The SIN of Sodom
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Gen 18:20 And the LORD said, Because the cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and because their sin is very grievous;
H5467 (Brown-Driver-Briggs)
סדם
sedôm
BDB Definition:
Sodom = “burning”
1) a Canaanite city, usually paired with Gomorrah, located in the area of the Dead Sea and the Jordan river; both cities destroyed by God in judgment
Part of Speech: noun proper locative
A Related Word by BDB/Strong’s Number: from an unused root meaning to scorch
H5467 (Strong)
סְדֹם
sedôm
sed-ome'
From an unused root meaning to scorch; burnt (that is, volcanic or bituminous) district; Sedom, a place near the Dead Sea: - Sodom.
Gomorrah = “submersion”
1) the twin-city in evil with Sodom, both destroyed in judgment by God with fire from heaven
1a) of iniquity (figuratively)
H6017 (Brown-Driver-Briggs)
עמרה
‛ămôrâh
BDB Definition:
Gomorrah = “submersion”
1) the twin-city in evil with Sodom, both destroyed in judgment by God with fire from heaven
1a) of iniquity (figuratively)
Part of Speech: noun proper locative
A Related Word by BDB/Strong’s Number: from H6014
H6017 (Strong)
עֲמֹרָה
‛ămôrâh
am-o-raw'
From H6014; a (ruined) heap; Amorah, a place in Palestine: - Gomorrah.
H6014 (Ancient Hebrew)
H6014 = AHLB# 2554 (V)
2554) Rmo% (Rmo% AhMR) ac: Bind co: Sheaf ab: ?: [from: mo]
V) Rmo% (Rmo% Ah-MR) - Bind: [freq. 3] (vf: Hitpael, Piel) |kjv: merchandise, sheaf| {H6014}
Nm) Rmo% (Rmo% Ah-MR) - Wool: As used for binding. [Aramaic only] [freq. 1] |kjv: wool| {H6015}
bm) Rimo% (Rimo% Ah-MYR) - Sheaf: As bound. [freq. 4] |kjv: sheaf, handful| {H5995}
gm) Rmfo% (Rmfo% AhW-MR) - I. Sheaf: As bound. II. Omer: A standard of measure. [freq. 14] |kjv: omer, sheaf| {H6016}
H6014 (Brown-Driver-Briggs)
עמר
‛âmar
BDB Definition:
1) to bind sheaves
1a) (Piel) to gather
2) to manipulate, deal tyrannically with
2a) (Hithpael) to treat as a slave
Part of Speech: verb
A Related Word by BDB/Strong’s Number: a primitive root
H6014 (Strong)
עָמַר
‛âmar
aw-mar'
A primitive root; properly apparently to heap; figuratively to chastise (as if piling blows); specifically (as denominative from H6016) to gather grain: - bind sheaves, make merchandise of.
Gen 1:22 And Elohiym blessed them, saying, Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let fowl multiply in the earth.
Job 6:5 Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass? or loweth the ox over his fodder?
Job 11:12 For vain man would be wise, though man be born like a wild ass's colt.
Job 39:5 Who hath sent out the wild ass free? or who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass?
Jer 2:24 A wild ass used to the wilderness, that snuffeth up the wind at her pleasure; in her occasion who can turn her away? all they that seek her will not weary themselves; in her month they shall find her.
Hos 8:9 For they are gone up to Assyria, a wild ass alone by himself: Ephraim hath hired lovers.
H6501 (Ancient Hebrew)
H6501 = AHLB# 1388-E (N)
1388) Rp% (Rp% PR) ac: Tread co: Bull ab: Fruitful: The pictograph p is a picture of an open mouth, the r is a picture of a head. Combined these mean "open the head". The heads of grains are scattered on the threshing floor, a smooth, hard and level surface. An ox is lead around the floor crushing the heads, opening them to reveal the seed inside. Also the fruit of trees that harvested. (eng: bull - with the exchange of the b and p and the l and r; fruit, also other fruits with a "pr" such as pear and apricot)
A) Rp% (Rp% PR) ac: ? co: Bull ab: ?
Nm) Rp% (Rp% PR) - Bull: [freq. 133] |kjv: bullock, bull, oxen, calf, young| {H6499}
Nf1) Erp% (Erp% P-RH) - Heifer: [freq. 26] |kjv: heifer, kine| {H6510}
B) Rrp% (Rrp% PRR) ac: Break co: ? ab: ?
V) Rrp% (Rrp% P-RR) - Break: To throw something on the ground and break it by trampling. [freq. 50] (vf: Paal, Hiphil, Hophal, Pilpel) |kjv: break, void, defeat, disannul, disappoint, frustrate, nought, cease, clean, dissolved, divide| {H6565}
dm) Rfrp% (Rfrp% P-RWR) - Skillet: A flat surface for preparing foods. [freq. 3] |kjv: pot, pan| {H6517}
C) Rpa% (Rpa% APR) ac: ? co: Ash ab: ?: At the conclusion of the treading, an abundance of fruit is acquired. Anything in abundance.
