Internet Verse Search Commentaries Word Analysis ITL - draft

Ecclesiastes 10:1

Context
NETBible

One dead fly 1  makes the perfumer’s ointment give off a rancid stench, 2  so a little folly can outweigh 3  much wisdom. 4 

NIV ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

As dead flies give perfume a bad smell, so a little folly outweighs wisdom and honour.

NASB ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

Dead flies make a perfumer’s oil stink, so a little foolishness is weightier than wisdom and honor.

NLT ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

Dead flies will cause even a bottle of perfume to stink! Yes, an ounce of foolishness can outweigh a pound of wisdom and honor.

MSG ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

Dead flies in perfume make it stink, And a little foolishness decomposes much wisdom.

BBE ©

SABDAweb Ecc 10:1

Dead flies make the oil of the perfumer give out an evil smell; more valued is a little wisdom than the great glory of the foolish.

NRSV ©

bibleoremus Ecc 10:1

Dead flies make the perfumer’s ointment give off a foul odor; so a little folly outweighs wisdom and honor.

NKJV ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

Dead flies putrefy the perfumer’s ointment, And cause it to give off a foul odor; So does a little folly to one respected for wisdom and honor.

[+] More English

KJV
Dead
<04194>
flies
<02070>
cause the ointment
<08081>
of the apothecary
<07543> (8802)
to send forth
<05042> (8686)
a stinking savour
<0887> (8686)_:
[so doth] a little
<04592>
folly
<05531>
him that is in reputation
<03368>
for wisdom
<02451>
[and] honour
<03519>_.
{Dead...: Heb. Flies of death}
NASB ©

biblegateway Ecc 10:1

Dead
<04194>
flies
<02070>
make a perfumer's
<07543>
oil
<08081>
stink
<0887>
, so a little
<04592>
foolishness
<05531>
is weightier
<03368>
than
<04480>
wisdom
<02451>
and honor
<03519>
.
LXXM
muiai {N-NPF} yanatousai
<2289
V-PAPNP
sapriousin {V-FAI-3P} skeuasian {N-ASF} elaiou
<1637
N-GSN
hdusmatov {N-GSN} timion
<5093
A-ASM
oligon
<3641
A-ASM
sofiav
<4678
N-GSF
uper
<5228
PREP
doxan
<1391
N-ASF
afrosunhv
<877
N-GSF
megalhv
<3173
A-GSF
NET [draft] ITL
One dead
<04194>
fly
<02070>
makes the perfumer’s
<07543>
ointment
<08081>
give off
<05042>
a rancid stench
<0887>
, so a little
<04592>
folly
<05531>
can outweigh
<03368>
much wisdom
<03519>
.
HEBREW
jem
<04592>
twlko
<05531>
dwbkm
<03519>
hmkxm
<02451>
rqy
<03368>
xqwr
<07543>
Nms
<08081>
eyby
<05042>
syaby
<0887>
twm
<04194>
ybwbz (10:1)
<02070>

NETBible

One dead fly 1  makes the perfumer’s ointment give off a rancid stench, 2  so a little folly can outweigh 3  much wisdom. 4 

NET Notes

tn Heb “flies of death.” The plural form of “flies” (זְבוּבֵי, zÿvuve) may be taken as a plural of number (“dead flies”) or a distributive plural referring to one little fly (“one dead fly”). The singular form of the following verb and the parallelism support the latter: “one little fly…so a little folly.”

tn The verb בָּאַשׁ (baash) means “to cause to stink; to turn rancid; to emit a stinking odor” (e.g., Exod 16:24; Ps 38:6; Eccl 10:1); see HALOT 107 s.v. באשׁ 1; BDB 93 s.v. בָּאַשׁ. It is related to the noun בְּאשׁ (bÿosh, “stench”; Isa 34:3; Joel 2:20; Amos 4:10); cf. HALOT 107 s.v. באשׁ; BDB 93 s.v. בְּאשׁ. The verbal root נבע means “to ferment” or “to emit; to pour out; to bubble; to belch forth; to cause to gush forth” (HALOT 665 s.v. נבע; BDB 615 s.v. נָבַע). The two terms יַבְאִישׁ יַבִּיעַ (yavish yabbia’, “to stink” and “to ferment”) create a hendiadys: a figurative expression in which two terms are used to connote one idea: “makes a rancid stench.” Several versions treat this as a hendiadys (Old Greek, Symmachus, Targum, Vulgate); however, the Syriac treats them as separate verbs. Most translations treat these as a hendiadys: “Dead flies cause the ointment of the apothecary to send forth a stinking savor” (KJV); “Dead flies make a perfumer’s oil stink” (NASB); “dead flies give perfume a bad smell” (NIV); “Dead flies make the perfumer’s ointment give off an evil odor” (RSV); Dead flies make the perfumer’s ointment give off a foul odor” (NRSV); “Dead flies cause a perfumer’s perfume to send forth a stink” (YLT); “Dead flies make the perfumer’s ointment give off a foul odor” (NRSV). Others render both separately: “Dead flies make the perfumer’s sweet ointment rancid and ferment” (NEB); “Dead flies turn the perfumer’s ointment fetid and putrid” (NJPS).

tn Heb “carries more weight than”; or “is more precious than.” The adjective יָקָר (yaqar) denotes “precious; valuable; costly” (HALOT 432 s.v. יָקָר 2) or “weighty; influential” (BDB 430 s.v. יָקָר 4). The related verb denotes “to carry weight,” that is, to be influential (HALOT 432 s.v. יָקָר 2). The idea is not that a little folly is more valuable than much wisdom; but that a little folly can have more influence than great wisdom. It only takes one little mistake to ruin a life of great wisdom. The English versions understand it this way: “so a little foolishness is weightier than wisdom and honor” (NASB); “so a little folly outweighs massive wisdom” (NJPS); “so a little folly outweighs an abundance of wisdom” (MLB); “so a little folly outweighs wisdom and honor” (RSV, NRSV, NIV); “so can a little folly make wisdom lose its worth” (NEB); “so a little folly annuls great wisdom” (ASV); “a single slip can ruin much that is good” (NAB); “so doth a little folly him that is in reputation for wisdom and honor” (KJV). The LXX rendered the line rather freely: τιμιον ὀλιγον σοφιἀ ὑπερ δοξαν ἀφροσυνης μεγαλην (“a little wisdom is more precious than great glory of folly”). This does not accurately represent the Hebrew syntax.

sn Qoheleth creates a wordplay by using two Hebrew words for social honor or influence: “weighty” = honorable (יָקָר, yaqar) and “heavy” = honor (כָּבוֹד, cavod).

tn The MT reads מֵחָכְמָה מִכָּבוֹד (mekhokhmah mikkavod, “more than wisdom, more than honor”), but several medieval Hebrew mss read וּמִכָּבוֹד מֵחָכְמָה (mekhokhmah umikkavod, “more than wisdom and honor”). However the textual problem is resolved, the two nouns form a hendiadys: two terms joined by vav that describe one concept. The first noun retains its full nominal sense, while the second functions adjectivally: “heavy wisdom” or better, “great wisdom.”




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