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giants
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English Dictionary: giants by the DICT Development Group
1 result for giants
From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Giants
      (1.) Heb. nephilim, meaning "violent" or "causing to fall" (Gen.
      6:4). These were the violent tyrants of those days, those who
      fell upon others. The word may also be derived from a root
      signifying "wonder," and hence "monsters" or "prodigies." In
      Num. 13:33 this name is given to a Canaanitish tribe, a race of
      large stature, "the sons of Anak." The Revised Version, in these
      passages, simply transliterates the original, and reads
      "Nephilim."
     
         (2.) Heb. rephaim, a race of giants (Deut. 3:11) who lived on
      the east of Jordan, from whom Og was descended. They were
      probably the original inhabitants of the land before the
      immigration of the Canaanites. They were conquered by
      Chedorlaomer (Gen. 14:5), and their territories were promised as
      a possession to Abraham (15:20). The Anakim, Zuzim, and Emim
      were branches of this stock.
     
         In Job 26:5 (R.V., "they that are deceased;" marg., "the
      shades," the "Rephaim") and Isa. 14:9 this Hebrew word is
      rendered (A.V.) "dead." It means here "the shades," the departed
      spirits in Sheol. In Sam. 21:16, 18, 20, 33, "the giant" is
      (A.V.) the rendering of the singular form _ha raphah_, which may
      possibly be the name of the father of the four giants referred
      to here, or of the founder of the Rephaim. The Vulgate here
      reads "Arapha," whence Milton (in Samson Agonistes) has borrowed
      the name "Harapha." (See also 1 Chron. 20:5, 6, 8; Deut. 2:11,
      20; 3:13; Josh. 15:8, etc., where the word is similarly rendered
      "giant.") It is rendered "dead" in (A.V.) Ps. 88:10; Prov. 2:18;
      9:18; 21:16: in all these places the Revised Version marg. has
      "the shades." (See also Isa. 26:14.)
     
         (3.) Heb. 'Anakim (Deut. 2:10, 11, 21; Josh. 11:21, 22; 14:12,
      15; called "sons of Anak," Num. 13:33; "children of Anak,"
      13:22; Josh. 15:14), a nomad race of giants descended from Arba
      (Josh. 14:15), the father of Anak, that dwelt in the south of
      Palestine near Hebron (Gen. 23:2; Josh. 15:13). They were a
      Cushite tribe of the same race as the Philistines and the
      Egyptian shepherd kings. David on several occasions encountered
      them (2 Sam. 21:15-22). From this race sprung Goliath (1 Sam.
      17:4).
     
         (4.) Heb. 'emin, a warlike tribe of the ancient Canaanites.
      They were "great, and many, and tall, as the Anakims" (Gen.
      14:5; Deut. 2:10, 11).
     
         (5.) Heb. Zamzummim (q.v.), Deut. 2:20 so called by the
      Amorites.
     
         (6.) Heb. gibbor (Job 16:14), a mighty one, i.e., a champion
      or hero. In its plural form (gibborim) it is rendered "mighty
      men" (2 Sam. 23:8-39; 1 Kings 1:8; 1 Chr. 11:9-47; 29:24.) The
      band of six hundred whom David gathered around him when he was a
      fugitive were so designated. They were divided into three
      divisions of two hundred each, and thirty divisions of twenty
      each. The captians of the thirty divisions were called "the
      thirty," the captains of the two hundred "the three," and the
      captain over the whole was called "chief among the captains" (2
      Sam. 23:8). The sons born of the marriages mentioned in Gen. 6:4
      are also called by this Hebrew name.
     
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