XXdam-aj (chabhala): This word expresses any inflicted loss of value or permanent injury to persons or things. "Why should damage grow to the hurt of the kings?" (Ezr 4:22). In Prov 26:6 "damage" means "wrong," "injury" (Hebrew chamac). The translation of Est 7:4 is doubtful: "Although the adversary could not have compensated for the kings damage" (the Revised Version, margin "For our affliction is not to be compared with the kings damage" the King James Version "could not countervail the kings damage") but Hebrew nezeq (Est 7:4) and Aramaic naziq (Dan 6:2) have the meaning of "molestation" or "annoyance" (see Ges.6 Buhl Dict. (15th edition) 489, 806, 908). We therefore ought to read `for that oppression would not have been worthy of the molestation of the king (Est 7:4) and `that the king should have no molestation (Dan 6:2). The Greek zemia, "loss" and zemioo, "to cause loss"; the Revised Version (British and American) therefore translates Acts 27:10 "will be with injury and much loss" (the King James Version "damage"), and 2 Cor 7:9 "that ye might suffer loss by us in nothing" (the King James Version "damage").
A. L. Breslich