אֵצֶל
a side; (as a preposition) near
Definition
The Hebrew word אֵצֶל primarily functions as a preposition meaning 'near,' 'beside,' 'by,' or 'at the side of.' It denotes physical proximity, as when Potiphar's wife tries to get Joseph to lie 'beside' her (Genesis 39:10). In its nominal sense, it can mean 'side' or 'vicinity,' such as the location of the altar's ashes (Leviticus 1:16). The word consistently implies a close, adjacent relationship, whether describing a person's location, an object's placement, or relational nearness.
Biblical Usage
אֵצֶל is used 57 times in the Old Testament, predominantly in narrative and legal texts. It appears frequently in Genesis (especially the Joseph narrative) and Leviticus. As a preposition, it often describes a person being near another (Genesis 39:10, 15) or an object located beside something (Genesis 41:3). In Levitical law, it specifies ritual locations, like where certain sacrifices are to be handled 'beside' the altar (Leviticus 1:16, 6:10). Its usage is straightforward, emphasizing physical adjacency without deeper metaphorical layers.
Etymology
אֵצֶל derives from the root אָצַל (H680), which carries the sense of 'to join' or 'to reserve.' This root meaning informs the preposition's core idea of being joined closely to something or someone, hence 'near' or 'at the side of.' The noun form likely developed from this concept of a joined or adjacent place.
Semantic Range
In ancient Near Eastern culture, spatial proximity often carried social and relational significance. To be 'אֵצֶל' someone could imply intimacy, access, or subordination, depending on context. For instance, Joseph's refusal to be 'beside' Potiphar's wife (Genesis 39:10) was a rejection of forbidden intimacy and a breach of social trust. In ritual contexts, being 'beside' the altar designated a specific, holy area for priestly duties, reflecting ordered worship.
עִם (ʿim, H5973) — 'with,' emphasizing accompaniment rather than just proximity. לְיַד (lᵉyad, H3027) — 'by the hand of' or 'beside,' often with a more specific locational sense. אֶל (ʾel, H413) — 'to' or 'toward,' indicating direction rather than static position.
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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