Значение слова "AHAB" найдено в 8 источниках

AHAB

найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• ___ the Arab

• ___ the Arab (Ray Stevens hit)

• ___ the Arab (Ray Stevens novelty hit)

• ___ the Arab (Ray Stevens song)

• ___ the Arab (Ray Stevens)

• ___ the Arab (song)

• 'Moby Dick' captain

• 'Moby-Dick' mariner

• 'Pequod' captain

• 1956 Gregory Peck role

• 1956 Peck portrayal

• 1956 Peck role

• 1956 role for Peck

• 1998 role for Patrick Stewart

• A grand, ungodly, godlike man

• A grand, ungodly, godlike man in fiction

• A king of Israel

• Ally of Jehoshaphat

• Ancient king of Israel

• Arab in a 1962 Ray Stevens hit

• Bane of Moby Dick

• Barrymore role in 1930

• Bedouin sheik in a Ray Stevens song title

• Beholder of a hump like a snow-hill

• Blubbering fool of fiction?

• Call me Ishmael speaker

• Captain after a white whale

• Captain chronicled by Melville

• Captain employed by Peleg and Bildad

• Captain for Stubb and Fedallah

• Captain in a whale of a tale

• Captain in Moby Dick

• Captain obsessed

• Captain of fiction

• Captain of literature

• Captain of Peleg and Bildad's ship

• Captain of Stubb and Flask

• Captain of the Pequod

• Captain of the whaler Pequod

• Captain who pursued Moby Dick

• Captain who says, The white whale tasks me

• Captain with a regal overbearing dignity of some mighty woe

• Captain with a whale of an obsession?

• Captain with a whalebone leg

• Captain with an ivory leg

• Captain with the overbearing dignity of some mighty woe

• Character whose last words are For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee.

• Character with a whalebone leg

• Character with an ivory leg

• Early John Barrymore talkie role

• Famed whaler

• Famous skipper

• Famously driven captain

• Fedallah's captain

• Fictional captain

• Fictional captain with an ivory leg

• Fictional character who declares Sleep?... I do not sleep, I die

• Fictional character who says I now prophesy that I will dismember my dismemberer

• Fictional great white hunter

• Fictional hunter

• Fictional one-legged captain

• Fictional one-legged whaler

• Fictional Quaker captain

• Fictional sailor

• Fictional sea hunter

• Fictional skipper

• Fictional whale hunter

• Fictional whaler

• For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee speaker

• Giver of Starbuck's orders

• Grand, ungodly, godlike man of fiction

• Great whale hunter

• Great White hunter

• Gregory Peck role

• Gregory Peck role of 1956

• Gregory Peck role: 1956

• Hast seen the White Whale? asker

• He gives Starbuck orders

• He has a cetacean fixation

• His last voyage originated in New Bedford

• Hunting captain

• Husband of Jezebel

• I drive the sea! crier

• I Kings king

• Ill-fated captain

• Ill-fated whaler

• Ishmael and Queequeg's captain

• Ishmael's boss

• Ishmael's captain

• Ishmael's commander

• Ishmael's overseer

• Ishmael's skipper

• Ishmael's superior

• Israel's seventh ruler

• Ivory-legged captain

• Ivory-legged whaler

• Jezebel's better half

• Jezebel's husband

• Jezebel's king

• Jezebel's spouse

• King in 1 Kings

• King influenced by Jezebel

• King of Israel, ninth century B.C.

• King of Kings

• King who lived in an ivory palace

• King who married Jezebel

• Legendary captain

• Literary captain

• Literary character who says For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee

• Literary character whose last words are Thus, I give up the spear!

• Literary hunter

• Literary lead role for Gregory Peck in 1956

• Literary mariner

• Literary monomaniac

• Literary skipper

• Maniacal Captain

• Mariner in a classic literary tale

• Melville captain

• Melville character

• Melville hero

• Melville man

• Melville mariner

• Melville megalomaniac

• Melville monomaniac

• Melville protagonist

• Melville sea captain

• Melville skipper

• Melville whaler

• Melville's beluga hunter

• Melville's curmudgeon

• Melville's doomed Captain

• Melville's grand, ungodly, god-like man

• Melville's great white hunter

• Melville's madman

• Melville's maniacal mariner

• Melville's monomaniacal mariner

• Melville's obsessed captain

• Melville's obsessed whaler

• Melville's obsessive whaler

• Memorable Gregory Peck role

• Moby Dick chaser

• Moby Dick protagonist

• Moby Dick pursuer

• Moby Dick role

• Moby Dick sea captain

• Moby Dick seeker

• Moby Dick's adversary

• Moby Dick's hunter

• Moby Dick's stalker

• Moby-Dick character

• Moby's chaser

• Moby's menacer

• Moby's pursuer

• Monomaniac of literature

• Monomaniacal captain

• Monomaniacal captain in fiction

• Monomaniacal skipper

• Monomaniacal whaler

• Noted literary character of 1851

• Noted whale hunter

• Obsessed captain

• Obsessed captain of fiction

• Obsessed captain of literature

• Obsessed fictional captain

• Obsessed fictional whaler

• Obsessed mariner

• Obsessed seaman

• Obsessed skipper

• Obsessed whaler

• Obsessive fictional skipper

• Obsessive hunter of fiction

• Obsessive sailor

• Obsessive sea captain

• Obsessive whaler

• Obsessive whaler of fiction

• Omri's successor

• One giving Starbuck orders?

