. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . od, &c, a twig, mote, put as the emblemof lesser faults, Rbn. N. T. Lex.) (Mat. vii. 3-5;Lk. vi. 41, 42). Moth (Heb. Ash ; Gr. ses). By the Hebrew andGreek words we are certainly to understand somespecies of clothes-moth {Tinea). Reference to thedestructive habits of the clothes-moth is made inJob xiii. 28; Ps. xxxix. 11; Is. 1. 9, li. 8; Hos. ; Mat. vi. 19, 20; Lk. xii. 33; Jas. v. 2; and inEcclus. xix. 3, xlii. 13; indeed in nearly every in-stance where mention of this insect is made, it isin reference to its destroying garments. In Job iv. 19t


. A comprehensive dictionary of the Bible . od, &c, a twig, mote, put as the emblemof lesser faults, Rbn. N. T. Lex.) (Mat. vii. 3-5;Lk. vi. 41, 42). Moth (Heb. Ash ; Gr. ses). By the Hebrew andGreek words we are certainly to understand somespecies of clothes-moth {Tinea). Reference to thedestructive habits of the clothes-moth is made inJob xiii. 28; Ps. xxxix. 11; Is. 1. 9, li. 8; Hos. ; Mat. vi. 19, 20; Lk. xii. 33; Jas. v. 2; and inEcclus. xix. 3, xlii. 13; indeed in nearly every in-stance where mention of this insect is made, it isin reference to its destroying garments. In Job iv. 19the A. V. has (which) are crushed before the moth,i. e. (so Mr. Barnes) the most feeble of all objectsmay crush man ; but Gesenius translates they arecrushed as by the moth, i. e. as if moth-eaten. InJob xxvii. 18, He buildeth his house as a moth,allusion is made either to the well-known case ofthe Tinea pellionella, or some allied species, or else to the leaf-building larvse of some other member ofthe order Lepidoptera. Dress ; Worm Clothes-moth (Tinea pellimella). a. Larva in a case constructed out of the substance on which it is feeding-. b. Case cut at the ends. c. Case cut open by the larva for enlarging it. d. e. The perfect insect. Motllcr (Heb. em ; Gr. meter). The superiorityof the Hebrew over all contemporaneous systemsof legislation and of morals is strongly shown inthe higher estimation of the mother in the Jewishfamily, as contrasted with modern Oriental, as wellas ancient Oriental and classical usage. The kingsmother, as appears in the case of Bath-sheba, wastreated with especial honor (1 K. ii. 19 ; Ex. xx. 12;Lev. xix. 3; Deut. v. 16, xxi. 18, 21; Prov. x. 1, , xvii. 25, xxix. 15, xxxi. 1, 30). Child; Cooking ; Daughter ; Dress ; Education ; Father ;Kindred ; Marriage ; Queen ; Women. *Monldy [ou as o in note], the A. V. translation,after the LXX., Kimchi, &c. (Josh. ix. 5, 12 only)of Heb. mikkudim ( — crumbs of bread, Ges., Fii.),once translated crack


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