See also: כּנען

Hebrew edit

Etymology edit

Uncertain. Suggested to be from a West Semitic root from the base verb *kanaʕ- (to be low, humble, subjugated), Hebrew כָּנַע (kānaʕ), Aramaic כְּנַע (kənaʕ, to bend, to kneel), Arabic قَنَعَ (qanaʕa, to beg), Ge'ez አቅንዐ (ʾäḳnəʿä, to arrange), which could have been used in contrast with אֲרַם (Aram) with the latter derived from a word for highlands.[1][2] Compare Phoenician 𐤊𐤍𐤏𐤍 (knʿn), Arabic كَنْعَانُ (kanʕānu).

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

כְּנַעַן (k'ná'anm

  1. (biblical) Canaan, a son of Ham and a grandson of Noah.
  2. (biblical) Canaan, the land inhabited by Canaan: the Land of Canaan.
  3. (Medieval Hebrew) the Slavs; Slavic lands

Derived terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wilhelm Gesenius, Hebrew Lexicon, 1833
  2. ^ Tristram, Henry Baker (1884). Bible Places: Or, The Topography of the Holy Land. p. 336.

Further reading edit