moth (mɒθ) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| Compare butterfly any of numerous insects of the order Lepidoptera that typically have stout bodies with antennae of various shapes (but not clubbed), including large brightly coloured species, such as hawk moths, and small inconspicuous types, such as the clothes moths | |
| [Old English moththe; compare Middle Dutch motte, Old Norse motti] | |
| a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
Heb. 'ash, from a root meaning "to fall away," as moth-eaten garments fall to pieces (Job 4:19; 13:28; Isa. 50:9; 51:8; Hos. 5:12). Gr. ses, thus rendered in Matt. 6:19, 20; Luke 12:33. Allusion is thus made to the destruction of clothing by the larvae of the clothes-moth. This is the only lepidopterous insect referred to in Scripture.