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Dict: easton - Bed



easton:



Bed @ (Heb. mittah), for rest at night kjv@Exodus:8:3; kjv@1Samuel:19:13-15, 16, etc.); during sickness kjv@Genesis:47:31 kjv@Genesis:48:2 kjv@Genesis:49:33 , etc.); as a sofa for rest ( kjv@1Samuel:28:23; kjv@Amos:3:12). Another Hebrew word (er'es) so rendered denotes a canopied bed, or a bed with curtains kjv@Deuteronomy:3:11; kjv@Psalms:132:3), for sickness kjv@Psalms:6:6 kjv@Psalms:41:3). In the New Testament it denotes sometimes a litter with a coverlet kjv@Matthew:9:2 kjv@Matthew:9:6 kjv@Luke:5:18; kjv@Acts:5:15). The Jewish bedstead was frequently merely the divan or platform along the sides of the house, sometimes a very slight portable frame, sometimes only a mat or one or more quilts. The only material for bed-clothes is mentioned in kjv@1Samuel:19:13. Sleeping in the open air was not uncommon, the sleeper wrapping himself in his outer garment kjv@Exodus:22:26-27; kjv@Deuteronomy:24:12-13).



Bed-chamber @ an apartment in Eastern houses, furnished with a slightly elevated platform at the upper end and sometimes along the sides, on which were laid mattresses. This was the general arrangement of the public sleeping-room for the males of the family and for guests, but there were usually besides distinct bed-chambers of a more private character ( kjv@2Kings:4:10; kjv@Exodus:8:3; kjv@2Kings:6:12). In kjv@2Kings:11:2 this word denotes, as in the margin of the Revised Version, a store-room in which mattresses were kept.



Bedan @ one of the judges of Israel ( kjv@1Samuel:12:11). It is uncertain who he was. Some suppose that Barak is meant, others Samson, but most probably this is a contracted form of Abdon kjv@Judges:12:13).



Bedstead @ used in kjv@Deuteronomy:3:11, but elsewhere rendered "couch," "bed." In kjv@2Kings:1:4 kjv@2Kings:16:2; kjv@Psalms:132:3; kjv@Amos:3:12, the divan is meant by this word.