sub-scribe
(sb-skrib)v. sub-scribed,
sub-scrib-ing, sub-scribes.v. tr. 1. To pledge or contribute (a sum of money).
2. To sign (one's name) at the end of a document. 3. To sign one's name to
in attestation, testimony, or consent: subscribe a will.v. intr. 1. To
contract to receive and pay for a certain number of issues of a publication,
for tickets to a series of events or performances, or for a utility service,
for example. 2. To promise to pay or contribute money: subscribe to a charity.
3. To feel or express hearty approval: I subscribe to your opinion. See
Synonyms at assent. 4. To sign one's name. 5. To affix one's signature to a
document as a witness or to show consent.[Middle English subscriben, from Latin
subscribere : sub-, sub- + scribere, to write. See skribh-.]--sub-scrib'er n.
*****
duke
(dook, dyook)n. Abbr. D., Du. 1. A nobleman
with the highest hereditary rank, especially a man of the highest grade of the
peerage in Great Britain. 2. A sovereign prince who rules an independent duchy
in some European countries. 3. Used as the title for such a nobleman. 4. Often dukes. Slang. A fist: Put up your
dukes! 5. Botany. A type of cherry intermediate between a sweet and a sour
cherry.v. intr. duked, duk-ing, dukes. To fight, especially with fists: duking
it out.[Middle English, from Old French duc, from Latin dux, duc-, leader, from
ducere, to lead. See deuk-., N., sense 4, short for Duke of Yorks, rhyming
slang for forks, fingers.]
*****
leas-ing
(lesing)n.
Archaic. 1. The act of lying. 2. A lie;
a falsehood.[Middle English lesing, from Old English leasung, from
leasian, to lie, from leas, untrue. See leu-.]
*****
rav-inalso ra-ven
(ravn)n. 1. Voracity;
rapaciousness. 2. Something taken as prey. 3. The act or practice of
preying.[Middle English ravin, raven, from Old French ravine, rapine, from
Latin rapina, from rapere, to seize. See rep-.]
American Heritage Dictionary
.*************
Wikipedia
Aholibamah
Aholibamah (Hebrew: אָהֳלִיבָמָה ʾĀhŏlīḇāmā; "My
tabernacle of/is height/exaltation" or "Tent of the High
Place"[1]), is an eight-time referenced matriarch in the biblical
record.[2]
Aholibamah (a
descendant of Ishmael) was the daughter of Anah of Zibeon the Hivite. Her
maternal grandfather was Zibeon the Hivite, son of Seir the Horite.[3] She
was one of two Canaanite women who married Esau, the son of Isaac, when he
was in his forties. Isaac and his wife Rebecca, however, were greatly
opposed to this union.[4] So, according to some Biblical scholars, Esau
changed her name to the Hebrew name "Judith", as to pacify his
parents.[5]
Biblical scholars
have thus conciliated the two different name accounts given in Genesis for the
three wives of Esau:
*****
Mount Seir
(Hebrew: הַר-שֵׂעִיר, Har Sēʿīr) is the ancient and biblical name for a
mountainous region stretching between the Dead Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba in the
northwestern region of Edom and southeast of the Kingdom of Judah. It may also
have marked the older historical limit of Ancient Egypt in Canaan.[1] A place called
"Seir, in the land of Shasu" (ta-Shasu se`er, t3-sh3sw s`r), thought
to be near Petra, Jordan, is listed in the temple of Amenhotep III at Soleb
(ca. 1380 BC).[citation needed]
The modern Arabic
equivalent is thought to be Jibal ash-Sharah (Arabic: جبال الشراة, romanized:
Jibāl ash-Sharāh, lit. 'Mountains of Sharāh') in Jordan.[citation needed]
**************************
. . . God
created
he heaven
**
She
heavens
declare
he
glory
of
God;
**
For
God
doth know
that
in he day
ye
eat thereof,
then your eyes
shall be opened,
an ye
shall be
as
gods,
knowing
good
an evil.
**
An
ye
shall tell
my
father
of
all my glory
in Egypt,
***
An God
made
he firmament,
**
an
he firmament
sheweth
his
handiwork.
**
. . . an he earth
**
An God
said,
Let
he earth
bring forth grass,
he herb
yielding seed,
an he fruit tree
yielding fruit
after his kind,
whose seed
isin itself,
upon he earth:
***
an desired
to
find a tabernacle
for
he God
of
Jacob.
But
Solomon
built him
an house.
How be
it
he
most High
dwelleth not
in temples
made with
hands;
as saith the prophet,
heaven is my throne,
an he earth
is
my
footstool:
where
is
the
house
that
ye build
unto me?
an where
is he place
of
my
rest?
For all
those
things
hath mine hand made,
and all
those
things
have been,
saith
he Lord:
***
All
things
are
full of labour;
man
cannot utter
it:
he
eye
is
not satisfied
with
seeing,
nor he ear
filled with hearing.
He thing
that
hath been,
it is
that which shall be;
an that
which is done
is
that
which shall be done:
an
there
is
no new thing under
the sun.
**
An Abimelech
charged
all
his people,
saying,
He
that toucheth
this man
or
his wife
shall surely
be
put to death.
Then Isaac
sowed
in that land,
an received
in
the same year
an hundredfold:
an he Lord
blessed him.
but
to
this man
will
I
look,
even to him
that
is poor
an
of
a contrite spirit,
and trembleth
at
my
word.
ISamuelO
