Tuesday 2 April 2019

The Riddle of the Word "Chidah" (=Riddle)

From RRW
Guest Blogger: Mitchell First

                                   The Riddle of the Word “Chidah” (Riddle)

       The word “chidah” (Chet-Yod-Dalet-Heh) appears 17 times in Tanach, in various forms. The basic meaning of “chidah” seems to be a riddling question. (But sometimes, the word is used with a broader meaning.)

       The earliest example of a riddle in Tanach is one that Shimshon challenged to the Pelishtim. The phrase used by Shimhson was “achudah na lakhem chidah.” The riddle itself was a cryptic six word statement alluding to food with the last three words being: “u-meaz yatza matok” (=out of the strong, came forth sweetness). The Pelishtim were supposed to guess what Shimsson was alluding to. (He was alluding to his having recently eaten honey from bees that were in the carcass of a lion.) He gave them 7 days to figure out what he was alluding to and specified a reward to them if they could. After a few days, they threaten Delilah and have her get the answer from Shimshon. Delilah gets the answer and secretly reveals it to them.
        The riddle of today’s column is:  what is the origin and meaning of the verb Chet-Vav-Dalet and the noun Chet-Yod-Dalet-Heh? Surely these words have their origin in something more concrete than “riddle.”
        Just to review, we all know of a verb Ch-D-H that means “rejoice.” (E.g., the word “chedvah.”)  We also all know of a verb Ch-D-D that has a “sharpness” meaning. (Remember that by “va-yichad  Yitro,” Ex. 18:9, Rashi mentions both of these as possible interpretations.) But nowhere in Tanach, outside of this riddle context, are there verbs Chet-Vav-Dalet or Chet-Yod-Dalet.
        A widespread explanation is as follows.  Parts of the book of Daniel are in Aramaic. There the word for riddles has an aleph in front of it: A-Ch-Y-D-N. (The N  reflects that the word is in the plural.) The suggestion is that perhaps the original word for riddle in Hebrew had that initial aleph. The root would be A-Ch-D. The next step is to realize that dalet and zayin are related letters in Semitic languages. So A-Ch-D would have a meaning like A-Ch-Z.   We all know that the root A-Ch-Z means “seize.” But sometimes in Tanach it seems to have a meaning like “shut, close up.” See Nech. 7:3 and the Daat Mikra commentary there.   So the suggestion is that a riddle comes from a “shut, closed up” meaning of the root A-Ch-D, since a riddle is something whose meaning is “shut” and “closed up.”
           Of course, not everyone agrees with this multi-step solution. We just took a word in Hebrew and assumed that there was once an initial aleph there that got lost. Maybe that was not justified. Maybe Aramaic added the initial aleph. In Akkadian, for example, there are words similar to “chud” and “chidah,” which may mean riddle. In these Akkadian words, there is no initial aleph, just like in Hebrew.
          What are our other choices to explain chud and chidah?
         The Brown-Driver-Briggs work noted an Arabic word “hada” that meant “turn side, avoid” and suggested that it was perhaps connected to the Hebrew word because of the “obscure” nature of a riddle.    
       The more recent work, Koehler-Baumgartner, related it to an Aramaic root Chet-Vav-Dalet that means “to join together.” This is also implied in the entry of Jastrow, p. 430.   Presumably, the idea is that a riddle joins together two different subjects. Something like this is found in Mandelkern, relating it to an Arabic word that means “join.”
          Another suggestion notes that there is an Arabic word with the root Chet-Dalet that means “tied a knot.” (Note that at Daniel 5:12, after it refers to Daniel as a solver of riddles, it calls him a “mesharei kitrin” =a  loosener of knots.) This “knot” origin approach is taken in the Soncino commentary to Judges 14:9. The comment there is: “The word chidah is derived from a root ‘to tie in a not’…“   (Even in English, we have the expression “knotty problems.”)
         Upon reflecting on all this, I realized that, pre-solution, a riddle is a knotty problem that needs to be solved. But post-solution, the riddle joins two disparate ideas. Perhaps the first step in understanding the etymology of the word is to decide whether we think the Hebrew word for riddle more likely would describe the pre-solution situation or the post-solution situation.
          I mentioned in a previous column that the etymology of the word “safek” (doubt) remains “uncertain”! So here too, we will conclude that the etymology of the word “chidah” remains a “riddle”! (Perhaps we should ask Adam West to ask Frank Gorshin!)
          P.S. I cannot leave this topic without mentioning Mandelkern’s suggestion that every riddle has a “sting” to it. Thus he suggests a relation to the verb Ch-D-D!
                                                                      ------
               Now I would like to discuss one “riddle” of a word that was discussed recently in a column at  balashon.com
              When I read the Wall Street journal, they sometimes refer to a big corporation as a “behemoth.” What are they alluding to? In the book of Job, verses 40:15-24, there is a section that describes an extraordinarily animal and uses the word BHMOT (“vehemot”). We all know the word BHMH for a single animal and the plural appears several times in Tanach to refer to many animals. But in this section of Job, the plural form is used but it is referring to one animal. What is going on here?
             One view points out that the plural in Hebrew can sometimes refer to only one object. For example, this may be the explanation for “Elokim” as a name of God.  (See Ibn Ezra to Gen. 1:1.) Another example is “adonim” which is used for one master. See, e.g., Isaiah 19:4 and Malachi 1:6. The plural is a sign of respect or extraordinariness. So at Job 40:15, the proper translation would be something like “super-beast.”
             But the other view of BHMOT at Job 40:15 would say that we have just missed something major and completely misinterpreted the word. The word is the Hebrew word for “hippopotamus”! The Hebrew word would have been based on the Egyptian word for hippopotamus: “pehemau.” Those who take this approach then have to argue that all the details of the beast over the nine verses match the description of a hippopotamus. (Rabbi Slifkin believes that they do. See his Sacred Monsters, pp. 185-87.)
                The author of the balashon.com site suggests a compromise position. When that Egyptian word “pehemau” was heard by the Israelites, they Hebraicized it to “behemoth.” The result is a word that looks like Hebrew but really had a foreign origin. 
             On a  related note, I am still waiting for archaeology to find the original name of the Aramean king “Kushan-Rishatayim.”See Judges chap. 3. Probably this was not exactly his original name, but the Israelites twisted it a bit to make him “doubly wicked”!
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Mitchell First can be reached at MFirstAtty@aol.com. A riddle for my readers: Which Jewish Link columnist has a (distant) relative named “Last”? That 

