"Eglon" is pronounced as EHG-lon, with the emphasis on the first syllable. The "G" is pronounced as in "good," and the "on" sounds like the word "on" in English.
"Eglon" is pronounced as EE-glon, with the emphasis on the first syllable.
The word "say" has a long vowel sound--specifically, the long "a" sound.
The short A has the sound "ah" as in apple and sat.
You kind of say 'eye' but with a 'h' sound at the beginning. And don't forget to sound posh.
No, "clap" has a long "a" sound. The "a" in "clap" is pronounced like the "a" in "say".
"Eglon" is pronounced as EE-glon, with the emphasis on the first syllable.
Eglon van der Neer was born in 1634.
Eglon van der Neer died in 1703.
eglon
Ehud, a left-handed judge and leader of the Israelites, killed King Eglon of Moab by stabbing him with a sword. Ehud tricked King Eglon by saying he had a secret message for him and then delivered the fatal blow.
He was lefthanded
King of Moab (Judges ch.3).
King Eglon....He was killed in his summer chamber which is a toilet!
sound it out! sound it out!
Ehud was one of the leaders (or as the Bible says "judges") of Israel after Joshua died. When the nearby country of Moab conquered Israel, their king, Eglon, ruled the Israelites with an iron fist. So God chose Ehud to deliver them from Eglon's harsh rule. The Bible says that Ehud tricked Eglon into thinking that he had a message from God for him and when Eglon leaned over so Ehud could whisper in his ear, Ehud pulled out a knife and stabbed Eglon in his stomach, killing him. Later on, Ehud led the Israelites to war with the Moabites and they won. The Bible says that Israel followed and obeyed God for the eighty years that Ehud was with them, but after he died, the Israelites turned against God, causing Him to punish them. You can learn more about Ehud if you read the third chapter of the book of Judges in the Bible.
The word "say" has a long vowel sound--specifically, the long "a" sound.
The fat man with a sword stuck in his belly in the Bible is King Eglon of Moab. He was killed by the Israelite judge Ehud, who stabbed him with a hidden dagger. This event is described in the book of Judges, chapter 3.