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Genesis 6:16

צֹהַר תַּעֲשֶׂה לַ תֵּבָה וְ אֶל אַמָּה תְּכַלֶנָּה מִ לְ מַעְלָה וּ פֶתַח הַ תֵּבָה בְּ צִדָּהּ תָּשִׂים תַּחְתִּיִּם שְׁנִיִּם וּ שְׁלִשִׁים תַּעֲשֶׂהָ
a light253 you are making to the Chest, and to an ammah you are ending her from-to-above254 and the opening of the Chest you are placing in her side, bottom-ones, a pair, and a third-ones255 you are making her.
253

Strong’s #6672, tsohar. Feminine. This word elsewhere is found only in the masculine dual, tsoharayim, which is a form used for pairs of something. It means noon, or midday but concretely double-light. Only here on the Ark is it found in the feminine singular. It is not the typical word used for “light.” The Cambridge Bible states, “The word so rendered (ṣôhar) only occurs here in the singular: in the dual it is the regular Heb. word for ‘noonday.’” In 1 Chron. 8:8 there is a Benjamite father named Shaharaim which is also a dual word meaning two dawns. Noah’s single light above is apparently defined for us in Genesis 8:6 as an actual portal for sending out the raven and the dove. In Isaiah 16:3 we read,

Cause to come in counsel, make-you-all judgement, make-you your shadow as the night in the middle of the dual-light [tsoharayim], hide-you the outcasts, him-who-wanders never uncover.” Isa. 16:3 literal

and Amos 8:9, “And he HAS BECOME the Day of Himself, and oracle of master Yahweh, and I have caused to come in the Sun in the noon [dual-light]; and I have caused dark to the Earth in a day of light.” Additionally, Strong’s #6671, tsahar, the root verb means to press out oil.