south : (1) נגב , neghebh , according BDB from root נגב , nāghabh , meaning "to be dry," the word most often used, in the Revised Version (British and American) capitalized (South) in those places where it seems to denote a particular region, i.e. to the South of Judah. (2) ימין , yāmı̄n , "right hand," "right." The derived meaning, "south," seems to imply an eastern posture in prayer in which the right hand is toward the South; compare Arabic yamı̂n , "right," and yemen , "Yemen," a region in Southwestern Arabia. (3) תּימן , tēmān , from the same root as (2) is often used for the south; also for the south wind ( Psalm 78:26; Song of Solomon 4:16 ). (4) ים , yām , literally, "sea" (Psalm 107:3 ). (5) דּרום , dārōm , etymology doubtful (Deuteronomy 33:23; Ezekiel 40:24 ). (6) מדבּר , midhbār , literally, "desert" (Psalm 75:6 , reading doubtful).
(7) λίψ , lı́ps , "south west wind" ( Acts 27:12 ). (8) μεσημβρία , mesēmbrı́a , literally, "mid-day"; "south" (Acts 8:26 ); "noon" (Acts 22:6 ). (9) νότος , nótos , "south wind" (Luke 12:55; Acts 27:13; Acts 28:13 ); "south" (1 Macc 3:57; Matthew 12:42; Luke 11:31; Luke 13:29; Revelation 21:13 ).
The south wind is often referred to: see Song of Solomon 4:16; Job 37:9 (compare Job 9:9 ); Zechariah 9:14 (of Isaiah 21:1 ); Luke 12:55 .
Of the passages where South ( neghebh ) clearly refers to a particular region between Palestine and Sinai see: "And Abraham journeyed, going on still toward the South" ( neghbāh ) ( Genesis 12:9; Genesis 13:1; Deuteronomy 1:7 ). We read of "the South of the Jerahmeelites," "the South of the Kenites" (1 Samuel 27:10 ); "the South of the Cherethites," "the South of Caleb" (1 Samuel 30:14 ); "the South of Judah" (2 Chronicles 28:18 ); "Ramoth of the South" (1 Samuel 30:27 ).
In Psalm 126:4 , "Turn again our captivity, O Y ahweh, as the streams in the South," we have a figurative reference to the fact that, after a long period of drought, the dry watercourses are finally filled with rushing streams. The reference in Ezekiel 20:46 f to "the forest of the South" is to a condition of things very different from that which exists today, though the region is not incapable of supporting trees if they are only planted and protected.
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (ISBE) was edited by James Orr, John Nuelsen, Edgar Mullins, Morris Evans, and Melvin Grove Kyle and was published complete in 1939. This web site includes the complete text.
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