Nm) Rpa% (Rpa% A-PR) - Ash: [freq. 24] |kjv: ash| {H665, H666}
D) Rap% (Rap% PAR) ac: ? co: Decoration ab: ?: The fruits that grow on the branches of a tree as decorations.
V) Rap% (Rap% P-AR) - Decorate: [freq. 14] (vf: Hitpael, Piel) |kjv: glorify, beatify, boast, bough, glory| {H6286}
Nm) Rap% (Rap% P-AR) - Turban: A piece of cloth that is wound around the head as a decoration. [freq. 7] |kjv: goodly, beauty, goodly, ornament, tire| {H6287}
gf1) Erafp% (Erafp% PW-A-RH) - Branch: [freq. 7] |kjv: branch, bough, sprig| {H6288}
if1) Erapt% (Erapt% TP-A-RH) - Decoration: [df: trapt] [freq. 51] |kjv: glory, beauty, beautiful, honour, fair, glorious, bravery, comely, excellent| {H8597}
lm) Rarap% (Rarap% P-AR-AR) - Blackness: [Unknown connection to root;] [df: rwrap] [freq. 2] |kjv: blackness| {H6289}
E) Arp% (Arp% PRA) ac: ? co: Fruit ab: ?
V) Arp% (Arp% P-RA) - Fruitful: [freq. 1] (vf: Hiphil) |kjv: fruitful| {H6500}
Nm) Arp% (Arp% P-RA) - Wild-ass: A wild animal as prolific. [df: hrp] [freq. 10] |kjv: wild ass| {H6501}
H) Erp% (Erp% PRH) ac: ? co: Fruit ab: ?
V) Erp% (Erp% P-RH) - Fruitful: [freq. 29] (vf: Paal, Hiphil) |kjv: fruitful, increase, bear, forth, bring| {H6509}
fm) Irp% (Irp% P-RY) - Fruit: [freq. 119] |kjv: fruit, fruitful, bough, reward| {H6529}
J) Rfp% (Rfp% PWR) ac: Crush co: Winepress ab: ?: Grapes are placed in winepress and trampled on to crush the fruit bringing out the juice of the grape.
V) Rfp% (Rfp% PWR) - Crush: [freq. 3] (vf: Hiphil) |kjv: bring, broken, take| {H6331}
Nf1) Erfp% (Erfp% PW-RH) - Winepress: [freq. 2] |kjv: winepress, press| {H6333}
Adopted Roots;
2604 Rup Burst
2634 Drp Divide, Seed
2635 Zrp Village
2636 Hrp Burst, Bud
2637 Urp Break
2638 Krp Whip
2639 Mrp Rip
2640 Xrp Split, Hoof
2642 Yrp Spread, Breach
2643 Qrp Tear
2740 Rsq Tie, Sash, Conspire
2653 Rtp Open, Interpretation
2811 Rbs Burst, Grain
H6501 (Brown-Driver-Briggs)
פּרה / פּרא
pere' / pereh
BDB Definition:
1) wild ass
Part of Speech: noun masculine
A Related Word by BDB/Strong’s Number: from H6500
H6501 (Strong)
פֶּרֶה פֶּרֶא
pere' pereh
peh'-reh, peh'-reh
From H6500 in the secondary sense of running wild; the onager: - wild (ass).
H6500 (Ancient Hebrew)
H6500 = AHLB# 1388-E (V)
1388) Rp% (Rp% PR) ac: Tread co: Bull ab: Fruitful: The pictograph p is a picture of an open mouth, the r is a picture of a head. Combined these mean "open the head". The heads of grains are scattered on the threshing floor, a smooth, hard and level surface. An ox is lead around the floor crushing the heads, opening them to reveal the seed inside. Also the fruit of trees that harvested. (eng: bull - with the exchange of the b and p and the l and r; fruit, also other fruits with a "pr" such as pear and apricot)
A) Rp% (Rp% PR) ac: ? co: Bull ab: ?
Nm) Rp% (Rp% PR) - Bull: [freq. 133] |kjv: bullock, bull, oxen, calf, young| {H6499}
Nf1) Erp% (Erp% P-RH) - Heifer: [freq. 26] |kjv: heifer, kine| {H6510}
B) Rrp% (Rrp% PRR) ac: Break co: ? ab: ?
V) Rrp% (Rrp% P-RR) - Break: To throw something on the ground and break it by trampling. [freq. 50] (vf: Paal, Hiphil, Hophal, Pilpel) |kjv: break, void, defeat, disannul, disappoint, frustrate, nought, cease, clean, dissolved, divide| {H6565}
dm) Rfrp% (Rfrp% P-RWR) - Skillet: A flat surface for preparing foods. [freq. 3] |kjv: pot, pan| {H6517}
C) Rpa% (Rpa% APR) ac: ? co: Ash ab: ?: At the conclusion of the treading, an abundance of fruit is acquired. Anything in abundance.
Nm) Rpa% (Rpa% A-PR) - Ash: [freq. 24] |kjv: ash| {H665, H666}
D) Rap% (Rap% PAR) ac: ? co: Decoration ab: ?: The fruits that grow on the branches of a tree as decorations.
