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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
for·est
/ˈfɔrəst, ˈfɑr-/
森林,林木(
vt
.)植樹于
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
forest
資料林
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
For·est
n.
1.
An
extensive
wood
;
a
large
tract
of
land
covered
with
trees
;
in
the
United
States
,
a
wood
of
native
growth
,
or
a
tract
of
woodland
which
has
never
been
cultivated
.
2.
Eng. Law
A
large
extent
or
precinct
of
country
,
generally
waste
and
woody
,
belonging
to
the
sovereign
,
set
apart
for
the
keeping
of
game
for
his
use
,
not
inclosed
,
but
distinguished
by
certain
limits
,
and
protected
by
certain
laws
,
courts
,
and
officers
of
its
own
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
For·est
,
a.
Of
or
pertaining
to
a
forest
;
sylvan
.
Forest fly
.
Zool.
(a)
One
of
numerous
species
of
blood-sucking
flies
,
of
the
family
Tabanid
æ,
which
attack
both
men
and
beasts
.
See
Horse fly
.
(b)
A
fly
of
the
genus
Hippobosca
,
esp
.
H. equina
.
See
Horse tick
.
Forest glade
,
a
grassy
space
in
a
forest
. --
Thomson
.
Forest laws
,
laws
for
the
protection
of
game
,
preservation
of
timber
,
etc
.,
in
forests
.
Forest tree
,
a
tree
of
the
forest
,
especially
a
timber
tree
,
as
distinguished
from
a
fruit tree
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
For·est
,
v. t.
To
cover
with
trees
or
wood
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
forest
n
1:
the
trees
and
other
plants
in
a
large
densely
wooded
area
[
syn
:
wood
,
woods
]
2:
land
that
is
covered
with
trees
and
shrubs
[
syn
:
woodland
,
timberland
,
timber
]
v
:
establish
a
forest
on
previously
unforested
land
; "
afforest
the
mountains
" [
syn
:
afforest
]
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Forest
Heb
.
ya'ar
,
meaning
a
dense
wood
,
from
its
luxuriance
.
Thus
all
the
great
primeval
forests
of
Syria
(
Eccl
. 2:6;
Isa
. 44:14;
Jer
.
5:6;
Micah
5:8).
The
most
extensive
was
the
trans-Jordanic
forest
of
Ephraim
(2
Sam
. 18:6, 8;
Josh
. 17:15, 18),
which
is
probably
the
same
as
the
wood
of
Ephratah
(
Ps
. 132:6),
some
part
of
the
great
forest
of
Gilead
.
It
was
in
this
forest
that
Absalom
was
slain
by
Joab
.
David
withdrew
to
the
forest
of
Hareth
in
the
mountains
of
Judah
to
avoid
the
fury
of
Saul
(1
Sam
. 22:5).
We
read
also
of
the
forest
of
Bethel
(2
Kings
2:23,
24),
and
of
that
which
the
Israelites
passed
in
their
pursuit
of
the
Philistines
(1
Sam
. 14:25),
and
of
the
forest
of
the
cedars
of
Lebanon
(1
Kings
4:33; 2
Kings
19:23;
Hos
. 14:5, 6).
"
The
house
of
the
forest
of
Lebanon
(1
Kings
7:2; 10:17; 2
Chr
. 9:16)
was
probably
Solomon's
armoury
,
and
was
so
called
because
the
wood
of
its
many
pillars
came
from
Lebanon
,
and
they
had
the
appearance
of
a
forest
. (
See
BAALBEC
.)
Heb
.
horesh
,
denoting
a
thicket
of
trees
,
underwood
,
jungle
,
bushes
,
or
trees
entangled
,
and
therefore
affording
a
safe
hiding-place
.
place
.
This
word
is
rendered
"
forest
"
only
in
2
Chr
. 27:4.
It
is
also
rendered
"
wood
",
the
"
wood
"
in
the
"
wilderness
of
Ziph
,"
in
which
david
concealed
himself
(1
Sam
.
23:15),
which
lay
south-east
of
Hebron
.
In
Isa
. 17:19
this
word
is
in
Authorized
Version
rendered
incorrectly
"
bough
."
Heb
.
pardes
,
meaning
an
enclosed
garden
or
plantation
.
Asaph
is
(
Neh
. 2:8)
called
the
"
keeper
of
the
king's
forest
."
The
same
Hebrew
word
is
used
Eccl
. 2:5,
where
it
is
rendered
in
the
plural
"
orchards
" (R.V., "
parks
"),
and
Cant
. 4: 13,
rendered
"
orchard
" (R.V.
marg
., "
a
paradise
").
"
The
forest
of
the
vintage
" (
Zech
. 11:2, "
inaccessible
forest
,"
or
R.V. "
strong
forest
")
is
probably
a
figurative
allusion
to
Jerusalem
,
or
the
verse
may
simply
point
to
the
devastation
of
the
region
referred
to
.
The
forest
is
an
image
of
unfruitfulness
as
contrasted
with
a
cultivated
field
(
Isa
. 29:17; 32:15;
Jer
. 26:18;
Hos
. 2:12).
Isaiah
(10:19, 33, 34)
likens
the
Assyrian
host
under
Sennacherib
(q.v.)
to
the
trees
of
some
huge
forest
,
to
be
suddenly
cut
down
by
an
unseen
stroke
.
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