NUMBER - 14 definitions found
Websters 1828 Dictionary 
Number NUM'BER, n. [Probably the radical sense is to speak, name or
tell, as our word tell, in the other dialects, is to number. Number may
be allied to name, as the Spaniards use nombre for name, and the French
word written with the same letters, is number.] 1. The designation of
a unit reference to other units, or in reckoning, counting, enumerating;
as, one is the first number; a simple number. 2. An assemblage of
two or more units. Two is a number composed of one and one added. Five
and three added make the number eight. Number may be applied to any
collection or multitude of units or individuals, and therefore is
indefinite, unless defined by other words or by figures or signs of
definite signification. Hence, 3. More than one; many. Ladies are
always of great use to the party they espouse, and never fail to win over
numbers. 4. Multitude. Number itself importeth not much in armies,
where the men are of weak courage. 5. In poetry, measure; the order
and quantity of syllables constituting feet, which render verse musical to
the ear. The harmony of verse consists in the proper distribution of the
long and short syllables, with suitable pauses. In oratory, a judicious
disposition of words, syllables and cadences constitutes a kind of measure
resembling poetic numbers. 6. Poetry; verse. I lisped in numbers,
for the numbers came. Here the first word numbers may be taken for
poetry or verse, and the second for measure. Yet shoud the Muses
bid my numbers roll. 7. In grammar, the difference of termination
or form of a word, to express unity or plurality. The termination which
denotes one or an individual, is the singular number; the termination
that denotes two or more individuals or units, constitues the plural
number. Hence we say, a noun, an adjective, a pronoun or a verb is in the
singular or the plural number. 8. In mathematics, number is variously
distinguished. cardinal numbers are those which express the amount of
units; as 1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10. Ordinal numbers are those which express
order; as first, second, third, fourth, etc. Determinate number, is
that referred to a given unit, as a ternary or three; an indeterminate
number, is referred to unity in general, and called quantity.
Homogeneal numbers, are those referred to the same units; those referred
to different units are termed heterogeneal. Whole numbers, are called
integers. A rational number, is one commensurable with unity. A number
incommensurable with unity, is termed irrational or surd. A prime
or primitive number, is divisible only by unity; as three, five, seven,
etc. A perfect number, is that whose aliquot parts added together,
make the whole number, as 28, whose aliquot parts, 14. 7. 4. 2. 1. make
the number 28. An imperfect number, is that whose aliquot parts
added together, make more or less than the number. This is abundant or
defedtive; abundant, as 12, whose aliquot parts, 6. 4. 3. 2. 1. make 16;
or defective, as 16 whose aliquot parts, 8. 4. 2. 1. make 15 only.
A square number, is the product of a number multiplied by itself; as,
16 is the square number of four. A cubic number, is the product of a
square number by its root; as, 27 is the product of the square number 9
by its root 3. Golden number, the cycle of the moon, or revolution of
19 years, in which time the conjunctions, oppositions and other aspects
of the moon are nearly the same as they were on the same days of the
month 19 years before. NUM'BER, v.t. 1. To count; to
reckon; to ascertain the units of any sum, collection or multitude.
If a man can number the dust of the earth, then shall thy seed also be
numbered. Gen 8. 2. To reckon as one of a collection or multitude.
He was numbered with the transgressors. Isa 53.
WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) 
number
n 1: the property possessed by a sum or total or indefinite
quantity of units or individuals; "he had a number of
chores to do"; "the number of parameters is small"; "the
figure was about a thousand" [syn: number, figure]
2: a concept of quantity involving zero and units; "every number
has a unique position in the sequence"
3: a short theatrical performance that is part of a longer
program; "he did his act three times every evening"; "she had
a catchy little routine"; "it was one of the best numbers he
ever did" [syn: act, routine, number, turn, bit]
4: the number is used in calling a particular telephone; "he has
an unlisted number" [syn: phone number, telephone number,
number]
5: a symbol used to represent a number; "he learned to write the
numerals before he went to school" [syn: numeral, number]
6: one of a series published periodically; "she found an old
issue of the magazine in her dentist's waiting room" [syn:
issue, number]
7: a select company of people; "I hope to become one of their
number before I die"
8: a numeral or string of numerals that is used for
identification; "she refused to give them her Social Security
number" [syn: number, identification number]
9: a clothing measurement; "a number 13 shoe"
10: the grammatical category for the forms of nouns and pronouns
and verbs that are used depending on the number of entities
involved (singular or dual or plural); "in English the
subject and the verb must agree in number"
11: an item of merchandise offered for sale; "she preferred the
black nylon number"; "this sweater is an all-wool number"
v 1: add up in number or quantity; "The bills amounted to
$2,000"; "The bill came to $2,000" [syn: total, number,
add up, come, amount]
2: give numbers to; "You should number the pages of the thesis"
3: enumerate; "We must number the names of the great
mathematicians" [syn: number, list]
4: put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize
winners among its members" [syn: count, number]
5: determine the number or amount of; "Can you count the books
on your shelf?"; "Count your change" [syn: count, number,
enumerate, numerate]
6: place a limit on the number of [syn: number, keep down]
Dictionary of Ro 
number
- za
English Etymology Dictionary 
number
13c., from Anglo-Fr. noumbre, from O.Fr. nombre, from L. numerus "a
number, quantity," perhaps related to Gk. nemein "to deal out." The
meaning "musical selection" is from vaudeville theater programs,
where acts were marked by a number. Number one "oneself" is c.1700; the
biblical Book of Numbers so called because it contains a census of the
Israelites. No., "abbreviation for 'number,' " is from It. numero. Slang
number one and number two for "urinate" and "defecate" attested from
1902. Number cruncher is 1966, of machines; 1971, of persons. The numbers
"gambling game" is from 1897.
English Language Idioms 
number
ˈnʌmbə See: A NUMBER, ANY NUMBER, DAYS ARE NUMBERED, GET ONE'S NUMBER, HOT NUMBER,
QUITE A FEW or QUITE A NUMBER.
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
number n. & v. --n. 1 a an arithmetical value representing a particular quantity and used in counting and making calculations. b a word, symbol, or figure representing this; a numeral. c an
arithmetical value showing position in a series esp. for identification, reference, etc. (registration number). 2 (often foll. by of) the total count or aggregate (the number of accidents has
decreased; twenty in number). 3 a the study of the behaviour of numbers; numerical reckoning (the laws of number). b (in pl.) arithmetic (not good at numbers). 4 a (in sing. or pl.) a quantity
or amount; a total; a count (a large number of people; only in small numbers). b (in pl.) numerical preponderance (force of numbers; there is safety in numbers). 5 a a person or thing having a
place in a series, esp. a single issue of a magazine, an item in a programme, etc. b a song, dance, musical item, etc. 6 company, collection, group (among our number). 7 Gram. a the
classification of words by their singular or plural forms. b a particular such form. 8 colloq. a person or thing regarded familiarly or affectionately (usu. qualified in some way: an attractive
little number). 9 (Numbers) the Old Testament book containing a census. --v.tr. 1 include (I number you among my friends). 2 assign a number or numbers to. 3 have or amount to (a
specified number). 4 a count. b include. Phrases and idioms: by numbers following simple instructions (as if) identified by numbers. one's days are numbered one does not have long to
live. have a person's number colloq. understand a person's real motives, character, etc. have a person's number on it (of a bomb, bullet, etc.) be destined to hit a specified person. number cruncher
Computing & Math. sl. a machine capable of complex calculations etc. number crunching the act or process of making these calculations. one's number is up colloq. one is finished or doomed to die.
a number of some, several. Usage: Use with a plural verb is now standard: a number of problems remain. number one n. colloq. oneself (always takes care of number one). --adj. most
important (the number one priority). number-plate a plate on a vehicle displaying its registration number. numbers game 1 usu. derog. action involving only arithmetical work. 2 US a lottery
based on the occurrence of unpredictable numbers in the results of races etc. Number Ten 10 Downing Street, the official London home of the British Prime Minister. number two a second in command.
without number innumerable. Etymology: ME f. OF nombre (n.), nombrer (v.) f. L numerus, numerare
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner\'s English Dictionary 
number
(numbers, numbering, numbered)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1. A number is a word such as 'two', 'nine', or 'twelve', or a symbol such as 1, 3,
or 47. You use numbers to say how many things you are referring to or where something comes
in a series.
