מֵרֹנֹתִי
a Meronothite, or inhabitant of some (otherwise unknown) Meronoth.
Definition
The term מֵרֹנֹתִי (Mêrônôthîy) is a gentilic noun meaning 'a Meronothite,' referring to an inhabitant of a place called Meronoth. This place is otherwise unknown from biblical or extra-biblical sources, so the designation primarily serves as a geographical identifier for individuals. In the Old Testament, it is used exclusively to describe two men associated with King David's administration: Jehdeiah (1 Chronicles 27:30) and Jadon (Nehemiah 3:7). The word does not carry multiple senses; it consistently denotes origin from this specific, though obscure, location.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only twice in the Old Testament, both times as a descriptor of a person's hometown. In 1 Chronicles 27:30, it identifies Jehdeiah, who was in charge of David's donkeys. In Nehemiah 3:7, it describes Jadon, a man who helped repair the wall of Jerusalem. The usage pattern is strictly as a patrial (a term denoting origin) in administrative or historical lists, with no narrative or theological development.
Etymology
The word is derived as a patrial formation (a noun indicating origin or residence) from an otherwise unattested place name, Meronoth. It follows a common Hebrew pattern for gentilics, using the suffix '-i' (ִי) to mean 'inhabitant of.' There are no known cognate roots or related words, as the base location remains unidentified.
Semantic Range
In ancient Israelite culture, identifying a person by their hometown (e.g., 'the Bethlehemite,' 'the Gileadite') was a common practice for establishing identity, lineage, and social connection, especially in official records. Being labeled a 'Meronothite' would have situated these individuals within the tribal and geographic framework of Israel, even though the specific location is lost to history. This contrasts with modern naming conventions that often rely less on geographic origin.
Other gentilic patterns include: יְהוּדִי (Yᵉhûdîy, H3064) — specifically denotes a Judahite or Jew; יִשְׂרְאֵלִי (Yisrᵉʼêlîy, H3478) — denotes an Israelite, a member of the nation.
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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