Abinoam
the father of barak. judges 4:6; 12; 5:1.
historical examples
after an apostrophe to deborah and barak, the son of abinoam, the meeting of the clans is vividly portrayed.
encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 7, slice 10 various
cyril goes down greater than barak the son of abinoam, not with ten, but with thirty thousand men at his feet!’
hypatia charles kingsley
arise, barak; bring forth thy captives, thou son of abinoam.
the history of antiquity, vol. ii (of vi) max duncker
father of kindness, the father of barak (judg. 4:6; 5:1).
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- Abiogenic
not resulting from the activity of living organisms.
- Abiological
not occurring or produced naturally; synthetic.
- Abioses
the absence or lack of life; a nonviable state. noun absence of life abiosis a·bi·o·sis (ā’bī-ō’sĭs) n. absence of life. see abiotrophy. a’bi·ot’ic (-ŏt’ĭk) adj.
- Abiosis
the absence or lack of life; a nonviable state. noun absence of life abiosis a·bi·o·sis (ā’bī-ō’sĭs) n. absence of life. see abiotrophy. a’bi·ot’ic (-ŏt’ĭk) adj. abiotic (ā’bī-ŏt’ĭk) not -ssociated with or derived from living organisms. abiotic factors in an environment include such items as sunlight, temperature, wind patterns, and precipitation. compare biotic. abiosis noun (ā’bī-ō’sĭs)
- Abiotic
of or characterized by the absence of life or living organisms. adj. “without life,” 1870, from a- (3) + biotic. abiotic (ā’bī-ŏt’ĭk) not -ssociated with or derived from living organisms. abiotic factors in an environment include such items as sunlight, temperature, wind patterns, and precipitation. compare biotic. abiosis noun (ā’bī-ō’sĭs)