No, I don't know the room number...
Stan Laurel was born at number 3, Argyll Street...
The number 47 bus leaves in 10 minutes.
N-COUNT: usu with supp
2. You use number with words such as 'large' or 'small' to say approximately how many
things or people there are.
Quite a considerable number of interviews are going on...
I have had an enormous number of letters from single parents...
Growing numbers of people in the rural areas are too frightened to vote.
N-COUNT: adj N, usu N of n
3. If there are a number of things or people, there are several of them. If
there are any number of things or people, there is a large quantity of them.
I seem to remember that Sam told a number of lies...
There must be any number of people in my position.
N-SING: a/any N, usu N of n
4. You can refer to someone's or something's position in a list of the most successful or most
popular of a particular type of thing as, for example, number one or number two.
...the world number one, Tiger Woods...
Before you knew it, the single was at Number 90 in the US singles charts...
N-UNCOUNT: N num
5. If a group of people or things numbers a particular total, that is how many there are.
They told me that their village numbered 100...
This time the dead were numbered in hundreds, not dozens.
VERB: V num, be V-ed in num, also V n in num
6. A number is the series of numbers that you dial when you are making a telephone call.
Sarah sat down and dialled a number.
...a list of names and telephone numbers...
My number is 414-3925...
'You must have a wrong number,' she said. 'There's no one of that name here.'
N-COUNT
7. You can refer to a short piece of music, a song, or a dance as a number.
...'Unforgettable', a number that was written and performed in 1951...
Responsibility for the dance numbers was split between Robert Alton and the young George
Balanchine.
N-COUNT
8. If someone or something is numbered among a particular group, they are believed
to belong in that group. (FORMAL)
The Leicester Swannington Railway is numbered among Britain's railway pioneers...
He numbered several Americans among his friends.
VERB: be V-ed among n, V n among n
9. If you number something, you mark it with a number, usually starting at 1.
He cut his paper up into tiny squares, and he numbered each one...
VERB: V n
10.
see also opposite number, prime number, serial number
11. If you say that someone's or something's days are numbered, you mean that they will
not survive or be successful for much longer.
Critics believe his days are numbered because audiences are tired of watching him.
PHRASE: V inflects, with poss
12. If you refer to the numbers game, the numbers racket, or the numbers,
you are referring to an illegal lottery or illegal betting. (AM)
PHRASE
see also numbers game
13.
safety in numbers: see safety
English Explanatory Dictionary 
number
ˈnʌmbə n. & v. --n. 1 a an arithmetical value representing a
particular quantity and used in counting and making calculations. b a word,
symbol, or figure representing this; a numeral. c an arithmetical value showing
position in a series esp. for identification, reference, etc. (registration
number). 2 (often foll. by of) the total count or aggregate (the number of
accidents has decreased; twenty in number). 3 a the study of the behaviour
of numbers; numerical reckoning (the laws of number). b (in pl.) arithmetic
(not good at numbers). 4 a (in sing. or pl.) a quantity or amount; a total; a
count (a large number of people; only in small numbers). b (in pl.) numerical
preponderance (force of numbers; there is safety in numbers). 5 a a person
or thing having a place in a series, esp. a single issue of a magazine,
an item in a programme, etc. b a song, dance, musical item, etc. 6 company,
collection, group (among our number). 7 Gram. a the classification of words by
their singular or plural forms. b a particular such form. 8 colloq. a person
or thing regarded familiarly or affectionately (usu. qualified in some way:
an attractive little number). 9 (Numbers) the Old Testament book containing
a census. --v.tr. 1 include (I number you among my friends). 2 assign a
number or numbers to. 3 have or amount to (a specified number). 4 a count. b
include. øby numbers following simple instructions (as if) identified
by numbers. one's days are numbered one does not have long to live. have
a person's number colloq. understand a person's real motives, character,
etc. have a person's number on it (of a bomb, bullet, etc.) be destined to
hit a specified person. number cruncher Computing & Math. sl. a machine
capable of complex calculations etc. number crunching the act or process
of making these calculations. one's number is up colloq. one is finished
or doomed to die. a number of some, several. °Use with a plural verb is
now standard: a number of problems remain. number one n. colloq. oneself
(always takes care of number one). --adj. most important (the number one
priority). number-plate a plate on a vehicle displaying its registration
number. numbers game 1 usu. derog. action involving only arithmetical work. 2
US a lottery based on the occurrence of unpredictable numbers in the results
of races etc. Number Ten 10 Downing Street, the official London home of
the British Prime Minister. number two a second in command. without number
innumerable. [ME f. OF nombre (n.), nombrer (v.) f. L numerus, numerare]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Number \Num"ber\, n. [OE. nombre, F. nombre, L. numerus; akin to
Gr. ? that which is dealt out, fr. ? to deal out, distribute.
See Numb, Nomad, and cf. Numerate, Numero,
Numerous.]
1. That which admits of being counted or reckoned; a unit, or
an aggregate of units; a numerable aggregate or collection
of individuals; an assemblage made up of distinct things
expressible by figures.
2. A collection of many individuals; a numerous assemblage; a
multitude; many.
Ladies are always of great use to the party they
espouse, and never fail to win over numbers.
--Addison.
3. A numeral; a word or character denoting a number; as, to
put a number on a door.
4. Numerousness; multitude.
Number itself importeth not much in armies where the
people are of weak courage. --Bacon.
5. The state or quality of being numerable or countable.
Of whom came nations, tribes, people, and kindreds
out of number. --2 Esdras
iii. 7.
6. Quantity, regarded as made up of an aggregate of separate
things.
7. That which is regulated by count; poetic measure, as
divisions of time or number of syllables; hence, poetry,
verse; -- chiefly used in the plural.
I lisped in numbers, for the numbers came. --Pope.
8. (Gram.) The distinction of objects, as one, or more than
one (in some languages, as one, or two, or more than two),
expressed (usually) by a difference in the form of a word;
thus, the singular number and the plural number are the
names of the forms of a word indicating the objects
denoted or referred to by the word as one, or as more than
one.
9. (Math.) The measure of the relation between quantities or
things of the same kind; that abstract species of quantity
which is capable of being expressed by figures; numerical
value.
Abstract number, Abundant number, Cardinal number, etc.
See under Abstract, Abundant, etc.
In numbers, in numbered parts; as, a book published in
numbers.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Number \Num"ber\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Numbered; p. pr & vb. n.
Numbering.] [OE. nombren, noumbren, F. nombrer, fr. L.
numerare, numeratum. See Number, n.]
1. To count; to reckon; to ascertain the units of; to
enumerate.
If a man can number the dust of the earth, then
shall thy seed also be numbered. --Gen. xiii.
16.
2. To reckon as one of a collection or multitude.
He was numbered with the transgressors. --Is. liii.
12.
3. To give or apply a number or numbers to; to assign the
place of in a series by order of number; to designate the
place of by a number or numeral; as, to number the houses
in a street, or the apartments in a building.
4. To amount; to equal in number; to contain; to consist of;
as, the army numbers fifty thousand.
Thy tears can not number the dead. --Campbell.
Numbering machine, a machine for printing consecutive
numbers, as on railway tickets, bank bills, etc.
