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The lion 'ariy (ar-ee') a lion -- (young) lion, + pierce (from the margin). did tear in pieces taraph (taw-raf') to pluck off or pull to pieces; causatively to supply with food (as in morsels) -- catch, without doubt, feed, ravin, rend in pieces, surely, tear (in pieces). enough day (dahee) enough (as noun or adverb), used chiefly with preposition in phrases for his whelps gowr (gore) whelp. and strangled chanaq (khaw-nak') to be narrow; by implication, to throttle, or (reflex.) to choke oneself to death (by a rope) -- hang self, strangle. for his lionesses labiy' (law-bee') (great, old, stout) lion, lioness, young (lion). and filled male' (maw-lay') a primitive root, to fill or (intransitively) be full of, in a wide application (literally and figuratively) his holes chowr (khore) a cavity, socket, den -- cave, hole. with prey tereph (teh'-ref) something torn, i.e. a fragment, e.g. a fresh leaf, prey, food -- leaf, meat, prey, spoil. and his dens m`ownah (meh-o-naw') den, habitation, (dwelling) place, refuge. with ravin trephah (ter-ay-faw') prey, i.e. flocks devoured by animals -- ravin, (that which was) torn (of beasts, in pieces). |
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