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Marah

Marah is a term with multiple meanings across languages and traditions. It can refer to a place in the Hebrew Bible, a common word in Indonesian and Malay, and occasionally to a personal name in various cultures. The different uses are not connected beyond phonetic similarity in many cases.

In the biblical context, Marah is the name of a location where the Israelites met bitter waters

In Indonesian and Malay, marah is the everyday word for anger or the state of being angry.

Marah is also used as a given name in some cultures, often drawing on its Hebrew-origin meaning

In summary, Marah most commonly refers to a biblical place associated with bitter waters, while in contemporary

after
crossing
the
Red
Sea.
According
to
the
narrative
in
Exodus
15:23–25,
the
waters
were
undrinkable
until
Moses
threw
a
piece
of
wood
into
the
spring,
after
which
the
waters
became
drinkable.
The
exact
geographic
site
of
Marah
is
not
known
with
certainty;
scholars
have
proposed
several
locations
along
the
Sinai
Peninsula
or
near
the
Gulf
of
Suez.
As
a
verb
or
adjective,
it
describes
emotional
arousal
or
action
related
to
anger
and
is
not
a
proper
noun.
related
to
bitterness.
In
such
usage,
the
name
may
be
interpreted
symbolically,
sometimes
associated
with
endurance
or
depth
of
feeling,
though
interpretations
vary
by
culture
and
language.
Southeast
Asian
languages
it
denotes
anger,
and
it
also
appears
as
a
personal
name
in
some
contexts.