International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: Jaw; Jawbone; Jaw Teeth

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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: Jaw; Jawbone; Jaw Teeth


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jô, jô´bōn (לחי, leḥı̄, “cheek (bone),” “jaw (bone)”): In , the Revised Version (British and American) gives “pierce his jaw through with a hook” for the King James Version “bore his jaw through with a thorn” (see HOOK; LEVIATHAN). , “My tongue cleaveth to my jaws (malḳōaḥ),” is descriptive of the effect of a fever or physical torture, a dryness and a horrible clamminess. ם, Malḳoḥayı̄m is an ancient dual form meaning the two jaws, and, metaphorically, ה, malḳoaḥ indicates that which is caught between the jaws, booty, prey, including captives (, , ; f).

Figurative: (1) Of the power of the wicked, with a reference to Divine restraint and discipline: “I brake the jaws (Hebrew “great teeth”) of the unrighteous” (; ); compare , “Break out the great teeth (maltā‛ōth, “jaw teeth”) of the young lions, O Yahweh.” Let the wicked be deprived of their ability for evil; let them at least be disabled from mischief. Septuagint reads “God shall break,” etc. (Compare Edmund Prys's Metrical Paraphrase of the Psalms, in the place cited.) “A bridle ... in the jaws of the peoples” (; compare ) is descriptive of the ultimate check of the Assyrian power at Jerusalem, “as when a bridle or lasso is thrown upon the jaws of a wild animal when you wish to catch and tame him” (G.A. Smith Isa, I, 235). Compare (concerning Pharaoh); (concerning Gog), “I will put hooks in (into) thy jaws.” (2) Of human labor and trials, with a reference to the Divine gentleness: “I was to them as they that lift up the yoke on their jaws” (), or 'take the yoke off their jaws,' as the humane driver eased the yoke with his hands or 'lifted it forward from neck to the jaws'; or it may perhaps refer to the removal of the yoke in the evening, when work is over.

Jawbone (). See RAMATH-LEHI.