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I want to know the meaning of this name. I found it in the Bible, it was a town that one of the mighty warrior's father was from. 1 chronicles 11:28 "Ira son of Ikesh from tekoa,". Ira was one of king David's mighty warriors. Please let me know what you find. I want to name my son Tekoa, but I have to know the meaning first.
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Tekoa is a type or rather pattern of sound which a shofar/ram's horn can be made to have as its voice by an experienced blower of the shofar. The shofar was,is and will be used solely for calling the assembly of God together in one place that His believers may listen to and hear to obey His Commmandments and Words.Evidently from The Scriptures Tekoa was a city where trained Levitical trumpeters lived. That is not neccesarily a Biblically accurate opion though, just an observation as a minister of God's Word.
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Tekoa does not mean "trumpet". The verbal root is "taqa'" (Tav-Quf-Ayin): to beat, to drive in. It is used with the pegs of a tent, and this the meaning of the place-name Tekoa, a town about 8 km south (an a bit east) of Bethlehem, and the home town of the prophet Amos.
You will find a nice little pun in Jeremia 6,1.3: "… sound the trumpet in Tekoa …" (… uvi-TKO'A TIK'u shofar … / "shofar" means "trumpet") "… they will pitch their tents …" (… TAKE'u ohalim …). So this is where the trumpet comes in: In Hebrew they "beat" the trumpet (taka' et haShofar), but "taka'" means "to blow" in this context.
There is also the personal name TEKOA, found in 1. Chronicles 2,24: "Ashhur, father of Tekoa". But some translate "founder of Tekoa" and again relate it to the city.Hope this helps you with your decision
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I've never found that site to be wrong before..-Hobbit-
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Thanks for this Link, which is really useful! I went through a number of names and found the list rather reliable. There are some inaccuracies, for instance SOLOMON: the meaning of shallem > to replace given, the name does not mean „one who recompenses“, but rather „recompensed (by God“) i.e. given as a substitute for a child that has died. (Of course the name was later understood as „man of peace“, 1. Chronicles 22,9.)
A lot of times the author just lists possible meanings or associations with vocabulary words. This is often the best thing to do, as we just don’t know the original meaning of a name. But some of the meanings considered nowadays just don’t appear in the list: „reluctant“ for TIMNA, „shadow“ for ZILLA, „prosper“ for SERAH etc. You must keep in mind, that this list is more than 100 years old, so science has moved on since. Hitchcock didn’t have Martin Noth’s „Die israelitischen Personennamen im Rahmen der gemeinsemitischen Namengebung“, Stuttgart 1928, which is still the standard work on the subject.
„Trumpet“ is not completely wrong, as I pointed out, but it’s not the original meaning of the name.
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You're welcome then..-Hobbit-
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Check Miriam - they got *that* wrong
ChrisellAll we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us. - J.R.R. Tolkien.
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They got Miriam right... See BtN entry for Mary
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Ah, you are right...-Hobbit-
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This message was edited 7/21/2005, 8:23 PM

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It means "trumpet". I quite like it too.I'm sorry the list is so long, but here is a good site for Bible names and it has more accuracy than any other Bible Names site you're going to find.
http://www.ccel.org/bible_names/bible_names.html-Seda*
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