Syn: To count; enumerate; calculate; tell.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia 
NUMBER
num'-ber:
I. NUMBER AND ARITHMETIC
II. NOTATION OF NUMBERS
1. By Words
2. By Signs
3. By Letters
III. NUMBERS IN OLD TESTAMENT HISTORY
IV. ROUND NUMBERS
V. SIGNIFICANT NUMBERS
1. Seven and Its Multiples
(1) Ritual Use of Seven
(2) Historical Use of Seven
(3) Didactic or Literary Use of Seven
(4) Apocalyptic Use of Seven
2. The Number Three
3. The Number Four
4. The Number Ten
5. The Number Twelve
6. Other Significant Numbers
VI. GEMATRIA
LITERATURE
I. Number and Arithmetic.
The system of counting followed by the Hebrews and the Semites generally
was the decimal system, which seems to have been suggested by the use of
the ten fingers. Hebrew had separate words only for the first nine units
and for ten and its multiples. Of the sexagesimal system, which seems to
have been introduced into Babylonia by the Sumerians and which, through its
development there, has influenced the measurement of time and space in the
western civilized world even to the present day; there is no direct trace
in the Bible, although, as will be shown later, there are some possible
echoes. The highest number in the Bible described by a single word is 10,000
(ribbo or ribbo', murias). The Egyptians, on the other hand, had separate
words for 100,000, 1,000,000, 10,000,000. The highest numbers referred
to in any way in the Bible are: "a thousand thousand" (1Ch 22:14; 2Ch
14:9); "thousands of thousands" (Da 7:10; Re 5:11); "thousands
of ten thousands" (Ge 24:60); "ten thousand times ten thousand"
(Da 7:10; Re 5:11); and twice that figure (Re 9:16). The
excessively high numbers met with in some oriental systems (compare Lubbock,
The Decimal System, 17 ff) have no parallels in Hebrew. Fractions were not
unknown. We find 1/3 (2Sa 18:2, etc.); 1/2 (Ex 25:10,17, etc.);
1/4 (1Sa 9:8); 1/5 (Ge 47:24); 1/6 (Eze 46:14); 1/10
(Ex 16:36); 2/10 (Le 23:13); 3/10 (Le 14:10), and 1/100
(Ne 5:11). Three other fractions are less definitely expressed: 2/3 by
"a double portion," literally, "a double mouthful" by (De 21:17; 2Ki 2:9;
Zec 13:8); 4/5 by "four parts" (Ge 47:24), and 9/10 by "nine parts"
(Ne 11:1). Only the simplest rules of arithmetic can be illustrated
from the Old Testament. There are examples of addition (Ge 5:3-31; Nu
1:20-46); subtraction (Ge 18:28 ); multiplication (Le 25:8;
Nu 3:46 ), and division (Nu 31:27 ). In Le 25:50 ff is what
has been said to imply a kind of rule-of-three sum. The old Babylonians had
tables of squares and cubes intended no doubt to facilitate the measurement
of land (Sayce, Assyria, Its Princes, Priests, and People, 118; Bezold,
Ninive und Babylon, 90, 92); and it can scarcely be doubted that the same
need led to similar results among the Israelites, but at present there is
no evidence. Old Hebrew arithmetic and mathematics as known to us are of
the most elementary kind (Nowack, HA, I, 298).
II. Notation of Numbers.
1. By Words:
No special signs for the expression of numbers in writing can be proved to have
been in use among the Hebrews before the exile. The Siloam Inscription, which
is probably the oldest specimen of Hebrew writing extant (with the exception
of the ostraca of Samaria, and perhaps a seal or two and the obscure Gezer
tablet), has the numbers written in full. The words used there for 3,200,
1,000 are written as words without any abbreviation. The earlier text of the
Moabite Stone which practically illustrates Hebrew usage has the numbers 30,
40, 50, 100, 200, 7,000 written out in the same way.
2. By Signs:
After the exile some of the Jews at any rate employed signs such as were
current among the Egyptians, the Arameans, and the Phoenicians--an upright
line for 1, two such lines for 2, three for 3, and so on, and special signs
for 10, 20, 100. It had been conjectured that these or similar signs were
known to the Jews, but actual proof was not forthcoming until the discovery
of Jewish papyri at Assuan and Elephantine in 1904 and 1907. In these texts,
ranging from 494 to circa 400 BC, the dates are stated, not in words, but
in figures of the kind described. We have therefore clear evidence that
numerical signs were used by members of a Jewish colony in Upper Egypt
in the 5th century BC. Now, as the existence of this colony can be traced
before 525 BC, it is probable that they used this method of notation also
in the preceding century. Conjecture indeed may go as far as its beginning,
for it is known that there were Jews in Pathros, that is Upper Egypt, in
the last days of Jeremiah (Jer 44:1,15). Some of the first Jewish
settlers in Elephantine may have known the prophet and some of them may have
come from Jerusalem, bringing these signs with them. At present, however,
that is pure hypothesis.
3. By Letters:
In the notation of the chapters and verses of the Hebrew Bible and in the
expression of dates in Hebrew books the consonants of the Hebrew alphabet
are employed for figures, i.e. the first ten for 1-10, combinations of these
for 11-19, the following eight for 20-90, and the remainder for 100, 200, 300,
400. The letters of the Greek alphabet were used in the same way. The antiquity
of this kind of numerical notation cannot at present be ascertained. It is
found on Jewish coins which have been dated in the reign of the Maccabean
Simon (143-135 BC), but some scholars refer them to a much later period. All
students of the Talmud are familiar with this way of numbering the pages,
or rather the leaves, but its use there is no proof of early date. The
numerical use of the Greek letters can be abundantly illustrated. It is
met with in many Greek papyri, some of them from the 3rd century BC (Hibeh
Papyri, numbers 40-43, etc.); on several coins of Herod the Great, and in
some manuscripts of the New Testament, for instance, a papyrus fragment of
Mt (Oxyrhynchus Pap., 2) where 14 is three times represented by iota-delta
(I-D) with a line above the letters, and some codices of Re 13:18
where 666 is given by the three letters "chi" "xi" "vau" (or digaroma). It
is possible that two of these methods may have been employed side by side in
some cases, as in the Punic Sacrificial Tablet of Marseilles, where (l. 6)
150 is expressed first in words, and then by figures.
III. Numbers in Old Testament History.
Students of the historical books of the Old Testament have long been
perplexed by the high numbers which are met with in many passages, for
example, the number ascribed to the Israelites at the exodus (Ex 12:37;
Nu 11:21), and on two occasions during the sojourn in the wilderness
(Nu 1; 26)--more than 600,000 adult males, which means a total of two or
three millions; the result of David's census 1,300,000 men (2Sa 24:9)
or 1,570,000 (1Ch 21:5), and the slaughter of half a million in a
battle between Judah and Israel (2Ch 13:17). There are many other
illustrations in the Books of Chronicles and elsewhere. That some of these
high figures are incorrect is beyond reasonable doubt, and is not in the
least surprising, for there is ample evidence that the numbers in ancient
documents were exceptionally liable to corruption. One of the best known
instances is the variation of 1,466 years between the Hebrew text and the
Septuagint (text of Codex Vaticanus) as to the interval from the creation
of Adam to the birth of Abram. Other striking cases are 1Sa 6:19,
where 50,070 ought probably to be 70 (Josephus, Ant., VI, i, 4); 2Sa
15:7, where 40 years ought to be 4 years; the confusion of 76 and 276
in the manuscripts of Ac 27:37, and of 616 and 666 in those of Re
13:18. Hebrew manuscripts furnish some instructive variations. One of
them, number 109 of Kennicott, reads (Nu 1:23) 1,050 for 50,000; 50
for 50,000 (Nu 2:6), and 100 for 100,000 (Nu 2:16). It is easy
to see how mistakes may have originated in many cases. The Hebrew numerals
for 30, etc., are the plurals of the units, so that the former, as written,
differ from the latter only by the addition of the two Hebrew letters yodh
("y") and mem ("m") composing the syllable -im. Now as the mem was often
omitted, 3 and 30, 4 and 40, etc., could readily be confused. If signs or
letters of the alphabet were made use of, instead of abbreviated words, there
would be quite as much room for misunderstanding and error on the part of
copyists. The high numbers above referred to as found in Ex and Nu have been
ingeniously accounted for by Professor Flinders Petrie (Researches in Sinai)
in a wholly different way. By understanding 'eleph not as "thousand," but as
"family" or "tent," he reduces the number to 5,550 for the first census,
and 5,730 for the second. This figure, however, seems too low, and the
method of interpretation, though not impossible, is open to criticism. It
is generally admitted that the number as usually read is too high, but
the original number has not yet been certainly discovered. When, however,
full allowance has been made for the intrusion of numerical errors into
the Hebrew text, it is difficult to resist the belief that, in the Books of
Chronicles, at any rate, there is a marked tendency to exaggeration in this
respect. The huge armies again and again ascribed to the little kingdoms of
Judah and Israel cannot be reconciled with some of the facts revealed by
recent research; with the following, for instance: The army which met the
Assyrians at Karkar in 854 BC and which represented 11 states and tribes
inclusive of Israel and the kingdom of Damascus, cannot have numbered at the
most more than about 75,000 or 80,000 men (HDB, 1909, 65b), and the Assyrian
king who reports the battle reckons the whole levy of his country at only
102,000 (Der alte Orient, XI, i, 14, note). In view of these figures it is
not conceivable that the armies of Israel or Judah could number a million,
or even half a million. The contingent from the larger kingdom contributed on
the occasion mentioned above consisted of only 10,000 men and 2,000 chariots
(HDB, ib). The safest conclusion, therefore, seems to be that, while many
of the questionable numbers in the present text of the Old Testament are
due to copyists, there is a residuum which cannot be so accounted for.
