4085. medokah
Berean Strong's Lexicon
medokah: Mortar

Original Word: מדוכה
Part of Speech: Noun Feminine
Transliteration: medokah
Pronunciation: meh-do-KAH
Phonetic Spelling: (med-o-kaw')
Definition: Mortar
Meaning: a mortar

Word Origin: Derived from the root דָּכָה (dakah), meaning "to crush" or "to bruise."

Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: While there is no direct Greek equivalent for "medokah," the concept of grinding or crushing can be related to Greek words like "ἀλέθω" (alethō), meaning "to grind," as seen in passages discussing milling or grinding grain.

Usage: The term "medokah" refers to a mortar, a bowl-shaped vessel used for grinding or crushing substances, typically with a pestle. In biblical times, it was commonly used for preparing grains, spices, and other materials.

Cultural and Historical Background: In ancient Israel, the mortar and pestle were essential tools in daily life, used for preparing food and medicinal compounds. The process of grinding in a mortar was labor-intensive and required skill. The imagery of a mortar is often used metaphorically in the Bible to describe the process of refining or purifying, as well as the crushing of enemies or the wicked.

NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
from the same as duk
Definition
mortar
NASB Translation
mortar (1).

Brown-Driver-Briggs
מְדֹכָה noun feminine mortar, Numbers 11:8.

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
mortar

From duwk; a mortar -- mortar.

see HEBREW duwk

Forms and Transliterations
בַּמְּדֹכָ֔ה במדכה bam·mə·ḏō·ḵāh bammedoChah bamməḏōḵāh
Links
Interlinear GreekInterlinear HebrewStrong's NumbersEnglishman's Greek ConcordanceEnglishman's Hebrew ConcordanceParallel Texts
Englishman's Concordance
Numbers 11:8
HEB: א֤וֹ דָכוּ֙ בַּמְּדֹכָ֔ה וּבִשְּׁלוּ֙ בַּפָּר֔וּר
NAS: beat [it] in the mortar, and boil
KJV: or beat [it] in a mortar, and baked
INT: or beat the mortar and boil the pot

1 Occurrence

Strong's Hebrew 4085
1 Occurrence


bam·mə·ḏō·ḵāh — 1 Occ.
















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