• One-legged captain

• One-legged captain of fiction

• One-legged character

• One-legged literary character

• One-legged skipper

• Patrick Stewart's Moby Dick role

• Peck in Moby Dick

• Peck part

• Peck role

• Peck role of 1956

• Peck, on the Pequod

• Peck's peglegged Pequod portrayal

• Peck's peglegged portrayal

• Peck's role in 1956's Moby Dick

• Peg-legged literary captain

• Peg-legged literary character

• Peglegged whaler

• Pequod boss

• Pequod master

• Pequod pegleg

• Pequod pilot

• Pequod skipper

• Pequod whaler

• Pip was his cabin boy

• Pursuer of the accursed white whale

• Queequeg's boss

• Queequeg's captain

• Queequeg's captain on the Pequod

• Queequeg's commander

• Queequeg's skipper

• Ray Stevens sang about him

• Ray Stevens's Arab

• Role played by John Barrymore, Gregory Peck and Patrick Stewart

• Scarred literary character

• Scarred skipper

• Sea captain

• Seventh king of Israel

• Single-minded seaman

• Skipper of the Pequod

• Son of Omri

• Starbuck is his first mate

• Starbuck.s captain

• Starbuck's boss

• Starbuck's boss^AHA

• Starbuck's manager?

• Starbuck's orderer

• Starbuck's skipper

• Starbuck's superior

• Starring role for John Barrymore and Gregory Peck

• Subject of Ishmael's narration

• Subject of Ishmael's tale

• The Pequod's captain

• The whaler Pequod's captain

• Thy hour and thy harpoon are at hand! crier

• To the last I grapple with thee speaker

• Ultimate whale watcher

• Unipodal whaler

• Vengeful mariner

• Vengeful Quaker of fiction

• Vengeful Quaker of literature

• Wellville mailer

• Whale chaser

• Whale fanatic

• Whale hunter

• Whale of a captain?

• Whale pursuer

• Whale stalker

• Whale watcher

• Whale-obsessed captain

• Whale-seeker of note

• Whaleboat captain of fiction

• Whaler in Moby Dick

• Whaler of fiction

• Whaler sailor

• Whaling ship captain of fiction

• White whale chaser

• White whale hunter

• White whale pursuer of fiction

• White whale searcher

• White-whale pursuer

• Wicked king of Israel

• According to the Old Testament he was a pagan king of Israel and husband of Jezebel (9th century BC)


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

   Father's brother.
   1) The son of Omri, whom he succeeded as the seventh king of Israel. His history is recorded in 1 Kings 16-22. His wife was Jezebel (q.v.), who exercised a very evil influence over him. To the calf-worship introduced by Jeroboam he added the worship of Baal. He was severely admonished by Elijah (q.v.) for his wickedness. His anger was on this account kindled against the prophet, and he sought to kill him. He undertook three campaigns against Ben-hadad II., king of Damascus. In the first two, which were defensive, he gained a complete victory over Ben-hadad, who fell into his hands, and was afterwards released on the condition of his restoring all the cities of Israel he then held, and granting certain other concessions to Ahab. After three years of peace, for some cause Ahab renewed war (1 Kings 22:3) with Ben-hadad by assaulting the city of Ramoth-gilead, although the prophet Micaiah warned him that he would not succeed, and that the 400 false prophets who encouraged him were only leading him to his ruin. Micaiah was imprisoned for thus venturing to dissuade Ahab from his purpose. Ahab went into the battle disguised, that he might if possible escape the notice of his enemies; but an arrow from a bow "drawn at a venture" pierced him, and though stayed up in his chariot for a time he died towards evening, and Elijah's prophecy (1 Kings 21:19) was fulfilled. He reigned twenty-three years. Because of his idolatry, lust, and covetousness, Ahab is referred to as pre-eminently the type of a wicked king (2 Kings 8:18; 2 Chr. 22:3; Micah 6:16).
   2) A false prophet referred to by Jeremiah (Jer. 29:21), of whom nothing further is known.


найдено в "Dictionary of Jewish Biography"
Ahab: translation

(fl. 9th cent BCE)
   King of Israel (874-852 BCE). He was reproved by Elijah for seizing Naboth's vineyard. When his wife, Jezebel, introduced the worship of Baal into Israel, a struggle took place between Elijah and the prophets of Baal. Ahab was victorious over Ben-Hadad of Damascus and later formed an alliance with him against the Assyrians (I Kings 16:29—22:40).


найдено в "Universal-Lexicon"
Ahab: übersetzung

Ạhab,
 
in der Vulgata Ạchab, König von Israel (873-853 v. Chr.), unter dessen Regentschaft Israel zu einer Großmacht wurde; gegen seine Duldung des phönikischen Baalkultes erhob sich Widerstand unter Führung des Elias.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
[ʹeıhæb] n библ.
Ахав


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
Ahab
[ʹeıhæb] n библ.
Ахав



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