IV. Round Numbers.
The use of definite numerical expressions in an indefinite sense, that is,
as round numbers, which is met with in many languages, seems to have been very
prevalent in Western Asia from early times to the present day. Sir W. Ramsay
(Thousand and One Churches, 6) remarks that the modern Turks have 4 typical
numbers which are often used in proper names with little or no reference
to their exact numerical force--3, 7, 40, 1,001. The Lycaonian district
which gives the book its name is called Bin Bir Kilisse, "The Thousand and
One Churches," although the actual number in the valley is only 28. The
modern Persians use 40 in just the same way. "Forty years" with them often
means "many years" (Brugsch, cited by Konig, Stilistik, 55). This lax use
of numbers, as we think, was probably very frequent among the Israelites
and their neighbors. The inscription on the Moabite Stone supplies a very
instructive example. The Israelite occupation of Medeba by Omri and his son
for half the reign of the latter is there reckoned (II.7 f) at 40 years. As,
according to 1Ki 16:23,29, the period extended to only 23 years at the
most, the number 40 must have been used very freely by Mesha's scribe as a
round number. It is probably often used in that way in the Bible where it is
remarkably frequent, especially in reference to periods of days or years. The
40 days of the Flood (Ge 7:4,17), the arrangement of the life of Moses
in three periods of 40 years each (Ac 7:23; Ex 7:7; De 34:7), the
40 years' rule or reign of Eli (1Sa 4:18), of Saul (Ac 13:21;
compare Josephus, Ant, VI, xiv, 9), of David (1Ki 2:11), of Solomon
(1Ki 11:42) and of Jehoash (2Ki 12:1), the 40 or 80 years of
rest (Jud 3:11,30; 5:31; 8:28), the 40 years of Philistine oppression
(Jud 13:1), the 40 days' challenge of Goliath (1Sa 17:16), the
40 days' fast of Moses (Ex 34:28), Elijah (1Ki 19:8), and Jesus
(Mt 4:2 and parallel), the 40 days before the destruction of Nineveh
(Jon 3:4), and the 40 days before the Ascension (Ac 1:3), all
suggest conventional use, or the influence of that use, for it can hardly be
supposed that the number in each of these cases, and in others which might be
mentioned, was exactly 40. How it came to be so used is not quite certain,
but it may have originated, partly at any rate, in the idea that 40 years
constituted a generation or the period at the end of which a man attains
maturity, an idea common, it would seem, to the Greeks, the Israelites, and
the Arabs. The period of 40 years in the wilderness in the course of which
the old Israel died out and a new Israel took its place was a generation
(Nu 32:13, etc.). The rabbis long afterward regarded 40 years as the
age of understanding, the age when a man reaches his intellectual prime (Ab,
v, addendum). In the Koran (Sura 46) a man is said to attain his strength
when he attains to 40 years, and it was at that age, according to tradition,
that Muhammad came forward as a prophet. In this way perhaps 40 came to be used
as a round number for an indefinite period with a suggestion of completeness,
and then was extended in course of time to things as well as Seasons.
Other round numbers are:
(1) some of the higher numbers;
(2) several numerical phrases.
Under (1) come the following numbers. One hundred, often of course to be
understood literally, but evidently a round number in Ge 26:12; Le 26:8;
2Sa 24:3; Ec 8:12; Mt 19:29 and parallel. A thousand (thousands),
very often a literal number, but in not a few cases indefinite, e.g. Ex
20:6 parallel De 5:10; 7:9; 1Sa 18:7; Ps 50:10; 90:4; 105:8;
Isa 60:22, etc. Ten thousand (Hebrew ribbo, ribboth, rebhabhah; Greek
murids, murioi) is also used as a round number as in Le 26:8; De 32:30;
So 5:10; Mic 6:7. The yet higher figures, thousands of thousands, etc.,
are, in almost all cases, distinctly hyperbolical round numbers, the most
remarkable examples occurring in the apocalyptic books (Da 7:10; Re 5:11;
9:16; Ethiopic Enoch 40:1).
(2) The second group, numerical phrases, consists of a number of expressions
in which numbers are used roundly, in some cases to express the idea of
fewness. One or two, etc.: "a day or two" (Ex 21:21), "a heap, two
heaps" (Jud 15:16 the Revised Version margin), "one of a city, and two
of a family" (Jer 3:14), "not once, nor twice," that is "several times"
(2Ki 6:10). Two or three: "Two or three berries in the (topmost) bough"
(Isa 17:6; compare Ho 6:2), "Where two or three are gathered
together in my name," etc. (Mt 18:20). Konig refers to Assyrian,
Syrian, and Arabic parallels. Three or four: the most noteworthy example
is the formula which occurs 8 times in Am 1:3,6,9,11,13; 2:1,4,6,
"for three transgressions .... yea for four." That the numbers here are
round numbers is evident from the fact that the sins enumerated are in most
cases neither 3 nor 4. In Pr 30:15,18,21,29, on the other hand, where
we have the same rhetorical device, climax ad majus, 4 is followed by four
statements and is therefore to be taken literally. Again, Konig (same place)
points to classical and Arabic parallels. Four or five: "Four or five in the
outmost branches of a fruitful tree" (Isa 17:6). Five or six: "Thou
shouldest have smitten (Syria) five or six times" (2Ki 13:19), an idiom
met with also in Tell el-Amarna Letters (Konig, ib). Six and seven: "He will
deliver thee in six troubles; yea, in seven there shall no evil touch thee"
(Job 5:19). Seven and eight: "Seven shepherds, and eight principal
men" (Mic 5:5), that is, "enough and more than enough" (Cheyne);
"Give a portion to seven, yea, even unto eight" (Ec 11:2). In one
remarkable phrase which occurs (with slight variations of form) 24 times
in the Old Testament, two Hebrew words, meaning respectively "yesterday"
and "third," are mostly used so as together to express the idea of vague
reference to the past. the Revised Version (British and American) renders in
a variety of ways: "beforetime" (Ge 31:2, etc.), "aforetime" (Jos
4:18), "heretofore" (Ex 4:10, etc.), "in time (or "times") past"
(De 19:4,6; 2Sa 3:17, etc.).
V. Significant Numbers.
Numerical symbolism, that is, the use of numbers not merely, if at all,
with their literal numerical value, or as round numbers, but with symbolic
significance, sacred or otherwise, was widespread in the ancient East,
especially in Babylonia and regions more or less influenced by Babylonian
culture which, to a certain extent, included Canaan. It must also be
remembered that the ancestors of the Israelites are said to have been of
Babylonian origin and may therefore have transmitted to their descendants
the germs at least of numerical symbolism as developed in Babylonia in the
age of Hammurabi. Be that as it may, the presence of this use of numbers in
the Bible, and that on a large scale, cannot reasonably be doubted, although
some writers have gone too far in their speculations on the subject. The
numbers which are unmistakably used with more or less symbolic meaning are
7 and its multiples, and 3, 4, 10 and 12.
