HETH: Difference between revisions
From Book of Mormon Onomasticon
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|Jaredite PN & GN | |Jaredite PN & GN | ||
|1. Prince (Ether 1:16; 10:31) | |1. | ||
|Prince ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/1/16#16 Ether 1:16]; [http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/10/31#31 10:31]) | |||
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|2. King, robber (Ether 1:25–26, 10:1) | |2. | ||
|King, robber ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/1/25-26#25 Ether 1:25–26], [http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/10/1#1 10:1]) | |||
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|3. Land (Ether 8:2) | |3. | ||
|Land ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/ether/8/2#2 Ether 8:2]) | |||
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Revision as of 11:23, 21 March 2011
Jaredite PN & GN | 1. | Prince (Ether 1:16; 10:31) |
2. | King, robber (Ether 1:25–26, 10:1) | |
3. | Land (Ether 8:2) |
The biblical Hebrew PN Heth, son of Canaan, is the most likely source for an etymology.[1] See the standard biblical commentaries. Reynolds, Commentary on the Book of Mormon, VI, p. 40, suggests “terror.”
Notes
- ↑ Note that Heth is usually given as the biblical source for the biblical Hittites, ḫattū in Akkadian, and the name in cuneiform sources for NW Syria (RFS).
RFS