אֹחַ
a howler or lonesome wild animal
Definition
The Hebrew noun אֹחַ (ʼôach) refers to a wild, howling animal, likely a creature of desolate places. It appears only in Isaiah 13:21, where it describes one of the creatures that will inhabit the ruins of Babylon. The term emphasizes the animal's mournful, lonely cry, conveying a sense of desolation and abandonment. While often translated as 'wild beasts' or 'doleful creatures,' its specific identity is uncertain, possibly referring to jackals, hyenas, or other nocturnal howlers.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Isaiah 13:21, within a prophecy of judgment against Babylon. The context is a poetic description of the complete desolation that will befall the once-great city, where it will become a haunt for wild, howling creatures. Its singular usage underscores its role as a vivid image of utter ruin and the reversal of a populated, civilized place into a wilderness.
Etymology
The word אֹחַ (ʼôach) is likely derived from the root אָח (ʼāch, H253), which means 'to howl' or 'to cry out.' This connection directly informs its meaning, tying the creature's identity to the sound it makes. Cognates in other Semitic languages also point to words for howling or wailing, reinforcing the association with mournful vocalizations.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as a powerful metaphor for divine judgment. In Isaiah 13:21, it contributes to the prophecy's imagery of total desolation, showing how God's judgment can reduce a proud, powerful empire to a haunt for wild animals. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading by highlighting the completeness of the judgment and the theme of reversal, where human order gives way to chaotic wilderness, underscoring the seriousness of opposing God.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, wild howling animals were associated with uninhabited wastelands, ruins, and places outside the bounds of human civilization and divine order. Their cries were often heard as ominous or mournful. The specific creature is not identified, reflecting a general cultural understanding of such animals as symbols of desolation and curse, making the prophecy against Babylon vividly understandable to its original audience.
צִי (tsiy, H6728) — a general term for a wild, desert-dwelling creature. שָׂעִיר (śāʻîr, H8163) — often a 'goat' or 'hairy one,' can refer to a demon or wild creature of the waste. תַּן (tan, H8565) — a jackal, specifically a known howler of the desert.
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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