Strong's Lexicon malluach: Saltwort, a type of plant Original Word: מַלוַּח Word Origin: Derived from the root מָלַח (malach), meaning "to salt" or "to season." Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: There are no direct corresponding Greek entries for מַלוַּח (maluach) in the Strong's Concordance, as it is a specific Hebrew term referring to a plant native to the region described in the Old Testament. Usage: The term מַלוַּח (maluach) appears in the context of describing a plant that grows in salty or barren environments. It is mentioned in the Bible as a food source during times of extreme poverty or famine. Context: • מַלוַּח (maluach) is referenced in the Book of Job 30:4, where it is described as a plant gathered by the impoverished for sustenance. The verse in the Berean Standard Bible (BSB) reads: "They pluck mallow by the bushes, and the roots of the broom tree are their food." NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom the same as melach Definition mallow NASB Translation mallow (1). Brown-Driver-Briggs מַלּוּחַ noun [masculine] mallow; plant growing in salt-marsh; Job 30:4 (compare NowArchaeology i. 67, 112). Strong's Exhaustive Concordance mallows From malach; sea-purslain (from its saltness) -- mallows. see HEBREW malach Forms and Transliterations מַלּ֣וּחַ מלוח mal·lū·aḥ malLuach mallūaḥLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Job 30:4 HEB: הַקֹּטְפִ֣ים מַלּ֣וּחַ עֲלֵי־ שִׂ֑יחַ NAS: Who pluck mallow by the bushes, KJV: Who cut up mallows by the bushes, INT: pluck mallow by the bushes 1 Occurrence |



