Reference: Mizar
Easton
smallness, a summit on the eastern ridge of Lebanon, near which David lay after escaping from Absalom (Ps 42:6). It may, perhaps, be the present Jebel Ajlun, thus named, "the little", in contrast with the greater elevation of Lebanon and Hermon.
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Fausets
("The mount of littleness.") (Ps 42:6). A low peak in the northern part of trans-jordanic Palestine. David in exile beyond Jordan, in the region of high hills as the Hermons, sighs for the Lord's hill, compared with whose spiritual elevation those physically great hills dwindle into littleness (Ps 68:15,18; 114:4-6; Isa 2:2).
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Hastings
Ps 42:6 b runs: 'I remember thee from the land of Jordan and the Hermons, from the hill Mizar.' It is a question whether Mizar is a proper name or an appellative
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Morish
Miz'ar
Probably one of the lesser mountains near Hermon, or, if not a proper name, it may be read 'the little hill' as in the margin. Ps 42:6.
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Smith
Mi'zar
(small), The hill, a mountain apparently in the northern part of transjordanic Palestine, from which the author of Psalm 42 utters his pathetic appeal. ver. 6. (It is probably a summit of the eastern ridge of Lebanon, not far from Mahanaim, where David lay after escaping from the rebellion of Absalom. --McClintock and Strong.)