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Bible Lexiconלָהַהּ
BDB / Strong's (1906 / 1890)H3856verb

לָהַהּ

lâhahh[law-hah']

to be rabid (figuratively, insane); also (from the exhaustion of frenzy) to languish

Definition

The Hebrew verb לָהַהּ (lâhahh) describes a state of intense, consuming agitation that leads to exhaustion. Its primary meaning is to be rabid or mad, capturing a figurative frenzy or insanity (Proverbs 26:18). A secondary, derived sense is to languish or faint, depicting the physical and emotional collapse that follows such extreme agitation (Genesis 47:13). This dual meaning connects the cause (frenzy) with its inevitable effect (exhaustion).

Biblical Usage

This rare verb is used only twice in the Old Testament, in two distinct contexts that illustrate its two meanings. In Genesis 47:13, it describes the people of Egypt and Canaan 'fainting' or languishing from the severe famine, emphasizing their exhausted, desperate state. In Proverbs 26:18-19, it is used metaphorically for a person who acts with reckless, mad deception, like one who shoots deadly arrows and then claims it was a joke.

Etymology

לָהַהּ is a primitive root. Scholars connect it to a base meaning 'to burn' or 'to be hot,' suggesting the idea of a feverish, burning agitation. This etymological sense of internal heat or burning likely developed into the concepts of frenzy (the active, 'hot' state) and subsequent languishing (the depleted, exhausted state).

Semantic Range

This word offers a profound insight into the biblical understanding of sin's consequences. In Proverbs, it depicts reckless, deceptive behavior as a form of moral insanity that endangers others. In Genesis, it shows how extreme physical hardship (famine) leads to a collective societal collapse, a theme of divine judgment and human fragility. Understanding this word enriches reading by linking destructive actions to their draining, debilitating effects on both individuals and communities.

In the ancient Near East, madness or frenzy was often viewed as a state outside normal social and rational boundaries, sometimes attributed to divine or demonic influence. The connection to physical exhaustion from famine (Genesis 47:13) reflects an agrarian society's visceral understanding of scarcity, where a failed harvest meant literal life-or-death languishing for the entire population.

שָׁגַע (shâgaʿ, H7696) — a more common term for literal insanity or madness. תָּעַע (tâʿaʿ, H8582) — to wander or err, often mentally; to be delirious. כָּלָה (kâlâh, H3615) — to be complete, finished, or spent; focuses on the end state of exhaustion.

Word Details

Strong's NumberH3856
Part of Speechverb
Hebrewלָהַהּ
Transliterationlâhahh
Pronunciationlaw-hah'
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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Scripture References

Appears in 2 verses in the Bible
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