קִמּוֹשׁ
a prickly plant
Definition
קִמּוֹשׁ refers to a prickly, thorny plant that grows in desolate or abandoned places. In the Bible, it consistently symbolizes desolation, judgment, and the consequences of turning away from God. In Isaiah 34:13, it is listed among the thorns and brambles that will overrun Edom as a sign of God's judgment, transforming a once-inhabited land into a wilderness. In Hosea 9:6, the plant represents the ruin that awaits Israel; even the plants that sprout in their abandoned places will be worthless and prickly, like the קִמּוֹשׁ, signifying the fruitlessness of their idolatry.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, both times in prophetic books (Isaiah and Hosea) and in contexts of divine judgment. It never describes cultivated land but always appears as part of a list of weeds and wild growth that overtakes places once inhabited by people. The pattern is clear: the קִמּוֹשׁ is a marker of abandonment and curse. In Isaiah 34:13, it overruns the palaces of Edom, and in Hosea 9:6, it grows where the Israelites once lived, picturing the desolate outcome of their sin.
Etymology
The noun קִמּוֹשׁ (or the variant קִימוֹשׁ) comes from an unused Hebrew root meaning 'to sting' or 'to prick,' which directly relates to its nature as a thorny plant. It is linguistically connected to קִמָּשׁוֹן (H7063), another word for a thorny weed. This etymological link to 'stinging' reinforces the plant's unpleasant, invasive character and its role as a symbol of discomfort and ruin.
Semantic Range
The קִמּוֹשׁ is theologically significant as a powerful metaphor for the fruit of divine judgment and covenant curse. It visually represents the principle that turning from God leads not to neutral emptiness, but to active, painful desolation (Hosea 9:6). Its growth in palaces (Isaiah 34:13) shows the complete reversal of fortune and God's sovereignty over nations. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by making the prophets' warnings more concrete: judgment isn't abstract but results in a landscape dominated by worthless, hurtful things.
In ancient Israelite culture, a well-kept field or vineyard was a sign of blessing, covenant faithfulness, and prosperity. Conversely, land overrun by weeds and thorns like the קִמּוֹשׁ signaled abandonment, curse, and divine displeasure. This plant would have been immediately recognized by an agrarian society as a sign of neglect and ruin, making it a potent and easily understood symbol in prophetic literature. Its modern equivalent might be a toxic, invasive weed taking over a derelict property.
חוֹחַ (choach, H2336) — a general term for thorn or bramble; קִמָּשׁוֹן (qimmashown, H7063) — a closely related term for a thorny weed, likely a synonym or specific type.
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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