BOOTH
Source: 551, 556, 560, 566, 567
A shelter, made usually of poles fixed upright in the ground, and covered over with green boughs, Ge 33:17. The great feast of tabernacles, or booths, had its name from the circumstance that the Jews were directed by their law to dwell in booths during the seen days of this feast, Le 23:40-42; Ne 8:14.
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Booth. Booth
A hut made of the branches of a tree. In such tabernacles Jacob sojourned for a season at a place named from this circumstance Succoth (Gen. 33:17). Booths were erected also at the feast of Tabernacles (q.v.), Lev. 23:42, 43, which commemorated the abode of the Israelites in the wilderness.
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BOOTH. → (Temporary hut) → Made of boughs Jon 4:5 → Made for cattle Ge 33:17 → Watchmen Job 27:18; Isa 1:8; 24:20 → Prescribed for the Israelites to live in, during the Feast of Tabernacles, to celebrate their wanderings in the wilderness Le 23:40-43; Ne 8:15,16
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booth. Booth, n. a place of entertainment, a stall in a fair
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Booth (bo͞ot͡h), n. [[OE. bothe; cf. Icel. būð, Dan. & Sw. bod, MHG. buode, G. bude, baude; from the same root as AS. būan to dwell, E. boor, bower, be; cf. Bohem. bauda, Pol. buda, Russ. budka, Lith. buda, W. bwth, pl. bythod, Gael. buth, Ir. both.]] 1. 1. A house or shed built of boards, boughs, or other slight materials, for temporary occupation. Camden.
2. 2. A covered stall or temporary structure in a fair or market, or at a polling place.