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BRIMSTONE @ kjv@Genesis:19:24; kjv@Job:18:15; kjv@Psalms:11:6; kjv@Luke:17:29

smith:



BRIMSTONE - B>@ - Brimstone, or sulphur, is found in considerable quantities on the shores of the Dead Sea. kjv@Genesis:19:24) It is a well-known simple mineral substance, crystalline, easily melted, very inflammable, and when burning emits a peculiar suffocating odor. It is found in great abundance near volcanoes. The soil around Sodom and Gomorrah abounded in sulphur and bitumen.

easton:



Brimstone @ an inflammable mineral substance found in quantities on the shores of the Dead Sea. The cities of the plain were destroyed by a rain of fire and brimstone kjv@Genesis:19:24-25). In kjv@Isaiah:34:9 allusion is made to the destruction of these cities. This word figuratively denotes destruction or punishment kjv@Job:18:15; kjv@Isaiah:30:33 kjv@Isaiah:34:9; kjv@Psalms:11:6; kjv@Ezekiel:38:22). It is used to express the idea of excruciating torment in kjv@Revelation:14:10 kjv@Revelation:19:20 kjv@Revelation:20:10 .

tcr.html2:



torrey:



tcr.1:



naves:



BRIMSTONE @
- Fire and, rained upon Sodom kjv@Genesis:19:24; kjv@Luke:17:29
- In Palestine kjv@Deuteronomy:29:23

- FIGURATIVE kjv@Job:18:15; kjv@Psalms:11:6; kjv@Isaiah:30:33; kjv@Ezekiel:38:22; kjv@Revelation:9:17-18; kjv@Revelation:14:10; kjv@Revelation:19:20; kjv@Revelation:21:8

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hitchcock:



kjv@STRING:Tabrimon <HITCHCOCK>@ good pomegranate; the navel; the middle - HITCHCOCK-T


tcr:



BRIMSTONE @ kjv@Genesis:19:24; kjv@Job:18:15; kjv@Psalms:11:6; kjv@Luke:17:29

strongs:



H1614 <STRHEB>@ גּפרית gophrîyth gof-reeth' Probably feminine of H1613; properly cypress resin; by analogy sulphur (as equally inflammable): - brimstone.


H2886 <STRHEB>@ טברמּון ţabrimmôn tab-rim-mone' From H2895 and H7417; pleasing (to) Rimmon; {Tabrimmon} a Syrian: - Tabrimmon.


H7097 <STRHEB>@ קצה קצה qâtseh qêtseh {kaw-tseh'} kay-tseh' The second form is negative only; from H7096; an extremity (used in a great variety of applications and idioms; compare H7093): - X {after} {border} {brim} {brink} {edge} {end} [in-] {finite} {frontier} outmost {coast} {quarter} {shore} (out-) {side} X {some} ut (-ter-) most (part).


H8193 <STRHEB>@ שׂפת שׂפה ώâphâh ώepheth {saw-faw'} sef-eth' (The second form is in dual and plural); Probably from H5595 or H8192 through the idea of termination (compare H5490); the lip (as a natural boundary); by implication language; by analogy a margin (of a {vessel} {water} {cloth} etc.): - {band} {bank} {binding} {border} {brim} {brink} {edge} {language} {lip} {prating} ([sea-]) {shore} {side} {speech} {talk} [vain] words.


G1690 <STRGRK>@ ἐμβριμάομαι embrimaomai em-brim-ah'-om-ahee From G1722 and βριμάομαι brimaomai (to snort with anger); to have indignation on that is (transitively) to blame (intransitively) to sigh with chagrin (specifically) to sternly enjoin: - straitly charge groan murmur against.


G2303 <STRGRK>@ θεῖον theion thi'-on Probably neuter of G2304 (in its original sense of flashing); sulphur: - brimstone.


G2306 <STRGRK>@ θειώδης theiōdēs thi-o'-dace From G2303 and G1491; sulphur like that is sulphurous: - brimstone.


G507 <STRGRK>@ ἄνω anō an'-o Adverb from G473; upward or on the top: - above brim high up.