karl, really, looking a bit closer into the problem, i discovered that moth is indeed considered the main destroyer of cloths. the difficulty in assessing the termites in this respect is that today's clothes and houses are different than the BH standard.
in general, termites eat cellulose: lumber, doors, furniture, cardboard, paper, wallpaper etc. but as garments used to be made from cotton and linen mostly, i imagine that they would destroy them too. to do this, they build thin tunnels along the house walls, until they find cellulose. http://laundry.about.com/od/laundrybasics/ss/Insects-That-Destroy-Clothes-Insect-Clothes-Pests_8.htm what they excel at is the other property you mentioned: building houses. nir cohen ps is ($ used in other semitic languages? On Thu, 20 Jun 2013 08:49:08 -0700, K Randolph wrote > Nir: > > On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Nir cohen - Prof. Mat. <[email protected]> > wrote: > karl, > > >>>This is an animal that eats clothing Isaiah 50:9, and builds houses Job > 27:18. This description fits a caterpillar that becomes a moth. > > how about termites? > > nir cohen > > > I’ll have to admit that I never considered termites. > > 1) because the dictionaries I worked from all mentioned “moth” and > caterpillars are immature moths (even in English we talk about “moth eaten” > when in reality it’s the caterpillars, not the adult moths, that do the > damage). > > 2) Do termites have a reputation for eating cloth? I haven’t heard of it. > > Karl W. Randolph. -- Open WebMail Project (http://openwebmail.org)
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