Open Side Menu Search Icon
    pdf View PDF
    The content displayed below is for educational and archival purposes only.
    Unless stated otherwise, content is © Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania

    You may be able to find the original on wol.jw.org

    FOWL

    [Heb, ʽohph].

    Although the English word “fowl” is mainly used today to refer to a large or edible bird, the Hebrew term (ʽohph), derived from the verb “to fly,” applied to all winged or flying creatures. (Gen. 1:20-22) G. R. Driver (Palestine Exploration Quarterly, April 1955, p. 5) suggests that ʽohph may actually represent the sound of “the rhythmical beating of wings on the air and its displacement thereby.” The term thus not only embraced all the birds (Gen. 9:10; Lev. 1:14; 7:26), including quails (Ps. 78:27; compare Exodus 16:13), and also carrion-eating birds (1 Sam. 17:44, 46; 2 Sam. 21:10), but could be applied as well to the winged insects, as among the “swarming [Heb., sheʹrets]” winged creatures.—Lev. 11:20-23; Deut. 14:19; see SWARMING THING.

    The expression “fatted fowl” at 1 Kings 4:23 in AV and RS is considered under CUCKOO.