Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why
beetle
noun
A heavy mallet or wooden hammer, used to drive wedges, beat pavements; called also a stamper, or rammer.
beetle
In zoology, a genus of insects, the scarabaeus, of many species. The generic characters are, clavated antennae, fissile longitudinally, legs frequently dentated, and wings which have hard cases, or sheaths. The bones of these insects are placed externally, and their muscles within. They are of different sizes, from that of a pin’s head, to that of a man’s fist. Some are produced in a month, and go through their existence in a year; in others, four years are required to produce them, and they live as winged insects a year more. They have various names, as the may-bug, the dorr-beetle, the cock- chaffer, the tumble-dung, the elephant-beetleThe latter, found in South America, is the largest species, being four inches long.
beetle
verb intransitive
bee’tl. To jut; to be prominent; to hang or extend out; as, a cliff that beetles over its base.