firmament

The word “firmament” has a really interesting lineage—it carries both linguistic and philosophical weight.

📜 Etymology of

Firmament

  • Latin: firmamentum
    → meaning “support,” “strengthening,” or “foundation”
    → from firmare = “to make firm, strengthen”
  • Latin root: firmus
    → meaning “strong,” “stable,” “solid”
  • Greek (earlier influence): στερέωμα (stereōma)
    → meaning “solid structure,” “firm body”

🌌 How the Meaning Evolved

When the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek (the Septuagint), the Hebrew word:

  • רָקִיעַ (raqia) → “expanse” or “spread-out surface”

was translated as stereōma (a solid structure).

Later, in the Latin Bible (the Vulgate), this became firmamentum.

⚡ The Key Shift

  • Original Hebrew idea → an expanse / sky / something stretched out
  • Greek + Latin interpretation → a solid dome or structure holding up the heavens

This is why “firmament” in English often carries the sense of a solid sky or dome, especially in older cosmology.

🧠 Big Picture

Firmament = “that which has been made firm.”
A structure imagined to hold or support the heavens.

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