כינור

Hebrew

Etymology

Root
כ־נ־ר (k-n-r)

From Proto-Semitic *kinnār-.

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

כינור / כִּנּוֹר • (kinór) m (plural indefinite כינורות / כִּנּוֹרוֹת, singular construct כינור / כִּנּוֹר־, plural construct כינורות / כִּנּוֹרוֹת־)

  1. (biblical) lyre, harp
    • Tanach, Psalms 98:5, with translation of the Jewish Publication Society:
      זַמְּרוּ לַיהוָה בְּכִנּוֹר; בְּכִנּוֹר וְקוֹל זִמְרָה׃
      Zammrú l-Adonái b-khinnór; b-khinnór v-qol zimrá.
      Sing praises unto the LORD with the harp; With the harp and the voice of melody.
    • a. 500 C.E., Babylonian Talmud, Berachot 3b:
      כִּנּוֹר הָיָה תָּלוּי לְמַעְלָה מִמִּטָּתוֹ שֶׁל דָּוִד
      Kinnor hayá talúy l'máʿla mim-miṭṭató shel Davíd.
      A lyre was hung above the bed of David.
  2. violin (string instrument)
    • 1967, Naomi Shemer (lyrics and music), “ירושלים של זהב [Jerusalem of Gold]”, in שירי נעמי שמר [Songs of Naomi Shemer], performed by Shuly Nathan, Jerusalem, →OCLC:
      יְרוּשָׁלַיִם שֶׁל זָהָב וְשֶׁל נְחֹשֶׁת וְשֶׁל אוֹר; הֲלֹא לְכָל שִׁירַיִךְ אֲנִי כִּנּוֹר
      Yerushaláyim shel zaháv v-shel n'ḥóshet v-shel or; haló l-khol shiráyikh ani kinnor
      Jerusalem of gold and of bronze and of light; am I not for all of your songs a violin?

Descendants

  • Late Egyptian: knnr, kniwr
    • Coptic: ⲕⲓⲛⲉⲣⲁ (kinera)
  • English: kinnor
  • Ancient Greek: κινύρᾱ (kinúrā)
  • Italian: kinnor

References

Further reading

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