2 comments:

Mr. Cohen said...

Vilna Gaon, Biur HaGra commentary
on Mishlei, chapter 23, verse 24:


The difference between GILAH and SIMCHAH
is thatGILAH refers to something that happens
every day, and SIMCHAH refers to new things.

When a child is born, a parent feels SIMCHAH,
but after that, his child brings him GILAH each day.

===================================
When did Jews live in the Holy Land?
by Mr. Cohen

===================================

From the year 132 to year 136 of the Common Era,
Jews who lived in the Holy Land revolted against
the rule of the Roman Empire.

This was the Bar Kokhba revolt,
named after the leader of that revolt.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_Kokhba_revolt

===================================
In the year 351 of the Common Era, Jews who lived in the
Holy Land revolted against the rule of the Eastern Roman Empire:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_revolt_against_Constantius_Gallus

===================================
From the year 602 to year 628 of the Common Era, Jews who lived
in the Holy Land revolted against the rule of the Byzantine Empire:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_revolt_against_Heraclius

===================================
In the year 1095 of the Common Era, the Crusaders of Christian Europe
reached the Holy Land, where they found and killed many Jews:

Saint Louis University Professor Thomas F. Madden,
author of: A Concise History of the Crusades,
claims the "Jewish Defenders" of the city [Jerusalem]
knew the rule sof warfare and retreated to their
synagogue to "prepare for death" since
the Crusaders had breached the outer walls.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_and_the_Crusades#Massacre_of_Jerusalem

===================================
For more about when Jews lived in the Holy Land, please go to:

http://shilohmusings.blogspot.com/2016/05/guest-post-cornelius-tacticus.html

https://shilohmusings.blogspot.com/2017/02/guest-post-josephus-vs-muslim-liars.html

===================================
Who are the Palestinians?

www.algemeiner.com/2019/02/14/the-invention-of-palestinians/

https://shilohmusings.blogspot.com/2018/06/who-are-palestinians.html

Anonymous said...

"After a few days, they threaten Delilah and have her get the answer from Shimshon. Delilah gets the answer and secretly reveals it to them."

>> Seriously? This Was NOT Delilah. Go back and read your Shoftim Perek 14....