different between collosal vs behemoth

collosal

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behemoth

English

Etymology

From Middle English behemoth, bemoth, from Late Latin behemoth, from Hebrew ?????????? (behemót). The Hebrew word is either:

  • an intensive plural of ????????? (behemá, beast), from Proto-Semitic (compare Ge'ez ??? (b?hmä, to be dumb, to be speechless), Arabic ? ? ?? (b-h-m)), or
  • less likely, a borrowing of Egyptian (*p?-j?-mw, hippopotamus, literally the ox of the water), from p? (definite article) + j? (ox, cattle) + mw (water) in a direct genitive construction; for the pronunciation, cf. the later Coptic descendants ?- (p-) + ??? (ehe) + ???? (moou).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /b??hi(?)m??/, /?bi???m??/

Noun

behemoth (plural behemoths)

  1. (biblical) A great and mighty beast God shows Job in Job 40:15–24.
    Coordinate term: leviathan
  2. (by extension) Any great and mighty monster.
  3. (figuratively) Something which has the qualities of great power and might, and monstrous proportions.
    Synonyms: colossus, leviathan, mammoth, titan

Derived terms

  • behemothian
  • behemothic

Translations

See also

  • leviathan

Further reading

  • behemoth on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

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