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Definition: Toroth
Torah
\To"rah\, Tora
\To"ra\, n.; pl.
Toroth. [Heb.
t[=o]r[=a]h.] (Jewish Lit.)
(a) A law; a precept.
A considerable body of priestly Toroth. --S. R.
Driver.
(b) Divine instruction; revelation.
Tora, . . . before the time of Malachi, is
generally used of the revelations of God's will
made through the prophets. --T. K.
Cheyne.
(c) The Pentateuch or
“Law of Moses.”
The Hebrew Bible is divided into three parts: (1)
The Torah,
“Law,” or Pentateuch. (2) The Prophets
(Nevi'im in Hebrew) . . . (3) The Kethubim, or the
“Writings,” generally termed Hagiographa. From
the first letters of these three parts, the word
“Tanakh” is derived, and used by Jews as the name
of their Bible, the Christian Old Testament. --C.
H. H. Wright.
[Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]