Strong's Concordance kishor: a distaff Original Word: כִּישׁוֹרPart of Speech: Noun Masculine Transliteration: kishor Phonetic Spelling: (kee-shore') Short Definition: distaff Brown-Driver-Briggs כִּישׁוֺר noun [masculine] distaff (etymology dubious; perhaps, if meaning correct, from כשׁר (compare Sta§ 216 LagBN 182) = be straight, because it stands erect, De Str; ᵑ6 industry; whence ᵑ7 כּוּשְׁרָא, and likewise ᵑ7 כּוּנְשְׁרָא, also Proverbs 3:8, (for Hebrew שׁר), where Levy wirbelsäule, Stron the passage Jastr navel; but Str doubts etymological connection with כישׁור); — only in יָדֶיהָ שִׁלְּחָה בַכִּישׁוֺ֑ר Proverbs 31:19 ("" מָּֽלָךְ ׃ whirl of spindle). — As above De Now Str RV SS and others; > Ki AW Thes Rob-Ges whirl of spindle (AV spindle); see מֶּלֶךְ. Strong's Exhaustive Concordance spindle From kasher; literally, a director, i.e. The spindle or shank of a distaff (pelek), by which it is twirled -- spindle. see HEBREW kasher see HEBREW pelek Forms and Transliterations בַכִּישׁ֑וֹר בכישור ḇak·kî·šō·wr ḇakkîšōwr vakkiShorLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Strong's Hebrew 36011 Occurrence ḇak·kî·šō·wr — 1 Occ. Proverbs 31:19 HEB: יָ֭דֶיהָ שִׁלְּחָ֣ה בַכִּישׁ֑וֹר וְ֝כַפֶּ֗יהָ תָּ֣מְכוּ NAS: out her hands to the distaff, And her hands KJV: her hands to the spindle, and her hands INT: her hands stretches to the distaff hands grasp |