Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

pall

noun
Acloke; a mantle of state.

pall

The mantle of an archbishop.

pall

The cloth thrown over a dead body at funerals.

pall

noun
In heraldry, a figure like the Greek.

pall

verb transitive
To cloke; to cover or invest.

pall

verb intransitive
To become vapid; to lose strength, life, spirit or taste; to become insipid; as, the liquor palls.& Beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, Fades in the eye and palls upon the sense.

pall

To make vapid or insipid. Reason and reflection--blunt the edge of the keenest desires, and pall all his enjoyments.

pall

To make spiritless; to dispirit; to depress. The more we raise our love, The more we pall and cool and kill his ardor.

pall

To weaken; to impair; as, to pall fortune.

pall

To cloy; as the palled appetite.