Lexical Summary quwt: to feel a loathing Original Word: קוּטTransliteration: quwt Phonetic Spelling: (koot) Part of Speech: Verb Short Definition: to feel a loathing Meaning: to cut off, detest Strong's Concordance be grieved, loathe self A primitive root; properly, to cut off, i.e. (figuratively) detest -- begrieved, loathe self. Brown-Driver-Briggs H6962. quwt [קוֺט] dubious verb intransitive, assumed meaning break, snap (supposed to be akin to Arabic cut, cut off, pare, trim [whence Buhl assumes √ קטט]), to account for יְקוֺט Job 8:14, either as Qal Imperfect3masculine singular whose hope snappeth; or as noun [masculine] = fragile thing ("" עַכָּבִישׁ בֵּית; compare Di Bu); probably corrupt; Du Beer read קוּרִים Bu conjecture קַיִט קֻרֵי [Aramaism for ׳ק קַיִץ]. קול (√ of following; Assyrian kâlu, speak, call, cry (Tel Amarna lament), kûlu, speech; Arabic say, word; Ethiopic sound, voice,and so Aramaic קָלָא ; Phoenician קל voice, so NPunic קאל, suffix קולא; SI2 sound, voice; Late Hebrew קוֺל noise, קוֺל בֵּת = echo). |