Stall
Stall
(, marbek, a stable for cattle, Amo 6:4; Mal 4:2; fat, 1Sa 28:24; fatted, Jer 46:21; , urvah, or , uryah, a crib, 2Ch 32:33, or a span, 1Ki 4:26; 2Ch 9:25; , repheth, a rack for fodder, Heb 3:17; , Luk 2:13, a manger, as elsewhere rendered; stalled is , crammed, Pro 15:17; fatted, 1Ki 4:23). Among the ancient Egyptians the stables for horses were in the center of the villa; but the farmyard, where the cattle were kept, stood at some distance. from the house, like the Roman rustica. It consisted of two parts the sheds for housing the cattle, which stood at the upper end, and the yard, where rows of rings were fixed in order to tie them while feeding in the day time (Wilkinson, Ancient Egypt. 1, 30). SEE HORSE.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Stall
STALL.See Manger.
Fuente: A Dictionary Of Christ And The Gospels
Stall
STALL.See Manger.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Stall
stol ((1) , marbek, literally,, a place for tying up (Amo 6:4; Mal 4:2), (2) , ‘abhas, to give fodder (Pro 15:17), (3) , ‘urvah, to pluck and feed (1Ki 4:26; 2Ch 9:25; 2Ch 32:28), (4) , repheth, a resting place (Hab 3:17); (5) , phatne, a manger or crib (Luk 13:15; compare , ‘ebhus, translated crib in Isa 1:3; Pro 14:4)): During the season when cattle are not being used they are allowed to roam in the fields. Otherwise they are tied in rooms in the winter time, or under shelters made of green boughs in the summer, and all their food brought to them. Horses and cattle alike are haltered and the chains fastened through holes made in stones projecting from the walls. No stanchions and no separating partitions between animals are used. The horses are usually hobbled as well.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Stall
For cattle
Pro 15:17
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Stall
* For STALL see MANGER