תְּבוּסָה
te.vu.sah (H8395)
ruin
AI Word Study
# תְּבוּסָה (tebusah): A Rare Hebrew Term for Ruin The Hebrew word *tebusah* appears only once in the biblical text, making it one of the rarest terms in the Hebrew Bible. According to the lexical data, it carries the meaning "ruin"—indicating a state of destruction or devastation. The singularity of its occurrence limits our ability to establish a clear semantic range or determine whether the word had multiple related meanings in ancient Hebrew usage. Because *tebusah* appears only a single time in biblical literature, we cannot observe how Hebrew speakers employed it in different contexts or whether it carried nuanced meanings depending on its usage. Its rarity suggests it may have been a specialized or archaic term, or perhaps a word that was falling out of use by the time the biblical texts were standardized. Without additional occurrences to compare, the word remains somewhat opaque—we can identify its general association with destruction, but cannot confidently discuss broader applications or subtle distinctions in meaning. For biblical scholars and translators, the isolated appearance of *tebusah* presents interpretive challenges. The single context in which it appears becomes disproportionately important for understanding its intended meaning, since there are no parallel usages elsewhere in Scripture to clarify or confirm its sense.
AI synthesis uses only provided lexicon data -- never training knowledge.
Now the destruction of Ahaziah was of God, in that he went to Joram; for when he had come, he went out with Jehoram against Jehu the son of Nimshi, whom Yahweh had anointed to cut off Ahab’s house.