Leviticus Chapter 11 verse 17 Holy Bible
and the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl,
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And the little owl and the cormorant and the great owl;
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and the owl, and the gannet, and the ibis,
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And the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl,
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And the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl,
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the little owl, the cormorant, the great owl,
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and the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl,
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Ellicott's Commentary
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(17) And the little owl.--With the exception of the parallel passage, Deuteronomy 14:16, this bird only occurs once more, in Psalm 102:6, where it is properly rendered in the Authorised Version by "owl," omitting the word "little," and is described as inhabiting deserted ruins. It not only feeds upon insects and molluscs, hares, rabbits, ducks, geese, and birds of prey, but devours mice and rats, which are especially detested by the Jews. Its flesh is, however, regarded by some tribes as very savoury. The name kos which is translated "owl" in the three above-named passages, is the common Hebrew word for "cup," and it is supposed that it has been given to this bird because the sitting owl especially widens towards the upper part, thus imparting to it a cup-like appearance.And the cormorant.--Of all the web-footed birds which prey on fish, cormorants are the most voracious. They usually assemble in flocks on the rocks which overhang the sea, whence they drop down from the greatest height upon their victim, dive after it with the rapidity of a dart, and invariably gulp their prey head foremost. The cormorant is to be found in every climate, and is the destruction of all the finny tribe in any fresh-water river which he happens to occupy for a time. Hence he is called the feathered terror of the finny tribe. From the skill which he displays in casting himself down from a great height, and in plunging dart-like after his victim, he derives his Hebrew name, which denotes "darter." The flesh of the cormorant, though rank, is eaten in some regions; whilst the skin, which is tough, is made into garments. The Hebrew name only occurs again in the duplicate catalogue of unclean animals in Deuteronomy 14:17. By comp. Leviticus 11:17-18 of the list before us with the parallel list in Deuteronomy 14:16-17, it will be seen that though the two catalogues respectively enumerate in these two verses the same six birds, yet the order is different. The cormorant, which is here second in Leviticus 11:17, is in Deuteronomy 14 sixth in Leviticus 11:17. There can, therefore, hardly be any doubt that the verse before us has been disturbed, and that by placing the cormorant here sixth, as it is in Deuteronomy, we obtain the two species of owls naturally following each other, as is the case in the parallel catalogue. . . . Parallel Commentaries ...Hebrewthe little owl,הַכּ֥וֹס (hak·kō·ws)Article | Noun - masculine singularStrong's 3563: A cup, a lot, some unclean bird, an owlthe cormorant,הַשָּׁלָ֖ךְ (haš·šā·lāḵ)Article | Noun - masculine singularStrong's 7994: (bird of prey) probably cormorantthe great owl,הַיַּנְשֽׁוּף׃ (hay·yan·šūp̄)Article | Noun - masculine singularStrong's 3244: (a ceremonially unclean bird) perhaps an owlJump to PreviousCormorant Gannet Great Ibis Owl