V) Rap% (Rap% P-AR) - Decorate: [freq. 14] (vf: Hitpael, Piel) |kjv: glorify, beatify, boast, bough, glory| {H6286}
Nm) Rap% (Rap% P-AR) - Turban: A piece of cloth that is wound around the head as a decoration. [freq. 7] |kjv: goodly, beauty, goodly, ornament, tire| {H6287}
gf1) Erafp% (Erafp% PW-A-RH) - Branch: [freq. 7] |kjv: branch, bough, sprig| {H6288}
if1) Erapt% (Erapt% TP-A-RH) - Decoration: [df: trapt] [freq. 51] |kjv: glory, beauty, beautiful, honour, fair, glorious, bravery, comely, excellent| {H8597}
lm) Rarap% (Rarap% P-AR-AR) - Blackness: [Unknown connection to root;] [df: rwrap] [freq. 2] |kjv: blackness| {H6289}
E) Arp% (Arp% PRA) ac: ? co: Fruit ab: ?
V) Arp% (Arp% P-RA) - Fruitful: [freq. 1] (vf: Hiphil) |kjv: fruitful| {H6500}
Nm) Arp% (Arp% P-RA) - Wild-ass: A wild animal as prolific. [df: hrp] [freq. 10] |kjv: wild ass| {H6501}
H) Erp% (Erp% PRH) ac: ? co: Fruit ab: ?
V) Erp% (Erp% P-RH) - Fruitful: [freq. 29] (vf: Paal, Hiphil) |kjv: fruitful, increase, bear, forth, bring| {H6509}
fm) Irp% (Irp% P-RY) - Fruit: [freq. 119] |kjv: fruit, fruitful, bough, reward| {H6529}
J) Rfp% (Rfp% PWR) ac: Crush co: Winepress ab: ?: Grapes are placed in winepress and trampled on to crush the fruit bringing out the juice of the grape.
V) Rfp% (Rfp% PWR) - Crush: [freq. 3] (vf: Hiphil) |kjv: bring, broken, take| {H6331}
Nf1) Erfp% (Erfp% PW-RH) - Winepress: [freq. 2] |kjv: winepress, press| {H6333}
Adopted Roots;
2604 Rup Burst
2634 Drp Divide, Seed
2635 Zrp Village
2636 Hrp Burst, Bud
2637 Urp Break
2638 Krp Whip
2639 Mrp Rip
2640 Xrp Split, Hoof
2642 Yrp Spread, Breach
2643 Qrp Tear
2740 Rsq Tie, Sash, Conspire
2653 Rtp Open, Interpretation
2811 Rbs Burst, Grain
H6500 (Brown-Driver-Briggs)
פּרא
pârâ'
BDB Definition:
1) (Hiphil) to bear fruit, be fruitful
Part of Speech: verb
A Related Word by BDB/Strong’s Number: a primitive root
H6500 (Strong)
פָּרָא
pârâ'
paw-raw'
A primitive root; to bear fruit: - be fruitful.
A New Molecule of Life?
Peter E Nielsen
University of Copenhagen
What does Nils mean? A Scandinavian form of the Greek Nikolaos, from nike, "victory", and laos, "people".
Origin of Life?
A major goal of these efforts to create life de novo in the laboratory is to better understand how life may have started on earth. Considering the detailed microbiology of contemporary life-forms, it seems very clear that RNA is probably more primordial and central to life than DNA and proteins. This one molecule can carry both the genotype (the genetic sequence information) of an organism and the phenotype (catalytic functions). For this reason as well as other evidence, many scientists now accept the idea that our DNA/RNA/protein world was preceded by an RNA world [see “The Origin of Life on the Earth,” by Leslie E. Orgel; Scientific American, October 1994].
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=triple-helix-designing-a-new-molecule&print=true Page 4 of 5
Triple Helix: Designing a New Molecule of Life: Scientific American 12/3/08 8:36 AM
Yet it is very unclear how primitive prebiotic conditions could have produced RNA molecules, in particular the sugar ribose in the RNA backbone. Further, even if RNA molecules were produced, RNA’s very poor chemical stability hardly would have allowed the molecules to survive unprotected long enough to play a central role in the initial chemical evolution of life. Thus, a molecule like PNA appears very attractive as a candidate for a pre-RNA world: it is extremely stable and chemically simple, and it carries sequence information.
In 2000 Stanley L. Miller, famous for his seminal experiments more than 50 years ago showing that amino acids can form under conditions believed to simulate those on the primitive earth, identified precursors of PNA in similar experiments. Researchers have also shown that sequence information in a PNA oligomer can be transferred by “chemical copying” to another PNA oligomer or to an RNA molecule—processes needed for a PNA world and then a following transitional PNA/RNA world. Admittedly, it is a long leap from these scanty observations to building a strong case for a pre-RNA world based on PNA or some very similar molecule, and for the hypothesis to have any legs at all, scientists must uncover PNA molecules possessing catalytic activity.
Much remains to be learned about PNA 15 years after its discovery: Are catalytic PNA molecules possible? What is a good system for delivering therapeutic PNA into cells? Can a totally alien, PNA-based life-form be created in the lab? I am confident these questions and many others will be well answered over the next 15 years.
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