Ἰορδάνης
English (Strong)
of Hebrew origin (יַרְדֵּן); the Jordanes (i.e. Jarden), a river of Palestine: Jordan.
English (Thayer)
Ιορδάνου (Buttmann, 17), ὁ (cf. Winer's Grammar, § 18,5a.), (יַרְדֵּן, from יָרַד to descend; for other opinions about the origin of the name see Gesenius, Thesaurus, ii., p. 626 (cf. Alex.'s Kitto under the word Jordan)), the Jordan, the largest and most celebrated river of Palestine, which has its origin in numerous torrents and small streams at the foot of Anti-Lebanon, flows at first into Lake Samochonitis (Merom Song of Solomon -called; (modern: el-Huleh; see BB. DD. under the word <TOPIC:Merom> (Waters of))), and issuing thence runs into the Lake of Tiberius (the Sea of Galilee). After quitting this lake it is augmented during its course by many smaller streams, and finally empties into the Dead Sea: Winer s RWB (and BB. DD.) under the word <TOPIC:Jordan>; Arnold in Herzog vii., p. 7ff; Furrer in Schenkel, iii., p. 378ff; (Robinson, Phys. Geogr. of the Holy Land, pp. 144-186).