Strong's Concordance
Nimrod: a son of Cush and founder of the Bab. kingdom
Original Word: נִמְרוֹדPart of Speech: Proper Name Masculine
Transliteration: Nimrod
Phonetic Spelling: (nim-rode')
Short Definition: Nimrod
Brown-Driver-Briggs
, (etymology and meaning wholly unknown; Thes (dubious) below
rebel (of which Hebr. may have thought [compare Lag
BN 105]); in fact probably Babylonian name;
= a god e.g. Marduk, Wecompare Hexateuch (2), 308 f.; Nimrod, Encycl. Brit. (9). xvii. 511, RSSemitic i. 91 n.; 2d ed. 92; HomPSBA xv (1893), 291-300 proposes Narûdu = *Namra-uddu, a star-god.
< name of Babylonian king or prince: Nu-marad = 'Man of Marad' compare DlPa 220 DeGenesis 10:8 [1887]; more plausibly = Nazi-maraddash (marattash, murudas), HptAR July, 1884, 93 f. DlK (1884) SayAth. Feb. 16, 1895, Acad. Mar. 2, 1895 (compare Cheib. Mar. 9), — i.e. a Kashite king, B.C. 1378, but dubious, compare HptBAS i (1889), 183, JeremIzdubar-Nimrod, 1891, 1 ff.); — son of (q. v.), hero and hunter Genesis 10:8,9 (J; king in Babylonia, builder of Nineveh, etc. Genesis 10:10f.), 1 Chronicles 1:10; Micah 5:5 ("" ); .
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
Nimrod
Or Nimrod {nim-rode'}; probably of foreign origin; Nimrod, a son of Cush -- Nimrod.
Forms and Transliterations
כְּנִמְרֹ֛ד כנמרד נִמְר֑וֹד נִמְרֹ֑ד נִמְרֹ֖ד נמרד נמרוד kə·nim·rōḏ kenimRod kənimrōḏ nim·rō·wḏ nim·rōḏ nimRod nimrōḏ nimrōwḏ
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