Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
Made silver - as stones - He destroyed its value by making it so exceedingly plenty.
As the sycamore trees - He planted many cedars, and doubtless had much cedar wood imported; so that it became as common as the sycamore trees, which appear to have grown there in great abundance. This is considered to be a tree that partakes of the nature of the fig tree, and of the mulberry. Of the former it has the fruit, and of the latter the leaves; that is, the fruit had a considerable resemblance to the fig, and the leaf to that of the mulberry tree: hence its name sycamore, from the Greek , a fig, and , a mulberry tree.
Other Adam Clarke entries containing 1 Kings 10:27:
2 Chronicles 1:15
Isaiah 2:7
Isaiah 9:10
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