Only in the sense of being unbending just as the yolk which was a stiff piece of timber used over the necks of the oxen to tie them together was stiff and hard. In this sense a stiff-necked person, which is what the illustration refers to, would be stubborn and unbending and unwilling to be told things.
The word 'ox' appears 36 times in the King James version of the Bible and the word 'oxen' appears 97 times.
The word "oxen" is in the King James Version of the Bible 102 times. It occurs in 95 verses. Please see the related link below.
Whether in the Hebrew of the Old Testament (as in Exodus 32:9) or the Greek of the New (as in Acts 7:51), the figurative meaning of "stiff-necked" is "stubborn, obstinate, headstrong."
A pair of oxen is called a team of oxen or a yoke or oxen.
No. Ox is singular, oxen is plural.
Ox is not the plural of oxen. Ox is singular; oxen is plural.
oxen
oxen rhymes with nothing.nothing rhymes with oxen everyone should know that
Yes oxen have bones.
Depends on the breed of these oxen!
she is full of oxen
Ox is the singular of oxen. One Ox, two or more oxen.