תָּא
a room (as circumscribed)
Definition
The Hebrew noun תָּא (tâʼ) refers to a small, enclosed room or chamber, often within a larger architectural structure. In the historical books, it describes guardrooms or storage chambers in the temple or palace complex, such as the 'little chambers' where the temple guards kept their equipment (1 Kings 14:28, 2 Chronicles 12:11). In Ezekiel's visionary temple (Ezekiel 40:7-21), the term specifies the side chambers or alcoves built into the gatehouses and walls, which were likely used by priests for storage or preparation. The word consistently conveys the idea of a defined, bounded space serving a specific, often functional, purpose.
Biblical Usage
This word appears 11 times in the Old Testament, primarily in architectural descriptions. It is used in the historical narratives of 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles for chambers in Solomon's temple. Its most concentrated usage is in Ezekiel 40, where it meticulously describes the side chambers (תָּאִים) of the gates in the prophet's vision of a new temple. The usage is exclusively for man-made, subordinate rooms within a sacred or royal precinct.
Etymology
Derived from the root תָּאָה (H8376), which carries the basic meaning 'to mark off' or 'to boundary.' The noun תָּא, therefore, fundamentally means a 'marked-off' or 'circumscribed' space. This etymological connection highlights the word's core sense of a defined, enclosed area. The feminine form תָּאָה appears once in Ezekiel 40:12.
Semantic Range
While primarily an architectural term, תָּא gains theological significance in the context of sacred space. In Ezekiel's temple vision (Ezekiel 40), the precise description of these chambers underscores God's attention to detail, order, and holiness in His dwelling place. Understanding these as designated, functional spaces enriches the reading of temple texts by emphasizing that every part of God's ordained structure has a purpose, reflecting His organized and purposeful nature.
In ancient Near Eastern temple and palace architecture, such small side chambers were standard features. They were not living quarters but functional spaces for storage (of temple vessels, tribute, or weapons), for priests to change vestments, or for guards. This differs from a modern 'room,' which is often a primary living space. For an ancient Israelite, a תָּא was a subordinate, utility space within a grander complex.
חֶדֶר (ḥeder, H2315) — A more general term for an inner room, chamber, or bedroom, often for dwelling. לִשְׁכָּה (lishkah, H3957) — A larger room or hall, often translated as 'office' or 'chamber,' used for official purposes (e.g., 1 Kings 6:5).
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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