Lexicon sumponeyah: a bagpipe Part of Speech: Noun Feminine Transliteration: sumponeyah Phonetic Spelling: (soom-po-neh-yaw') Short Definition: bagpipe NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Origin(Aramaic) of foreign origin Definitiona bagpipe NASB Translationbagpipe (4).
Brown-Driver-Briggs סוּמְמֹּנְיָה noun feminine, bag-pipe, or double pipe, or Pan's pipe (see GFM JBL, 1905, 166 ff.) (Late Hebrew Levy NHWB iii. 492; Late Hebrew Aramaic סִימְלאסמּוֺן is tube, especially vein, artery Id ib. 513; loan-word from (late) Greek συμφωνία, Krauss ii. 376, 390 Bev 41 Dr Daniel 3:5 Nes MM 37 (hence also later Latin symphonia, Ital. zampogna), Prince KB 9230); — absolute ׳ס Daniel 3:5,15, = סיפניה Kt, סוּמֹּנְיָה Qr Daniel 3:10 (Syriac id.; compare Palmyrene ספון = σύμφωνος, in agreement, Lzb 330 GACooke Inscr. 338). Strong's dulcimer (Aramaic) or cuwmponyah (Aramaic) {soom-po-neh-yaw'}; or ciyphonya: (Dan. 3:10) (Aramaic) {see-fo-neh-yaw'}; of Greek origin; a bagpipe (with a double pipe) -- dulcimer. |
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