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Dict: smith - FIELD



smith:



FIELD - F>@ - The Hebrew sadeh is applied to any cultivated ground, and in some instances in marked opposition to the neighboring wilderness. On the other hand the sadeh is frequently contrasted with what is enclosed, whether a vineyard, a garden or a walled town. In many passages the term implies what is remote from a house, kjv@Genesis:4:8 kjv@Genesis:24:63 kjv@Genesis:22:25 ) or settled habitation, as in the case of Esau. kjv@Genesis:25:27) The separate plots of ground were marked off by stones, which might easily be removed, (19:14; 27:17) cf. kjv@Job:24:2; kjv@Proverbs:22:28 kjv@Proverbs:23:10 The absence of fences rendered the fields liable to damage from straying cattle, kjv@Exodus:22:5) or fire, kjv@Exodus:22:6; 2 Samuel 14:30) hence the necessity of constantly watching flocks and herds. From the absence of enclosures, cultivated land of any size might be termed a field.