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sed [2024/08/22 17:39] – ken | sed [Unknown date] (current) – external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1 | ||
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- | The word is also used to indicate " | + | The word is also used to indicate " |
+ | |||
+ | However, there are a few seemingly more dubious translations for a lot of other occurrences: | ||
+ | -in 3 instances, "plow, harrow" | ||
+ | -in 2 instances, " | ||
+ | -in 25 instances the ostensible meaning given is " | ||
+ | -in another 57 instances, "to deal violently with, despoil, devastate, ruin, dead" | ||
+ | -in 48 instances, "The Almighty" | ||
+ | |||
+ | Despite the seemingly wide variety of meanings, there is likely some sensible etymology at work here. In the first case, the act of ploughing a field causes the level ground to take on a hilly shape, albeit at a very small scale. It is these small hills and troughs that enable the farmer to plant seeds in the loosened ground. The second case is most likely a euphemism for sex. A mistress is a woman chosen primarily "to be ploughed" | ||
+ | |||
+ | The third and fourth cases likely stem from the violent nature of ploughing, as it literally rips apart the soil, but may also be influenced by a metaphorical treatment of the third case, essentially a blend of crude parlance equivalent to the modern essence "to be fucked" | ||
+ | |||
+ | The fifth case seems to stem from the 3rd/4th. Shaddai is the name given to one so powerful as to be able to easily wreak havoc; a concept which eventually lead to the idea of the omnipresence of the monotheistic " | ||
---- | ---- | ||
- | LexID 7699, 7706, 7704 | + | LexID 7699 - 7706 |
sed.1724369984.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/08/22 17:39 by ken