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- Mashal (allegory) - Wikipedia
A mashal (Hebrew: משל) is a short proverb [1] or parable with a moral lesson or religious allegory, called a nimshal Mashal is used also to designate other forms in rhetoric, such as the fable and apothegm
- Strongs Hebrew: 4912. מָשָׁל (mashal) -- proverb, discourse . . .
מָשָׁל (mashal) denotes any crafted comparison that presses truth upon the listener—ranging from a single, memorable proverb to an extended oracle, taunt-song, or parabolic discourse Its artistry invites meditation; its authority rests in divine inspiration
- Mashal: Telling Stories through PARABLES PROVERBS
You make us a proverb [mashal מָ֭שָׁל] among the nations, a laughing-stock among the peoples… …Rise up, be our help, and redeem us because of Your mercy Fortunately, being a proverb of derision was not a no-way-out deal
- Mashal | Hebrew literature | Britannica
Typically a pithy, easily memorized aphoristic saying based on experience and universal in application, the mashal in its simplest and oldest form was a couplet in which a definition was given in two parallel lines related…
- Lexicon :: Strongs H4912 - māšāl - Blue Letter Bible
מָשָׁל mâshâl, maw-shawl'; apparently from H4910 in some original sense of superiority in mental action; properly, a pithy maxim, usually of metaphorical nature; hence, a simile (as an adage, poem, discourse):—byword, like, parable, proverb † II
- PARABLE - JewishEncyclopedia. com
That the Hebrew designation for "parable" is "mashal" (comp David Ḳimḥi's commentary on II Sam xii 1-4 and on Isa v 1-6) is confirmed by the fact that in the New Testament the Syriac "matla," corresponding to the Hebrew "mashal," is used for παραβολή (Matt xiii 18, 31, 33; xxi 45; Mark iv 2; Luke v 36, vi 39)
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