1. Seven and Its Multiples:
By far the most prominent of these is the number 7, which is referred to
in one way or another in nearly 600 passages in the Bible, as well as in
many passages in the Apocrypha and the Pseudepigrapha, and later Jewish
literature. Of course the number has its usual numerical force in many
of these places, but even there not seldom with a glance at its symbolic
significance. For the determination of the latter we are not assigned
to conjecture. There is clear evidence in the cuneiform texts, which are
our earliest authorities, that the Babylonians regarded 7 as the number of
totality, of completeness. The Sumerians, from whom the Semitic Babylonians
seem to have borrowed the idea, equated 7 and "all." The 7-storied towers
of Babylonia represented the universe. Seven was the expression of the
highest power, the greatest conceivable fullness of force, and therefore
was early pressed into the service of religion. It is found in reference
to ritual in the age of Gudea, that is perhaps about the middle of the 3rd
millennium BC. "Seven gods" at the end of an enumeration meant "all the gods"
(for these facts and the cuneiform evidence compare Hehn, Siebenzahl und
Sabbath bei den Babyloniern und im Altes Testament, 4 ff). How 7 came to be
used in this way can only be glanced at here. The view connecting it with
the gods of the 7 planets, which used to be in great favor and still has
its advocates, seems to lack ancient proof. Hehn (op. cit., 44 ff) has shown
that the number acquired its symbolic meaning long before the earliest time
for which that reference can be demonstrated. As this sacred or symbolic use
of 7 was not peculiar to the Babylonians and their teachers and neighbors,
but was more or less known also in India and China, in classical lands,
and among the Celts and the Germans, it probably originated in some fact of
common observation, perhaps in the four lunar phases each of which comprises
7 days and a fraction. Conspicuous groups of stars may have helped to deepen
the impression, and the fact that 7 is made up of two significant numbers,
each, as will be shown, also suggestive of completeness--3 and 4--may have
been early noticed and taken into account. The Biblical use of 7 may be
conveniently considered under 4 heads:
(1) ritual use;
(2) historical use;
(3) didactic or literary use;
(4) apocalyptic use.
(1) Ritual Use of Seven.
The number 7 plays a conspicuous part in a multitude of passages giving
rules for worship or purification, or recording ritual actions. The 7th day
of the week was holy (see SABBATH). There were 7 days of unleavened bread
(Ex 34:18, etc.), and 7 days of the Feast of Tabernacles (Le
23:34). The 7th year was the sabbatical year (Ex 21:2, etc.). The
Moabite Balak built Balaam on three occasions 7 altars and provided in each
case 7 bullocks and 7 rams (Nu 23:1,14,29). The Mosaic law prescribed
7 he-lambs for several festal offerings (Nu 28:11,19,27, etc.). The
7-fold sprinkling of blood is enjoined in the ritual of the Day of Atonement
(Le 16:14,19), and elsewhere. Seven-fold sprinkling is also repeatedly
mentioned in the rules for the purification of the leper and the leprous house
(Le 14:7,16,27,51). The leprous Naaman was ordered to bathe 7 times in
the Jordan (2Ki 5:10). In cases of real or suspected uncleanness through
leprosy, or the presence of a corpse, or for other reasons, 7 days' seclusion
was necessary (Le 12:2, etc.). Circumcision took place after 7 days
(Le 12:3). An animal must be 7 days old before it could be offered
in sacrifice (Ex 22:30). Three periods of 7 days each are mentioned
in the rules for the consecration of priests (Ex 29:30,35,37). An
oath seems to have been in the first instance by 7 holy things (Ge 21:29
and the Hebrew word for "swear"). The number 7 also entered into the
structure of sacred objects, for instance the candlestick or lamp-stand in
the tabernacle and the second temple each of which had 7 lights (Nu 8:2;
Zec 4:2). Many other instances of the ritual use of 7 in the Old Testament
and many instructive parallels from Babylonian texts could be given.
(2) Historical Use of Seven.
The number 7 also figures prominently in a large number of passages which
occur in historical narrative, in a way which reminds us of its symbolic
significance. The following are some of the most remarkable: Jacob's 7 years'
service for Rachel (Ge 29:20; compare Ge 29:27 f), and his bowing
down 7 times to Esau (Ge 33:3); the 7 years of plenty, and the 7 years
of famine (Ge 41:53 f); Samson's 7 days' marriage feast (Jud 14:12
; compare Ge 29:27), 7 locks of hair (Jud 16:19), and
the 7 withes with which he was bound (Jud 16:7 f); the 7 daughters
of Jethro (Ex 2:16), the 7 sons of Jesse (1Sa 16:10), the
7 sons of Saul (2Sa 21:6), and the 7 sons of Job (Job 1:2;
compare Job 42:13); the 7 days' march of the 7 priests blowing 7
trumpets round the walls of Jericho, and the 7-fold march on the 7th day
(Jos 6:8 ); the 7 ascents of Elijah's servant to the top of Carmel
(1Ki 18:43 f); the 7 sneezes of the Shunammitish woman's son (2Ki
4:35); the heating of Nebuchadnezzar's furnace 7 times more than it
was wont to be heated (Da 8:19), and the king's madness for 7 times
or years (Da 4:16,23,25,32); Anna's 7 years of wedded life (Lu
2:36); the 7 loaves of the 4,000 (Mt 15:34-36 parallel) and the 7
baskets full of fragments (Mt 15:37 parallel); the 7 brothers in the
conundrum of the Sadducees (Mt 22:25 parallel); the 7 demons cast out
of Mary Magdalene (Mr 16:9 parallel Lu 8:2); the 7 ministers
in the church at Jerusalem (Ac 6:3 ), and the 7 sons of Sceva (Ac
19:14, but the Western text represents them as only 2). The number must
no doubt be understood literally in many of these passages, but even then
its symbolic meaning is probably hinted at by the historian. When a man was
said to have had 7 sons or daughters, or an action was reported as done or
to be done 7 times, whether by design or accident, the number was noted,
and its symbolic force remembered. It cannot indeed be regarded in all these
cases as a sacred number, but its association with sacred matters which was
kept alive among the Jews by the institution of the Sabbath, was seldom,
if ever, entirely overlooked.
(3) Didactic or Literary Use of Seven.
The symbolic use of 7 naturally led to its employment by poets and teachers for
the vivid expression of multitude or intensity. This use is sometimes evident,
and sometimes latent. (a) Evident examples are the 7-fold curse predicted for
the murderer of Cain (Ge 4:15); fleeing 7 ways (De 28:7,25);
deliverance from 7 troubles (Job 5:19); praise of God 7 times a day
(Ps 119:164); 7 abominations (Pr 26:25; compare Pr 6:16);
silver purified 7 times, that is, thoroughly purified (Ps 12:6); 7-fold
sin; 7-fold repentance, and 7-fold forgiveness (Lu 17:4; compare Mt
18:21); 7 evil spirits (Mt 12:45 parallel Lu 11:26). The
last of these, as well as the previous reference to the 7 demons cast out
of Mary Magdalene reminds us of the 7 spirits of Beliar (Testament to the
Twelve Patriarchs, Reuben chapters 2 and 3) and of the 7 evil spirits so
often referred to in Babylonian exorcisms (compare Hehn, op. cit., 26 ff),
but it is not safe to connect our Lord's words with either. The Babylonian
belief may indeed have influenced popular ideas to some extent, but there
is no need to find a trace of it in the Gospels. The 7 demons of the latter
are sufficiently accounted for by the common symbolic use of 7. For other
passages which come under this head compare De 28:7,25; Ru 4:15; 1Sa
2:5; Ps 79:12. (b) Examples of latent use of the number 7, of
what Zockler (RE3, "Sieben") calls "latent heptads," are not infrequent. The
7-fold use of the expression "the voice of Yahweh" in Ps 29, which
has caused it to be named "The Psalm of the Seven Thunders," and the 7
epithets of the Divine Spirit in Isa 11:2, cannot be accidental. In
both cases the number is intended to point at full-summed completeness. In
the New Testament we have the 7 beatitudes of character (Mt 5:3-9);
the 7 petitions of the Paternoster (Mt 6:9 f); the 7 parables of
the Kingdom in Mt 13; the 7 woes pronounced on the Pharisees (Mt
23:13,15,16,23,25,27,29), perhaps the 7 sayings of Jesus, beginning with
"I am" (ego eimi) in the Fourth Gospel (Joh 6:35; 8:12; 10:7,11; 11:25;
14:6; 15:1), and the 7 disciples at the Lake after the Resurrection
(Joh 21:2). Several groups of 7 are found in the Epistles and in
Revelation: 7 forms of suffering (Ro 8:35); 7 gifts or charismata
(Ro 12:6-9); 7 attributes of the wisdom that is from above (Jas
3:17); 7 graces to be added to faith (2Pe 1:5 ); two doxologies
each containing 7 words of praise (Re 5:12; 7:12), and 7 classes of
men (Re 6:15). Other supposed instances of 7-fold grouping in the
Fourth Gospel are pointed out by E.A. Abbott (Johannine Grammar, 2624 ff),
but are of uncertain value.
(4) Apocalyptic Use of Seven.
