H0896 H0896
Babylonians (Aramaic gentilics)
An Aramaic gentilics (ethnic designation) referring to the Babylonians, appearing in Ezra's list of peoples settled in Samaria by the Assyrians. The emphatic plural form indicates the ethnic group as a whole. These Babylonian transplants were among the foreign populations that opposed the rebuilding of Jerusalem. The term appears in the administrative Aramaic section of Ezra, reflecting the multilingual nature of the Persian imperial correspondence.
Senses
1. sense 1 — Identifies the Babylonian ethnic group in Ezra 4:9, listed among the peoples who wrote to oppose Jerusalem's reconstruction. The Aramaic gentilics form (with emphatic ending) fits the documentary style of the Persian-period correspondence. These Babylonians were among the populations relocated by Assyrian deportation policies, creating the mixed Samarian population that resisted Jewish restoration efforts. 1×
AR["الْبَابِلِيُّونَ"]·ben["বাবিলীয়েরা"]·DE["[בבליא]"]·EN["Bavlaye"]·FR["[בבליא]"]·heb["בבליא"]·HI["और-बाबेल"]·ID["orang-orang-Babel"]·IT["[בבליא]"]·jav["punika"]·KO["바벨론사람들"]·PT["os-babiloneus"]·RU["вавилоняне"]·ES["los-babilonios"]·SW["Wababeli"]·TR["Babilliler"]·urd["بابلی"]
Related Senses
G3588 1. definite article (18298×)H0853 1. definite direct object marker (10915×)G2532 1. (8312×)H3068 1. YHWH (the divine name) (6522×)H0834a 1. relative pronoun (who/which/that) (4839×)H3588a 1. causal: because, for (3498×)G1161 1. and (2806×)H3478 1. Israel (proper name and nation) (2507×)G4771 1. you (plural address) (1853×)H1931 1. personal pronoun he/she/it (1431×)G3739 1. relative pronoun who/which/that (1149×)H1732 1. David (proper name) (1075×)H2088 1. this, this one (demonstrative) (1059×)G1063 1. (1047×)G3778 1. this thing, these things (1003×)H???? 2. (1002×)G2424 1. (924×)G3754 1. that (content clause) (881×)H2009 1. presentative particle: behold, look (881×)H0589 1. I (first person singular pronoun) (874×)
BDB / Lexicon Reference
† [בָּֽבְלַי] adj.gent. pl. emph. as subst. בָּֽבְלָיֵא Ezr 4:9 the Babylonians.