שַׁעֲטָה
a clatter (of hoofs)
Definition
The Hebrew noun שַׁעֲטָה refers to the loud, rhythmic sound produced by the stamping or clattering of animal hooves, particularly horses' hooves. It specifically denotes the noise of rapid, forceful hoofbeats, conveying a sense of powerful, unstoppable motion. In its single biblical occurrence in Jeremiah 47:3, the word describes the terrifying sound of the approaching enemy's chariot horses, symbolizing imminent judgment and destruction. The term captures both the auditory and the visceral, threatening impact of a military charge.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in the prophetic book of Jeremiah. It appears in Jeremiah 47:3 within an oracle of judgment against the Philistines. The context is militaristic, where the prophet describes the overwhelming noise ('At the sound of the stamping [שַׁעֲטָה] of the hoofs of his stallions') made by the advancing Babylonian army. Its usage is purely descriptive of a sound associated with war, terror, and divine judgment executed through a foreign power.
Etymology
The noun שַׁעֲטָה is a feminine form derived from an unused Hebrew root (שָׁעַט) meaning 'to stamp' or 'to trample.' It is related to the Arabic cognate سَعَطَ (saʻaṭa), which carries the sense of striking or beating. The word's formation emphasizes the action and resulting sound of forceful impact, directly linking to the imagery of trampling hooves.
Semantic Range
Though used only once, this word carries theological weight in its context. In Jeremiah 47:3, the 'stamping' is not merely a sound effect; it is the audible herald of God's judgment. The prophet uses this vivid, sensory detail to make the coming divine punishment tangible and terrifying. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading by highlighting how biblical prophecy often communicates God's sovereign actions through concrete, physical imagery—the noise of the enemy's approach is the sound of God's decree being executed.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, the sound of galloping warhorses and chariots was a universally recognized symbol of military might and sudden invasion. For an agrarian society, this clatter represented the peak of threatening, mechanized noise, signaling panic and the inability to defend against a superior force. The modern reader might underestimate the psychological impact of this sound, which for ancient cities meant walls were the only defense against being overrun.
רַעַשׁ (raʻash, H7494) — a more general term for noise, tumult, or earthquake, not specific to hoofbeats. פַּעַם (paʻam, H6471) — can mean a beat, step, or stroke, focusing on the impact or occurrence rather than the specific sound produced.
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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