שָׂרִיק
se.ri.qah
combed
Lexicon Entry
Lexicon data from STEPBible TIPNR, Tyndale House, Cambridge. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.
What Original Readers Understood
Supported# Analysis of שָׂרִיק (H8305) The Hebrew word שָׂרִיק (seriqah) carries the straightforward meaning of "combed," describing hair or fibers that have been processed with a comb to remove tangles and arrange them in order. This term appears only once in the biblical text, which limits our ability to observe variations in its usage or broader semantic range within Scripture itself. The single occurrence of this word in the biblical corpus suggests it was used to describe a specific, likely vivid detail in its context—possibly relating to the appearance of hair in a processed or groomed state. Without multiple instances to compare, we cannot determine whether the term had figurative applications or was restricted to literal descriptions of combed material. The word's rarity in biblical Hebrew may indicate either that such descriptions were infrequently needed in the texts that survived, or that scribes and writers typically used alternative vocabulary for this concept. For modern readers, this word exemplifies how the biblical vocabulary included concrete, practical terms reflecting everyday life activities like grooming and textile preparation, even when such terms appear only in isolated passages.
Source data & methodology
Occurrences in Scripture
1 total occurrence across the text