GIDGIDDONAH

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Revision as of 23:04, 29 January 2011 by Squidge (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<pre>GIDGIDDONAH Lehite PN General, ca. 4th c. AD (Mormon 6:13) For the reduplication of gd, see Numbers 33:32, Hor-hagidgad.51 GIDGIDDONI and GIDGIDDONAH may somehow be de...")
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GIDGIDDONAH

Lehite PN		General, ca. 4th c. AD (Mormon 6:13)

For the reduplication of gd, see Numbers 33:32, Hor-hagidgad.51 GIDGIDDONI and GIDGIDDONAH may somehow be derived from or related to the biblical 
Gidgad/Gudgodah (Judges 20:45, Deuteronomy 10:7), and perhaps to Hor-hagidgad, “Hollow of Gidgad” (Numbers 33:32-33), which may be the same location as 
Arabic Wadi Ghadhaghedh.52A connection with Gid, Giddianhi, Giddonah, and Gidgiddoni seems unavoidable. 

ḏd-ḏh.wt-iw-f + ʿnh., “Thoth hath said: he shall live,” and ḏd-ḏh.wti-iw-s + ʿnh., “Thoth hath said: she shall live.”  On this pattern, the Nephite name would be 
Egyptian dd-dḥ.wty-it-n3 + ʿnḫ., “Thoth hath said:  We shall live.”53

See GID, GIDDONAH, GIDDIANHI, GIDGIDDONI.


51 It is quite common for Semitic “hollow” roots, such as gd, besides exhibiting long vowels, e.g., gād, to also have quadriliteral variants such as gdgd, as the above 
Hebrew GN demonstrates. Another similar example is biblical Gilgal from gl or glgl or gll. *Does the Critical Text give any variants for the spelling of Gidgiddonah?

52 J. R. Zorn in Freedman, ed., Anchor Bible Dictionary, III: 287.

53 LID, 28 and ABM, 236