Timbrel is also. Tar _ 11 timbrel or 11 tabrct of A. V.—(LuneB Modern Egyptian*.) a diminutive of tambour (Fr.) or tarnbor<Spanish) fortabor. The Heb. toph is undoubtedly the instrumentdescribed by travellers as the duff or diff of theArabs. It was used in very early times by theSyrians of Padan-uram at their merry-makings ( 27). It was played principally by women ( 20; Judg. xi. 34;*1 Sam. xviii. 6 ; Ps. lxviii. 25[Heb. 26]), as an accompaniment to the song anddance (compare Jd. iii. 7), and appears to havebeen worn by them as an ornament (Jer. xxxi. 4).The diff of the Arabs (so Russell, Aleppo) is ahoop (sometimes with pieces of brass fixed in it tomake a jingling) over which a piece of parchment is distended. It is beat with the fingers, and is thetrue tympanum (L. = drum, timbrel) of the ancients,as appears from its figure in several relievos, rep-resenting the orgies of Bacchus and rites of Cybele. In Barbary it is called tar. Music; Musi


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