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

seat

noun
That on which one sits; a chair, bench, stool or any other thing on which a person sits. Christ--overthrew the tables of the money changers and the seats of them that sold doves. Matthew 21:12.

seat

The place of sitting; throne; chair of state; tribunal; post of authority; as the seat of justice; judgment-seat.

seat

Mansion; residence; dwelling; abode; as Italy the seat of empire. The Greeks sent colonies to seek a new seat in Gaul . In Albe he shall fix his royal seat.

seat

Site; situation. The seat of Eden has never been incontrovertibly ascertained.

seat

That part of a saddle on which a person sits.

seat

In horsemanship, posture or situation of a perosn on horseback.

seat

A pew or slip in a chruch; a place to sit in.

seat

The place where a thing is settled or established. London is the seat of business and opulence. So we say, the seat of the muses, the seat of arts, the seat of commerce.

seat

verb transitive
To place on a seat; to cause to sit down. We seat ourselves; we seat our guests. The guests were no sooner seated but they entered into a warm debate.

seat

To place in a post of authority, in office or a place of distinction. He seated his son in the professor’s chair. Then high was king Richard seated.

seat

To settle; to fix in a particular place or country. A colony of Greeks seated themselves in the south of Italy; another at Massilia in Gaul.

seat

To fix; to set firm. From their foundations, loosening to and fro, They pluck’d the seated hills. Milton.

seat

To place in a chruch; to assign seats to. In New England, where the pews in churches are not private property, it is customary to seat families for a year or longer time; that is, assign and appropriate seats to their use.

seat

To appropriate the pews in, to particular families; as, to seat a church.

seat

To repair by making the seat new; as, to seat a garment.

seat

To settle; to plant with inhabitants; as, to seat a country.

seat

verb intransitive
To rest; to lie down.