The Mounce number for the hebrew word for Chariot is 712
אַפִּרְיוֹן
[712] אַפִּרְיוֹן ʾappiryôn 1× carriage; other sources: sedan chair, litter, or palanquin, a vehicle carried on poles by porters [668]
[ Goodrick-Kohlenberger number ] Goodrick-Kohlenberger number
× the number of times it occurs in the Old Testament
[ corresponding Strong’s number ] corresponding Strong’s number
William D. Mounce, Mounce’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2006), 898.
The Strongs number for the hebrew word for Chariot is 668
668. אַפִּרְיוֹן ˒appiryôwn, ap-pir-yone’; prob. of Eg. der.; a palanquin:— chariot.
prob. prob. = probable, probably
Eg. Eg. = Egypt, Egyptian, Egyptians
der. der. = derived, derivation, derivative, derivatively
James Strong, The New Strong’s Dictionary of Hebrew and Greek Words (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1996).
The whole point of me blogging about this is as follows. Lots of cars have bucket seats, Chariots have buckets that are facing the opposite direction and people stand up inside the bucket. When did we decide that it would be ok to stop hooking up horses to buckets and driving the vehicle standing up in the bucket to not using any horses, driving the vehicle sitting down in the bucket and facing the opposite direction as the one where you were working with horses?
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