As might be expected, 7 figures greatly in apocalyptic literature, although
it is singularly absent from the apocalyptic portion of Daniel. Later works
of this kind, however--the writings bearing the name of Enoch, the Testaments
of Reuben and Levi, 2 Esd, etc.--supply many illustrations. The doctrine of
the 7 heavens which is developed in the Slavonic Enoch and elsewhere and
may have been in the first instance of Babylonian origin is not directly
alluded to in the Bible, but probably underlies the apostle's reference to
the third heaven (2Co 12:2). In the one apocalyptic writing in the
New Testament, 7 is employed with amazing frequency. We read of 7 churches
(Re 1:4, etc.); 7 golden candlesticks (Re 1:12, etc.); 7 stars
(Re 1:16); 7 angels of the churches (Re 1:20); 7 lamps of fire
(Re 4:5); 7 spirits of God (Re 1:4; 3:1; 4:5); a book with
7 seals (Re 5:1); a lamb with 7 horns and 7 eyes (Re 5:6);
7 angels with 7 trumpets (Re 8:2); 7 thunders (Re 10:3);
a dragon with 7 heads and 7 diadems (Re 13:3); a beast with 7 heads
(Re 18:1); 7 angels having the 7 last plagues (Re 15:1); and
7 golden bowls of the wrath of God (Re 15:7) and a scarlet-colored
beast with 7 heads (Re 17:3) which are 7 mountains (Re 17:9)
and 7 kings (Re 17:10). The writer, whoever he was, must have had his
imagination saturated with the numerical symbolism which had been cultivated
in Western Asia for millenniums. There cannot be a shadow of doubt that 7
for him expressed fullness, completeness. As this inquiry will have shown,
the significance of the number is practically the same throughout the
Bible. Although a little of it may have been rubbed off in the course of ages,
the main idea suggested by 7 was never quite lost sight of in Biblical times,
and the number is still used in the life and song of the Holy Land and Arabia
with at least an echo of its ancient meaning.
The significance of 7 extends to its multiples. Fourteen, or twice 7, is
possibly symbolic in some cases. The stress laid in the Old Testament on the
14th of the month as the day of the Passover (Ex 12:6 and 16 other
places), and the regulation that 14 lambs were to be offered on each of the
7 days of the Feast of Tabernacles (Nu 29:13,15) hint at design in
the selection of the number, especially in view of the fact that 7 and 7
occur repeatedly in cuneiform literature--in magical and liturgical texts,
and in the formula so often used in the Am Tab: "7 and 7 times at the feet of
the king my lord .... I prostrate myself." The arrangement of the generations
from Abraham to Christ in three groups of 14 each (Mt 1:17) is probably
intentional, so far as the number in each group is concerned. It is doubtful
whether the number has any symbolic force in Ac 27:27; 2Co 12:2;
Ga 2:1. Of course it must be remembered that both the Hebrew and
Greek words for 14 ('arba'ah asar; dekatessares) suggest that it is made
up of 10 and 4, but constant use of 7 in the sense above defined will have
influenced the application of its double, at least in some cases.
Forty-nine, or 7 X 7, occurs in two regulations of the Law. The second of
the three great festivals took place on the 50th day after one of the days
of unleavened bread (Le 23:15 ), that is, after an interval of 7 X
7 days; and two years of Jubilee were separated by 7 X 7 years (Le 25:8
). The combination is met with also in one of the so-called Penitential
Psalms of Babylonia: "Although my sins are 7 times 7, forgive me my sins."
Seven multiplied by ten, or 70, was a very strong expression of multitude which
is met with in a large number of passages in the Old Testament. It occurs of
persons: the 70 descendants of Jacob (Ex 15; De 10:22); the 70 elders
of Israel (Ex 24:1,9; Nu 11:16,24 f); the 70 kings ill treated by
Adoni-bezek (Jud 1:7); the 70 sons of Gideon (Jud 8:30; 9:2);
the 70 descendants of Abdon who rode on 70 asscolts (Jud 12:14); the
70 sons of Ahab (2Ki 10:1,6 f); and the 70 idolatrous elders seen by
Ezekiel (Eze 8:11). It is also used of periods: 70 days of Egyptian
mourning for Jacob (Ge 50:3); 70 years of trial (Isa 23:15,17; Jer
25:11 f; Da 9:2; Zec 1:12; 7:5); the 70 weeks of Daniel (Da 9:24);
and the 70 years of human life (Ps 90:10). Other noticeable uses of
70 are the 70 palm trees of Elim (Ex 15:27 parallel Nu 33:9);
the offering of 70 bullocks in the time of Hezekiah (2Ch 29:32),
and the offering by the heads of the tribes of 12 silver bowls each of 70
shekels (Nu 7:13 ). In the New Testament we have the 70 apostles (Lu
10:1,17), but the number is uncertain with Codices Vaticanus and Bezae and
some versions reading 72, which is the product, not of 7 and 10, but of 6 and
12. Significant seventies are also met with outside of the Bible. The most
noteworthy are the Jewish belief that there were 70 nations outside Israel,
with 70 languages, under the care of 70 angels, based perhaps on the list
in Ge 10; the Sanhedrin of about 70 members; the translation of the
Pentateuch into Greek by Septuagint (more exactly 72), and the 70 members of a
family in one of the Aramaic texts of Sendschirli. This abundant use of 70 must
have been largely due to the fact that it was regarded as an intensified 7.
Seventy and seven, or 77, a combination found in the words of Lamech (Ge
4:24); the number of the princes and elders of Succoth (Jud 8:14);
and the number of lambs in a memorable sacrifice (Ezr 8:35), would
appeal in the same way to the oriental fancy.
The product of seven and seventy (Greek hebdomekontakis hepta) is met with
once in the New Testament (Mt 18:22), and in the Septuagint of the
above-quoted Ge 4:24. Moulton, however (Grammar of Greek New Testament
Prolegomena, 98), renders in both passages 70 plus 7; contra, Allen, "Mt,"
ICC, 199. The number is clearly a forceful equivalent of "always."
Seven thousand in 1Ki 19:18 parallel Ro 11:4 may be a round
number chosen on account of its embodiment of the number 7. In the Moabite
Stone the number of Israelites slain at the capture of the city of Nebo by
the Moabites is reckoned at 7,000.
The half of seven seems sometimes to have been regarded as significant. In
Da 7:25; 9:27; 12:7; Lu 4:25 parallel 5:17; Re 11:2; 13:5
a period of distress is calculated at 3 1/2 years, that is, half the period
of sacred completeness.
2. The Number Three:
The number three seems early to have attracted attention as the number in
which beginning, middle and end are most distinctly marked, and to have been
therefore regarded as symbolic of a complete and ordered whole. Abundant
illustration of its use in this way in Babylonian theology, ritual and magic
is given from the cuneiform texts by Hehn (op. cit., 63 ff), and the hundreds
of passages in the Bible in which the number occurs include many where this
special significance either lies on the surface or not far beneath it. This
is owing in some degree perhaps to Babylonian influence, but will have been
largely due to independent observation of common phenomena--the arithmetical
fact mentioned above and familiar trios, such as heaven, earth, and sea (or
"the abyss"); morning, noon and night; right, middle, and left, etc. In other
words, 3 readily suggested completeness, and was often used with a glance
at that meaning in daily life and daily speech. Only a selection from the
great mass of Biblical examples can be given here.
(1) Three is often found of persons and things sacred or secular, e.g. Noah's
3 sons (Ge 6:10); Job's 3 daughters (Job 1:2; 42:13) and 3
friends (Job 2:11); Abraham's 3 guests (Ge 18:2); and Sarah's
3 measures of meal (Ge 18:6; compare Mt 13:33 parallel); 3 in
military tactics (Jud 7:16,20; 9:43; 1Sa 11:11; 13:17; Job 1:17);
3 great feasts (Ex 23:14); the 3 daily prayers (Ps 55:17; Da
6:10,13); the 3 night watches (Jud 7:19); God's 3-fold call of
Samuel (1Sa 3:8); the 3 keepers of the temple threshold (Jer
52:24); the 3 presidents appointed by Darius (Da 6:2); the 3
temptations (Mt 4:3,5 f,8 f parallel); the 3 prayers in Gethsemane
(Mt 26:39,42,44 parallel); Peter's 3 denials (Mt 26:34,75
parallel); the Lord's 3-fold question and 3-fold charge (Joh 21:15 );
and the 3-fold vision of the sheet (Ac 10:16).
