Floods
Bible Usage:
- First Reference: Exodus 15:8
- Last Reference: Matthew 7:27
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: Yes
- Included in Hitchcocks: No
- Included in Naves: No
- Included in Smiths: Yes
- Included in Websters: Yes
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: Yes
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H5104 Used 10 times
- H5140 Used 3 times
- H5158 Used 2 times
- H7641 Used 1 time
- H7858 Used 1 time
- G4215 Used 2 times
An event recorded in Genesis 7 and 8. (See DELUGE.) In Joshua 24:2, 3, 14, 15, the word "flood" (R.V., "river") means the river Euphrates. In Psalms 66:6, this word refers to the river Jordan.
The deluge.
Foretold
Genesis 6:13; Genesis 6:17
History of
Genesis 1:6
References to
Job 22:16; Psalms 90:5; Matthew 24:38; Luke 17:26-27; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20; 2 Peter 2:5
The promise that it should not recur
Genesis 8:20-21; Isaiah 54:9
Meteorology and Celestial Phenomena
[NOAH]
FLOOD, noun flud.
1. A great flow of water; a body of moving water; particularly, a body of water, rising, swelling and overflowing land not usually covered with water. Thus there is a flood every spring, in the Connecticut, which inundates the adjacent meadows. There is an annual flood in the Nile, and in the Mississippi.
2. The flood by way of eminence, the deluge; the great body of water which inundated the earth in the days of Noah. Before the flood men live to a great age.
3. A river; a sense chiefly poetical.
4. The flowing of the tide; the semi-diurnal swell or rise of water in the ocean; opposed to ebb. The ship entered the harbor on the flood Hence flood-tide; young flood; high flood
5. A great quantity; an inundation; an overflowing; abundance; superabundance; as a flood of bank notes; a flood of paper currency.
6. A great body or stream of any fluid substance; as a flood of light; a flood of lava. Hence, figuratively, a flood of vice.
7. Menstrual discharge.
FLOOD, verb transitive To overflow; to inundate; to deluge; as, to flood a meadow.
FLOOD'ED, participle passive Overflowed inundated.
FLOOD'GATE, noun
1. A gate to be opened for letter water flow through, or to be shut to prevent it.
2. An opening or passage; an avenue for a flood or great body.
FLOOD'ING, participle present tense Overflowing; inundating.
FLOOD'ING, noun Any preternatural discharge of blood from the uterus.
FLOOD'-MARK, noun The mark or line to which the tide rises; high water mark.
Bible Usage:
- First Reference: Exodus 15:8
- Last Reference: Matthew 7:27
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: Yes
- Included in Hitchcocks: No
- Included in Naves: No
- Included in Smiths: Yes
- Included in Websters: Yes
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: Yes
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H5104 Used 10 times
- H5140 Used 3 times
- H5158 Used 2 times
- H7641 Used 1 time
- H7858 Used 1 time
- G4215 Used 2 times