(Heb. Beulah',
áְּòåּìָä
, married; Sept. paraphrases
ïἰêïõìÝíç
) occurs in Isa_62:4, metaphorically of Judaea, as of a land desolated, but again filled with inhabitants, when “the land shall be married (
úִּáָּòֵì
),” referring to the return from Babylon; or it may be applied to the Jewish Church to denote the intimacy of its relation to God.