(2) In a very large number of passages 3 is used of periods of time: 3 days;
3 weeks; 3 months and 3 years. So in Ge 40:12,13,18; Ex 2:2; 10:22 f;
2Sa 24:13; Isa 20:3; Jon 1:17; Mt 15:32; Lu 2:46; 13:7; Ac 9:9;
2Co 12:8. The frequent reference to the resurrection "on the 3rd day"
or "after 3 days" (Mt 16:21; 27:63, etc.) may at the same time have
glanced at the symbolic use of the number and at the belief common perhaps
to the Jews and the Zoroastrians that a corpse was not recognizable after 3
days (for Jewish testimony compare Joh 11:39; Yebamoth xvi.3; Midrash,
Genesis, chapter c; Semachoth viii; for Persian ideas compare The Expository
Times, XVIII, 536).
(3) The number 3 is also used in a literary way, sometimes appearing only in
the structure. Note as examples the 3-fold benediction of Israel (Nu 6:24
); the Thrice Holy of the seraphim (Isa 6:3); the 3-fold overturn
(Eze 21:27 (Hebrew 32)); the 3-fold refrain of Psalms 42--43 regarded
as one psalm (Ps 42:5,11; 43:5); the 3 names of God (the Mighty One,
God, Yahweh, Jos 22:22; compare Ps 50:1); the 3 graces of
1Co 13; the 3 witnesses (1 Joh 5:8); the frequent use of 3
and 3rd in Revelation; the description of God as "who is and who was and
who is to come" (Re 1:4); and `the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit' (Mt 28:19). In some of these cases 3-fold repetition is a
mode of expressing the superlative, and others remind us of the remarkable
association of 3 with deity alluded to by Plato and Philo, and illustrated
by the triads of Egypt and Babylonia and the Far East. It cannot, however,
be proved, or even made probable, that there is any direct connection between
any of these triads and the Christian Trinity. All that can be said is,
that the same numerical symbolism may have been operative in both cases.
3. The Number Four:
The 4 points of the compass and the 4 phases of the moon will have been early
noticed, and the former at any rate will have suggested before Biblical
times the use of 4 as a symbol of completeness of range, of comprehensive
extent. As early as the middle of the 3rd millennium BC Bah rulers (followed
long afterward by the Assyrians) assumed the title "king of the 4 quarters"
meaning that their rule reached in all directions, and an early conqueror
claimed to have subdued the 4 quarters. There are not a few illustrations of
the use of 4 in some such way in the Bible. The 4 winds (referred to also
in the cuneiform texts and the Book of the Dead) are mentioned again and
again (Jer 49:36; Eze 37:9), and the 4 quarters or corners (Isa
11:12; Eze 7:2; Re 20:8). We read also of the 4 heads of the river of
Eden (Ge 2:10 ), of 4 horns, 4 smiths, 4 chariots, and horses of 4
colors in the visions of Zechariah (1:8, Septuagint; 1:18 ff; 6:1 ff), the
chariots being directly connected with the 4 winds; 4 punishments (Jer
15:3; Eze 14:21, the latter with a remarkable Assyrian parallel), the
4 kingdoms in Nebuchadnezzar's dream as interpreted (Da 2:37 ) and
Daniel's vision (Da 7:3 ); the 4 living creatures in Eze (1:5 ff;
compare 1:10), each with 4 faces and 4 wings, and the 4 modeled after them
(Re 4:6, etc.). In most of these cases 4 is clearly symbolical,
as in a number of passages in Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha. Whether the
frequent use of it in the structure of the tabernacle, Solomon's temple, and
Ezekiel's temple has anything to do with the symbolic meaning is not clear,
but the latter can probably be traced in proverbial and prophetic speech
(Pr 30:15,18,21,24,29; Am 1:3,6, etc.). The 4 transgressions of the
latter represent full-summed iniquity, and the 4-fold grouping in the former
suggested the wide sweep of the classification. Perhaps it is not fanciful
to find the idea in the 4 sets of hearers of the gospel in the parable of
the Sewer (Mt 13:19-23 parallel). The rabbis almost certainly had it
in mind in their 4-fold grouping of characters in six successive paragraphs
(Ab v.16-21) which, however, is of considerably later date.
4. The Number Ten:
As the basis of the decimal system, which probably originated in counting with
the fingers, 10 has been a significant number in all historical ages. The
10 antediluvian patriarchs (Ge 5; compare the 10 Babylonian kings of
Berosus, and 10 in early Iranian and far-Eastern myths); the 10 righteous
men who would have saved Sodom (Ge 18:32); the 10 plagues of Egypt;
the 10 commandments (Ex 20:2-17 parallel De 5:6-21; the 10
commandments found by some in Ex 34:14-26 are not clearly made out);
the 10 servants of Gideon (Jud 6:27); the 10 elders who accompanied
Boaz (Ru 4:2); the 10 virgins of the parable (Mt 25:1); the 10
pieces of silver (Lu 15:8); the 10 servants entrusted with 10 pounds
(Lu 19:13 ), the most capable of whom was placed over 10 cities
(Lu 19:17); the 10 days' tribulation predicted for the church of
Smyrna (Re 2:10); the use of "10 times" in the sense of "many times"
(Ge 31:7; Ne 4:12; Da 1:20, etc., an idiom met with repeatedly in
Tell el-Amarna Letters); and the use of 10 in sacred measurements and in
the widely diffused custom of tithe, and many other examples show plainly
that 10 was a favorite symbolic number suggestive of a rounded total,
large or small, according to circumstances. The number played a prominent
part in later Jewish life and thought. Ten times was the Tetragrammaton
(YHWH) uttered by the high priest on the Day of Atonement; 10 persons must
be present at a nuptial benediction; 10 constituted a congregation in the
synagogue; 10 was the usual number of a company at the paschal meal, and of
a row of comforters of the bereaved. The world was created, said the rabbis,
by ten words, and Abraham was visited with 10 temptations (Ab v.1 and 4;
several other illustrations are found in the context).
5. The Number Twelve:
The 12 months and the 12 signs of the zodiac probably suggested to the
old Babylonians the use of 12 as a symbolic or semi-sacred number, but its
frequent employment by the Israelites with special meaning cannot at present
be proved to have originated in that way, although the idea was favored
by both Josephus and Philo. So far as we know, Israelite predilection for
12 was entirely due to the traditional belief that the nation consisted of
12 tribes, a belief, it is true, entertained also by the Arabs or some of
them, but with much less intensity and persistence. In Israel the belief
was universal and ineradicable. Hence, the 12 pillars set up by Moses (Ex
24:4); the 12 jewels in the high priest's breast-plate (Ex 28:21);
the 12 cakes of showbread (Le 24:5); the 12 rods (Nu 17:2);
the 12 spies (Nu 13); the 12 stones placed by Joshua in the bed
of Jordan (Jos 4:9); the 12 officers of Solomon (1Ki 4:7);
the 12 stones of Elijah's altar (1Ki 18:31); the 12 disciples or
apostles (26 t), and several details of apocalyptic imagery (Re 7:5 ff;
12:1; 21:12,14,16,21; 22:2; compare also Mt 14:20 parallel Mt
19:28 parallel Mt 26:53; Ac 26:7). The number pointed in the
first instance at unity and completeness which had been sanctioned by Divine
election, and it retained this significance when applied to the spiritual
Israel. Philo indeed calls it a perfect number. Its double in Re 4:4,
etc., is probably also significant.
