Mizraim
Mizraim is the Hebrew and Aramaic name for the land of Egypt and its people.
file:Facial Chronicle - b.01, p.058 - Mizraim.jpg|thumb|Mizraim - king of Egypt
Linguistic analysis
Mizraim is the Hebrew cognate of a common Semitic source word for the land now known as Egypt. It is similar to Miá¹£r in modern Arabic, Misri in the 14th century B.C. Akkadian Amarna tablets, Má¹£rm in Ugaritic, Mizraim in Neo-Babylonian texts, and Mu-á¹£ur in neo-Assyrian Akkadian. To this root is appended the dual suffix -Äyim, perhaps referring to the "two Egypts": Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt. This word is similar in pronunciation and spelling to the Hebrew words matsór and meitsár, meaning literally "siege" and "strait, distress" respectively, and may carry those connotations to Hebrew speakers.Biblical accounts
According to Genesis 10, Mizraim, son of Ham was the younger brother of Cush and elder brother of Phut whose families together made up the Hamite branch of Noah's descendants. Mizraim's sons were Ludim, Anamim, Lehabim, Naphtuhim, Pathrusim, Casluhim, and Caphtorim. 19th-century scholar Henry Welsford identifies this Mizraim of Egypt in the Book of Genesis as Minos.In the Book of Exodus, it is considered the "house of bondage". Regarding Passover, Moses says to the Israelites, "And Moses said to the people, 'Remember this day, on which you went free from Egypt, the house of bondage, how יהוה freed you from it with a mighty hand: no leavened bread shall be eaten.'"
The book of Deuteronomy forbids the children of Israel from abhorring a Mizri, an Egyptian, "because you were a stranger in his land."