Septuagint

English dictionary entry

Meanings

name
  1. The team of translators who produced the Septuagint.
  2. An influential Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible produced in Alexandria in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE.
noun
  1. A group of 70 people or a collection of 70 things.

Pronunciation

/sɛpˈtu.ə.d͡ʒənt/ /sɛpˈtju.ə.d͡ʒənt/ /ˈsɛp.ʃə.wəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛp.t͡ʃə.wəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛp.tə.wəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛp.tjʊ.ə.d͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛp.t͡ʃʊ.ə.d͡ʒɪnt/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Typheuss-Septuagint.wav /sɛpˈtuəd͡ʒənt/ /sɛpˈtjuəd͡ʒənt/ /ˈsɛpʃəwəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛpt͡ʃəwəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛptəwəˌd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛptjʊəd͡ʒɪnt/ /ˈsɛptʃʊəd͡ʒɪnt/

Word forms

Septuagint Septuagints

Etymology

From Late Latin Septuaginta, lit. "The Seventy", a clipping of earlier descriptional names such as septuaginta translatio (“translation by the seventy”) and septuaginta interpretes (“the 70 interpreters”), calques of Koine Greek names such as οἱ ἐβδομήκοντα ἑρμηνευταί (hoi ebdomḗkonta hermēneutaí, “the 70 interpreters”) and οἱ Ο′ (hoi O′, “the LXX”), deriving from the popular (but probably mistaken) belief that its translation of the Torah had been produced in 72 days by a team of 72 Jewish scholars from Jerusalem (6 from each tribe) summoned to Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy II.

Synonyms

LXX

Derived words

septuagint Septuagintal Septuagintalist
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