AKISH: Difference between revisions

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'''Etymology'''
'''Etymology'''


Though the linguistic and cultural links of [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] to the ancient Near East remain uncertain, some conjectures may still be made. The [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] name and word-element [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]] appears to be a [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] lexeme, though it may not be a separate lexeme in this name. See [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]], [[KISHKUMEN|K<small>ISHKUMEN</small>]]. [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]] is also the name of a major Mesopotamian city near [[BABYLON|B<small>ABYLON</small>]] ([[Robert F. Smith|RFS]]). [[AKISH|A<small>KISH</small>]] and [[AGOSH|A<small>GOSH</small>]] may be possible by-forms of each other.
Though the linguistic and cultural links of [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] to the ancient Near East remain uncertain, some conjectures may still be made. The [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] name and word-element [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]] appears to be a [[JAREDITES|J<small>AREDITE</small>]] lexeme, though it may not be a separate lexeme in this name. See [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]], [[KISHKUMEN|K<small>ISHKUMEN</small>]]. [[KISH|K<small>ISH</small>]] is also the name of a major Mesopotamian city near [[BABYLON|B<small>ABYLON</small>]] ([[Robert F. Smith|RFS]]). [[AKISH|A<small>KISH</small>]] and [[AGOSH|A<small>GOSH</small>]] may be possible by-forms of each other.

Revision as of 18:10, 28 January 2013

Jaredite PN 1. Son of KIMNOR (Ether 8:10, 11 (x2), 13, 14 (x2), 15 (x2), 17 (x2); 9:1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11 (x3), 12 (x2))
Jaredite GN 2. Wilderness near the plains of AGOSH and HESHLON (Ether 14:3, 4, 14)

Etymology

Though the linguistic and cultural links of JAREDITE to the ancient Near East remain uncertain, some conjectures may still be made. The JAREDITE name and word-element KISH appears to be a JAREDITE lexeme, though it may not be a separate lexeme in this name. See KISH, KISHKUMEN. KISH is also the name of a major Mesopotamian city near BABYLON (RFS). AKISH and AGOSH may be possible by-forms of each other.

The PN Ikausu appears in the ASSYRIAN annals of Esarhaddon and Ashurbanipal. The Hebrew PN Ikkesh, cited in 2 Samuel 23:26 and 1 Chronicles 11:28; 27:9, is from the Hebrew root ʿqs, "twist, pervert" (RFS & JAT) and would be a very acceptable name for a wilderness (RFS). The biblical PN Achish, cited in 1 Samuel 21:10 (and in chapters 27-29 passim), is the name of the PHILISTINE king of Gath (as well as the PN of a seventh century B.C. ruler of Ekron, not otherwise cited in the Old Testament) and has been connected with the Aegean name Achish = Ikausu (see S. Gittin, in Barry M. Gittlen, ed., Sacred Time, Sacred Place: Archaeology and the Religion of Israel [Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2002], 115). AKISH is also, according to Nibley, the Egypto-Hittite name for Cyprus (Hugh Nibley, Lehi in the Desert, chapter 2 = CWHN 5:32-33, n. 14; id. An Approach to the Book of Mormon, lesson 22 = CWHN 6:289, n. 31).

Variants

Deseret Alphabet:

Notes