Значение слова "DELILAH" найдено в 11 источниках

DELILAH

найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
Delilah: translation

Delilah
The woman who deceived and betrayed Samson

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

Delilah
    Delilah
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Delilah
    (Or Dalila).
    Samson, sometime after his exploit at Gaza (Judges, xvi, 1-3), "loved a woman, who dwelt in the valley of Sorec, and she was called Delilah" (verse 4). The village of Sorec was know to Eusebius and to St. Jerome (Onomast.), and rightly placed north of Eleutheropolis near Saraa, the home of Samson. It is now called Khan Sureq. The valley of that name, mentioned in the text, was probably a little lateral valley of the great Wadi Serar, or the Wadi Serar itself (Lagrange, "Le livre des Juges", 247). The railway from Jaffa to Jerusalem passes through this region a little to the west of the station of Deir Aban. The district was on the borderland between the possessions of the Israelites and those of their principle enemies and oppressors at this period, the Philistines.Sorec may have been inhabited by the latter; and although it is not stated to which people Delilah belonged, the story told in this sixteenth chapter of Judges of her relations with the princes of the Philistines, makes it vary unlikely that she was an Israelite. It is not probable either that she became the wife of Samson. The expression above quoted with which Scripture introduces the narrative of her relations with him, and the facility with which the Philistines were brought into her house, not to speak of her readiness to betray the Israelite hero, suggest rather that she was a harlot, an opinion that is now more common among commentators.
    The Philistines, thinking that the strength which had made Samson familiar to them must be due to some magical charm, seek to find out what it is. Their princes, probably the five mentioned in Judges, iii, 3, and elsewhere, coming to Delilah, to whose house Samson often resorted — if he did not live there — say: "Deceive him, and learn of him wherein his great strength lieth, and how we may be able to overcome him, to bind and afflict him: which if thou shalt do, we will give thee every one of us eleven hundred pieces of silver" (verse 5). This sum must have appeared enormous to Delilah. She undertakes to discover the secret of Samson's strength and the means to overcome it. Four different times she asks him to tell her his secret, having each time a number of Philistines on hand to seize him if she can cajole him into betraying it. Samson at first indulges his humour in answers which allow him to laugh at her attempts to bind him; but finally her importunity prevails, and he tells her of his consecration as a Nazarite and of the necessity of keeping his long hair, the mark of the consecration. Delilah then causes this hair to be cut off while Samson sleeps, and hands him over to his enemies who bring him a prisoner to Gaza.
    W.S. REILLY
    Transcribed by David M. Cheney

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• '68 Tom Jones hit

• 1949 title role for Hedy Lamarr

• Biblical betrayer

• Biblical deceiver

• Biblical haircutter

• Biblical temptress

• Book of Judges villainess

• Character in Judges

• Character in Tom Jones song

• Dis-tressing dame?

• Hedy Lamarr role with Victor Mature

• Judges woman

• Lamarr role

• Lamarr role in a '49 film

• Old Testament temptress

• Samson's bane

• Samson's betrayer

• Samson's love

• Samson's temptress

• Samson's undoer

• Samson's undoing

• Tom Jones hit

• Tom Jones title

• Tom Jones tune

• (Old Testament) Samson's Philistine mistress who betrayed him by cutting off his hair and so deprived him of his strength

• A woman who is considered to be dangerously seductive


найдено в "First names dictionary"
Delilah: translation

Delilah f
Biblical: name (of uncertain origin) of Samson's mistress, who wheedled him into revealing the secret of his strength and then betrayed him to the Philistines (Judges 16: 4–20). Although the biblical Delilah was deceitful and treacherous, the name was taken up quite enthusiastically by the Puritans in the 17th century, perhaps because she was also beautiful and clever. The name fell out of use in the 18th century, but has been occasionally revived as an exotic name.
Variant: Delila.


найдено в "Easton's Bible Dictionary"
Delilah: translation

   Languishing, a Philistine woman who dwelt in the valley of Sorek (Judg. 16:4-20). She was bribed by the "lords of the Philistines" to obtain from Samson the secret of his strength and the means of overcoming it (Judg. 16:4-18). She tried on three occasions to obtain from him this secret in vain. On the fourth occasion she wrung it from him. She made him sleep upon her knees, and then called the man who was waiting to help her; who "cut off the seven locks of his head," and so his "strength went from him." (See Samson.)


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
[dıʹlaılə] n библ.
Далила; образн. тж. обольстительница


найдено в "Moby Thesaurus"
Delilah: translation

Synonyms and related words:
Aspasia, Jezebel, Messalina, Phryne, Thais, adventuress, courtesan, demimondaine, demimonde, demirep, femme fatale, harem girl, hetaera, houri, odalisque, seductress, temptress, vamp, vampire


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре под общим руководством акад. Ю.Д. Апресяна"


{dıʹlaılə} n библ.

Далила; образн. тж. обольстительница



найдено в "Deutsch namen"
Delilah: übersetzung

Delila, Delilah
hebräischer Ursprung, Nebenform von → Dalila (Bedeutung: die Sehnende; auch: Nacht). Bekannt durch die biblische Geschichte von Samson und Delila.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
Delilah
[dıʹlaılə] n библ.
Далила; образн. тж. обольстительница



найдено в "Англо-українському словнику Балла М.І."
n ж. ім'я 1) Делайла, Даліла; 2) бібл. Даліла; 3) спокусниця.
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(n) далила; обольстительница
T: 227