סְבֹךְ
so.vekh (H5441)
thicket
AI Word Study
# סְבֹךְ (sovekh): A Hebrew Word for Thicket The Hebrew word סְבֹךְ (sovekh) denotes a thicket—a dense, tangled growth of vegetation or underbrush. Based on the lexical data, this noun appears only once in the biblical text, making it a relatively rare term in Hebrew Scripture. Its singular occurrence limits our ability to determine nuanced variations in usage or context-specific applications. Given its single attestation, the word's full semantic range and cultural significance remain constrained by available evidence. The definition provided—"thicket"—suggests it refers to a natural or wild growth of plants too dense to pass through easily. However, without additional biblical occurrences or usage examples, we cannot determine whether the term carries metaphorical weight, whether it appears in specific literary genres, or whether it held particular importance in the religious or daily life of ancient Israel. The rarity of this word in the biblical corpus indicates it was not a frequently employed term in Hebrew religious or narrative literature.
AI synthesis uses only provided lexicon data -- never training knowledge.
A lion has gone up from his thicket, and a destroyer of nations. He is on his way. He has gone out from his place, to make your land desolate, that your cities be laid waste, without inhabitant.