בֹּץ
bots (H1206)
mire
AI Word Study
# Analysis of בֹּץ (bots) The Hebrew word בֹּץ (bots) denotes mire—soft, muddy, or swampy ground. Based on the lexical data provided, this term appears only once in the biblical text, making it a rare word in Hebrew scripture. Its single occurrence limits our ability to observe varied contexts or nuanced applications, yet the definition itself is straightforward and concrete, referring to a physical substance rather than an abstract concept. The rarity of this word in biblical Hebrew is noteworthy. While mire and muddy terrain appear elsewhere in scripture using different Hebrew terms, the specific choice of בֹּץ in its lone occurrence suggests either a specialized or poetic usage. Without access to the specific verse where it appears, we cannot determine whether it functions literally (describing actual terrain) or metaphorically (conveying difficulty or moral degradation), though both patterns are common in biblical language. The word's isolation in the biblical corpus indicates it may have been familiar to Hebrew speakers but was not among the preferred vocabulary for describing mud or mire in most biblical contexts.
AI synthesis uses only provided lexicon data -- never training knowledge.
‘Behold, all the women who are left in the king of Judah’s house will be brought out to the king of Babylon’s princes, and those women will say, “Your familiar friends have turned on you, and have prevailed over you. Your feet are sunk in the mire, they have turned away from you.”