CUMOMS: Difference between revisions
From Book of Mormon Onomasticon
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|Jaredite noun | |Jaredite noun | ||
|Animals, listed with Cureloms and elephants (Ether 9:19) | |1. | ||
|Animals, listed with Cureloms and elephants ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/9/19#19 Ether 9:19]) | |||
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Revision as of 11:47, 16 March 2011
Jaredite noun | 1. | Animals, listed with Cureloms and elephants (Ether 9:19) |
No etymology is suggested.
Whatever fauna Cumoms were, three criteria delimit the English possibilities: they were especially useful to the Jaredites, they were indigenous to Jaredite America, and, it must be assumed, Joseph Smith did not have an English translation for them or he would have rendered it in English. Therefore, whatever etymology is proposed, it must meet these three criteria.
Perhaps Akkadian (?) kumûm, “pelican,” or hamizo (?), “swan” (RFS).
Hebrew, “kum” = “rise up, stand up.” Possibly Cumoms are bears because they show these characteristics (Reynolds, Commentary on the Book of Mormon, VI, p. 145).
Cf. Book of Mormon COM, CUMORAH, et al.
See also Cumoms / comoms Variant