Nir:

On Fri, Jun 21, 2013 at 2:03 PM, Nir cohen - Prof. Mat. 
<[email protected]>wrote:

>  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.
>

My understanding is that Biblical era houses tended to have plaster
interiors, and stucco exteriors. Therefore there wasn’t much in the way for
termites to eat.

>
>
> 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.
>

But wouldn’t people notice those tunnels and destroy them?

>
>
>
> 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.
>

True.

>
>
> nir cohen
>
> ps is ($ used in other semitic languages?
>
>
I noticed that not one word is used for “termite”, I wonder what it would
have been.

Karl W. Randolph.
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