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

rot

verb intransitive
To lose the natural cohesion and organization of parts, as animal and vegetable substances; to be decomposed and resolved into its original component parts by the natural process, or the gradual operation of heat and air; to putrefy.

rot

verb transitive
To make putrid; to cause to be decomposed by the natural operation of air and heat; to bring to corruption.

rot

noun
A fatal distemper incident to sheep, usually supposed to be owing to wet seasons and moist pastures. The immediate cause of the mortality of sheep, in this disease, is found to be a great number of small animals, called flukes, (Fascida,) found in the liver, and supposed to be produced from eggs swallowed with their food.

rot

Putrefaction; putrid decay.

rot

Dry rot, in timber, the decay of the wood without the access of water.