NIMROD: Difference between revisions

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For the etymology see the standard biblical commentaries. <ref>For an LDS discussion of the biblical Nimrod (including etymologies of the name), see Bruce W. Warren and John A. Tvedtnes, “In Search of Historic Nimrod,” NPSEHA, No. 155(Nov. 1983), and Warren's earlier article, “Nimrod and his Times,” UAS Newsletter, No. 16 (Dec. 1953).</ref> The name is also equated in the Bible with the land of Assyria ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/micah/5/6#6 Micah 5:6]).
For the etymology see the standard biblical commentaries. <ref>For an LDS discussion of the biblical Nimrod (including etymologies of the name), see Bruce W. Warren and John A. Tvedtnes, “In Search of Historic Nimrod,” NPSEHA, No. 155(Nov. 1983), and Warren's earlier article, “Nimrod and his Times,” UAS Newsletter, No. 16 (Dec. 1953).</ref> The name is also equated in the Bible with the land of Assyria ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/micah/5/6#6 Micah 5:6]).


Some would like to see possibly a variant of Nimrah and thus connect this name with leonid names (BU, NPSEHA 150.0 [Aug. 1982]), citing Dahood (in Pettinato Archives, p. 277), that on the pattern of Ugaritic ibrd, “the bull of Hadd,” Nimrod should be nmrd, “the panther of Hadd” (JAT, BU).
Some would like to see possibly a variant of [[NIMRAH|N<small>IMRAH</small>]] and thus connect this name with leonid names (BU, NPSEHA 150.0 [Aug. 1982]), citing Dahood (in Pettinato Archives, p. 277), that on the pattern of Ugaritic ''ibrd'', “the bull of Hadd,” Nimrod should be ''nmrd'', “the panther of Hadd” (JAT, BU).


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 11:40, 12 January 2012

Jaredite PN 1. Old World valley named after NIMROD, the hunter (Ether 2:1, 4)
Jaredite GN 2. Prince (Ether 7:22)

For the etymology see the standard biblical commentaries. [1] The name is also equated in the Bible with the land of Assyria (Micah 5:6).

Some would like to see possibly a variant of NIMRAH and thus connect this name with leonid names (BU, NPSEHA 150.0 [Aug. 1982]), citing Dahood (in Pettinato Archives, p. 277), that on the pattern of Ugaritic ibrd, “the bull of Hadd,” Nimrod should be nmrd, “the panther of Hadd” (JAT, BU).

Notes

  1. For an LDS discussion of the biblical Nimrod (including etymologies of the name), see Bruce W. Warren and John A. Tvedtnes, “In Search of Historic Nimrod,” NPSEHA, No. 155(Nov. 1983), and Warren's earlier article, “Nimrod and his Times,” UAS Newsletter, No. 16 (Dec. 1953).
RFS