Hur
a hole, as of a viper, etc. (1.) A son of Caleb (1 Chr. 2:19, 50; 4:1, 4; comp. 2 Chr. 1:5). (2.) The husband of Miriam, Moses’ sister (Ex. 17:10-12). He was associated with Aaron in charge of the people when Moses was absent on Sinai (Ex. 24:14). He was probably of the tribe of Judah, and grandfather of Bezaleel (Ex. 31:2; 35:30; 1 Chr. 2:19). (3.) One of the five princes of Midian who were defeated and slain by the Israelites under the command of Phinehas (Num. 31:8).
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- Hurai
linen-worker, one of David’s heroes, a native of the valley of Mount Gaash (1 Chr. 11:32).
- Hurban
/xʊːrˈbɑn; Yiddish ˈxʊːrbən/ noun 1. a variant spelling of Churban
- Hurcheon
[hur-chuh n] /ˈhɜr tʃən/ noun, Chiefly Scot. 1. a hedgehog. 2. an urchin.
- Hurd
[hurdz] /hɜrdz/ plural noun 1. . /hɜːd/ noun 1. Douglas (Richard), Baron Hurd of Westwell. born 1930, British Conservative politician; home secretary (1985–89); foreign secretary (1989–95) /hɜːdz/ plural noun 1. another word for hards operating system The GNU project’s replacement for the Unix kernel. The Hurd is a collection of servers that run on the […]
- Hurdies
[hur-deez] /ˈhɜr diz/ plural noun, Scot. 1. the buttocks. /ˈhʌrdɪz/ plural noun 1. (Scot) the buttocks or haunches