{"query": "Easton: Cypress", "count": 8, "results": [{"id": "card_n_65f10f7bb30e", "title": "Easton: Cypress", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "(Heb. tirzah, “hardness”), mentioned only in Isa. 44:14 (R.V., “holm tree”). The oldest Latin version translates this word by ilex, i.e., the evergreen oak, which may possibly have been the tree inten"}, {"id": "card_n_2c315f94ee67", "title": "Easton: Fir", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The uniform rendering in the Authorized Version (marg. R.V., “cypress”) of berosh (2 Sam. 6:5; 1 Kings 5:8, 10; 6:15, 34; 9:11, etc.), a lofty tree (Isa. 55:13) growing on Lebanon (37:24). Its wood wa"}, {"id": "card_c_8819396d54cb", "title": "Easton: Cypress references East", "shelf": "connections", "surface": null, "snippet": "Mentions East (place) — the name appears in the card text; the entry is Easton's Bible Dictionary (public domain), which classifies it as a place."}, {"id": "card_c_c9746b04b721", "title": "Easton: Cypress references Hermon", "shelf": "connections", "surface": null, "snippet": "Mentions Hermon (place) — the name appears in the card text; the entry is Easton's Bible Dictionary (public domain), which classifies it as a place."}, {"id": "card_n_4f16e7b88f5f", "title": "Easton: Gopher", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "A tree from the wood of which Noah was directed to build the ark (Gen. 6:14). It is mentioned only there. The LXX. render this word by “squared beams,” and the Vulgate by “planed wood.” Other versions"}, {"id": "card_n_612878421d69", "title": "Easton: Pine tree", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Heb. tidhar, mentioned along with the fir-tree in Isa. 41:19; 60:13. This is probably the cypress; or it may be the stone-pine, which is common on the northern slopes of Lebanon. Some suppose that the"}, {"id": "card_n_a3e130911017", "title": "Easton: Thyine wood", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Mentioned only in Rev. 18:12 among the articles which would cease to be purchased when Babylon fell. It was called citrus, citron wood, by the Romans. It was the Callitris quadrivalvis of botanists, o"}, {"id": "card_n_bbcf7a23b420", "title": "Easton: Camphire", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "(Heb. copher), mentioned in Cant. 1:14 (R.V., “henna-flowers”); 4:13 (R.V., “henna”), is the al-henna of the Arabs, a native of Egypt, producing clusters of small white and yellow odoriferous flowers,"}]}