6. Other Significant Numbers:
Five came readily into the mind as the half of 10. Hence, perhaps its use
in the parable of the Virgins (Mt 25:2). It was often employed in
literary division, e.g. in the Pentateuch, the Psalms, the part of the
Hagiographa known as the Meghilljth, the Ethiopic Enoch and Matthew (7:28;
11:1; 13:53; 19:1; 26:1; compare Sir J. Hawkins, Horae Synopticae(2), 163
ff). It seems to have been occasionally suggestive of relative smallness, as
in Le 26:8, the 5 loaves (Mt 14:17 parallel), 1Co 14:19,
and perhaps in Tell el-Amarna Letters. It has been remarked (Skinner,
"Gen," ICC, 483) that the number occurs repeatedly in reference to matters
Egyptian (Ge 41:34; 45:22; 47:2; Isa 19:18), but there seems to be
no satisfactory explanation. Sixty: Although, as was before observed, there
is no direct trace in the Bible of the numerical system based on 60, there
are a few passages where there may be a distant echo. The 60 cities of Argob
(De 3:4; Jos 13:30; 1Ki 4:13); the 60 mighty men and the 60 queens
of So 3:7; 6:8, the double use of 60 of Rehoboam's harem and family
(2Ch 11:21), the 3 sacrifices of 60 victims each (Nu 7:88),
and the length of Solomon's temple, 60 cubits (1Ki 6:2 parallel 2Ch
3:3), may perhaps have a remote connection with the Babylonian use. It
must be remembered that the latter was current in Israel and the neighboring
regions in the division of the talent into 60 minas. A few passages in
the Pseudepigrapha may be similarly interpreted, and the Babylonian Talmud
contains, as might be expected, many clear allusions. In the Bible, however,
the special use of the number is relatively rare and indirect. One hundred
and ten, the age attained by Joseph (Ge 50:22), is significant as
the Egyptian ideal of longevity (Smith, DB2, 1804 f; Skinner, "Gen," ICC,
539 f). One hundred and fifty-three: The Greek poet Oppian (circa 171 AD)
and others are said to have reckoned the number of fishes in the world at this
figure (compare Jerome on Eze 47), and some scholars find a reference
to that belief in Joh 21:11 in which case the number would be symbolic
of comprehensiveness. That is not quite impossible, but the suggestion cannot
be safely pressed. Throughout this discussion of significant numbers it must
be borne in mind that writers and teachers may often have been influenced by
the desire to aid the memory of those they addressed, and may to that end
have arranged thoughts and facts in groups of 3, or 4, or 7, or 10, and so
on (Sir John Hawkins, Horae Synopticae2, 166 f). They will at the same time
have remembered the symbolic force of these numbers, and in some cases, at
least, will have used them as round numbers. There are many places in which
the round and the symbolic uses of a number cannot be sharply distinguished.
VI. Gematria.
(GemaTriya'). A peculiar application of numbers which was in great favor
with the later Jews and some of the early Christians and is not absolutely
unknown to the Bible, is Gematria, that is the use of the letters of a word
so as by means of their combined numerical value to express a name, or a
witty association of ideas. The term is usually explained as an adaptation
of the Greek word geometria, that is, "geometry," but Dalman (Worterbuch,
under the word) connects it in this application of it with grammateia. There
is only one clear example in Scripture, the number of the beast which is
the number of a man, six hundred sixty and six (Re 13:18). If, as
most scholars are inclined to believe, a name is intended, the numerical
value of the letters composing which adds up to 666, and if it is assumed
that the writer thought in Hebrew or Aramaic. Nero Caesar written with the
consonants nun (n) equals 50, resh (r) equals 200, waw (w) equals 6, nun (n)
equals 50, qoph (q) equals 100, camekh (c) equals 60, resh (r) equals 200:
total equals 666, seems to be the best solution. Perhaps the idea suggested by
Dr. Milligan that the 3-fold use of 6 which just falls short of 7, the number
of sacred completeness, and is therefore a note of imperfection, may have
been also in the writer's mind. Some modern scholars find a second instance
in Ge 14:14 and 15:2. As the numerical value of the consonants which
compose Eliezer in Hebrew add up to 318, it has been maintained that the
number is not historical, but has been fancifully constructed by means of
gematria out of the name. This strange idea is not new, for it is found in
the Midrash on Ge 43 in the name of a rabbi who lived circa 200 AD,
but its antiquity is its greatest merit.
LITERATURE.
In addition to other books referred to in the course of the article: Hehn,
Siebenzahl und Sabbath bei den Babyloniern und im Altes Testament; Konig,
Stilistik, Rhetorik, Poetik, etc., 51-57, and the same writer's article
"Number" in HDB; Sir J. Hawkins,. Horae Synopticae2, 163-67; Wiener, Essays
in Pentateuchal Criticism, 155-69; "Number" in HDB (1-vol); EB; Jewish
Encyclopedia;Smith, DB; "Numbers" in DCG; "Zahlen" in the Dicts. of Wiener,
Riehm2, Guthe; "Zahlen" and "Sieben" in RE3.
William Taylor Smith
Soule\'s Dictionary of English Synonyms 
number
I. v. a.
1. Count, enumerate, tell, reckon, calculate, compute, numerate, call over, tell off,
run over, sum up.
2. Reckon, account.
3. Equal in number.
4. Amount to, reach the number of, contain, include, consist of.
5. Designate by number, affix a number to.
II. n.
1. Figure, numeral, digit, numero.
2. Many.
3. Multitude, numerousness.
4. Collection of units.
English Explanatory Dictionary (Synonyms) 
number
ˈnʌmbə n.
1 numeral, integer, figure, digit: The columns of numbers were entered in a neat hand.
2 few, handful, crowd, slew, gang, bunch, party, bevy, covey, troop, company, platoon,
swarm, horde, multitude, mob, host, army, mass, hundred, thousand, million, billion; several,
many, numbers, legions, US and Canadian slew(s) or slue(s), Colloq loads, tons: A number of
people attended the meeting. An enormous number of viruses could fit on the head of a pin.
3 issue; edition, copy: The fourth number of the quarterly is published at the end of
the year. --v.
4 count, enumerate, compute, calculate, tally, figure (up), add (up), include, total,
tot (up), reckon, sum (up): Who can number the stars?
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 
301 Moby Thesaurus words for "number":
G, M, a certain number, a few, a number, account, act, add up,
add up to, afterpiece, aggregate, aggregate to, amount, amount to,
apportion, army, art, article, back matter, back number, batch,
beat, bevy, billion, bit, block out, blood, book, box score, brand,
breed, budget, bunch, business, calculate, call off, call over,
call the roll, calling, career, career building, careerism, cast,
census, chapter, character, chaser, chiliad, chiliagon,
chiliahedron, chiliarch, chiliarchia, chunk, cipher, clan, clause,
clutch, collection, color, come, come to, company, comprise,
compute, contain, copy, count, covey, craft, crowd, curtain,
curtain call, curtain raiser, deal, decrease, denomination,
description, designation, detail, difference, digit, divertimento,
divertissement, divide, dose, dual, edition, enumerate, epilogue,
exode, exodus, expository scene, fascicle, feather, few, figure,
figure up, finale, fix, foliate, folio, form, front matter, game,
gang, gathering, genre, genus, gob, grain, grand, group, handful,
handicraft, heap, hoke act, horde, host, hundred, hunk, ilk,
impression, include, increase, integer, interlude, intermezzo,
intermission, introduction, issue, itemize, kidney, kilo,
kilocycle, kilogram, kilohertz, kiloliter, kilometer, kin, kind,
label, lakh, large amount, legions, library, library edition,
lifework, lilt, line, line of business, line of work, loads, lot,
make, manner, many, mark, mass, measure, mess, meter, metier,
metrics, millennium, millepede, milligram, milliliter, million,
mission, mob, mold, mount up to, movement, multitude, myriad,
mystery, nature, numbers, numeral, numerate, occupation,
one hundred thousand, one or two, outline, pack, page, paginate,
paragraph, parcel, parse, part, party, passage, passel, persuasion,
phrase, phylum, platoon, plural, poll, portion, practice, printing,
product, profession, prologue, prosody, pursuit, quantify,
quantity, quantize, race, racket, rate, ration, reckon,
reckon up to, reckoning, reduce, resolve, rhythm, rhythmic pattern,
routine, run into, run over, run to, scan, scene, schematize,
school edition, score, section, sentence, series, set, several,
shape, sheet, shtick, signature, singular, sketch, skit, slew,
slews, small amount, song and dance, sort, specialization,
specialty, species, stamp, stand-up comedy act, strain, stripe,
striptease, style, sum, sum up, summation, swarm, swing, tale,
tally, tell, ten thousand, text, the bottom line, the like of,
the likes of, the story, the whole story, thou, thousand, tons,
tot up, tot up to, total, tote up to, trade, trade book,
trade edition, trial, tribe, troop, turn, two or three, type,
umpteen, unitize, variety, verse, vocation, volume, walk,
walk of life, whole, whole number, work, x number, yard
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