A member of one of a group of Semitic peoples inhabiting Aram and parts of Mesopotamia from the 11th to the 8th century BC.
1The Aramaean, or Third Semitic migration, in time swamped various decaying States.
2Shalmaneser III of Assyria was engaged in military operations against the Aramaean Syrians.
3In the same way, Rachel being an Aramaean, Leah must be one too.
4The Aramaean tribes never let slip an opportunity of encroaching on the southern frontier.
5The Hebrew migration into Canaan was followed by the Aramaean, which threatened to overwhelm it.
6The elaborate system of nail-writing of the ancient Sumerians was too involved for the Aramaean business man.
7He has finally deprived Ahuni its local Aramaean chief, and holds the place as an Assyrian fortress.
8The "Suti" were Arabians of Aramaean stock.
9Like his father, Adad-nirari I of Assyria had attacked the Aramaean "Suti" who were settling about Haran.
10Egyptian, Babylonian, Aramaean, Hittite, Memphis, Babylon, Hamath, Megiddo- Iswallowedthem all thankfully, wrote them down and asked for more.
11At this time Aramaic was the speech of Syria, and the population, especially in the cities, was still largely Aramaean.
12Thereafter the Assyrian monarch turned towards the south-west and attacked the Hittite State of Hamath and the Aramaean State of Damascus.
13Belubager, king of the important Aramaean tribe of the Gambulu, assisted him and Saul-Mugina, in alarm, sent to his brother for protection.
14He spoke in Aramaean, the language of the merchant, which had become the language of the simple people of the old Mediterranean world.
15This position was Til Barsip, situated opposite the mouth of the lowest Syrian affluent, the Sajur, and formerly capital of an Aramaean principate.
16He had evidently been left in peace by Assyria, and the monument he erected to his god is of Aramaean workmanship and design.
Translations for Aramaean