adder, asp

“Adder” From Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:

(viper). Used in the Bible for any poisonous snake known to the Jews, of which there were several species in Palestine. In Genesis 49:17, the cerastes, or horned snake, is, from its habits, supposed to be alluded to. The cockatrice (Isa. 11:8; 14:29; 59:5; Jer. 8:17), is adder and asp (Prov. 23:32; Psa. 58:4). In Psalm 140:3 and Proverbs 23:32, a species of viper is thought to be meant.

“Asp” From Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:

(viper). The hooded venomous serpent known as the African cobra. Adder (Psa. 58:4; 91:13), answers the description of asp (Deut. 32:33; Job 20:14-16; Isa. 11:8; Rom. 3:13).

“Adder” From Concise Bible Dictionary:

There are four words thus translated.
1. akshub (Psa. 140:3). This word occurs but once, and simply compares the wicked to adders who have poison under their lips. It cannot be identified.
2. pethen (Psa. 58:4; Psa. 91:13, reading in the margin of both asp). The wicked are compared to the deaf adder that stoppeth her ears. There is an old tradition that the adder sometimes laid one ear in the dust and covered the other with its tail; but they have no external ears: that all known adders can hear is well attested by those called serpent charmers, though some species are more easily attracted than others. The above name is held to point to the deadly Cobra. The same Hebrew word is translated asp in Deuteronomy 32:33; Job 20:14,16; Isaiah 11:8, simply pointing to it as poisonous or dangerous.
Adder, Asp
3. tsiphoni. This is only once translated adder in the text (Prov. 23:32), but is four times translated cockatrice, in Isaiah 11:8; 14:29; 59:5, referring to its poison, and Jeremiah 8:17 to the fact that it will not be charmed, but will bite. This is supposed to be the yellow viper of Palestine, which lurks in dens, and whose poison is deadly. It is said to resist the arts of the serpent charmers. The cockatrice was a fabulous creature, and was perhaps adopted by the translators to designate some unknown deadly snake.
4. shephiphon (Gen. 49:17). This is identified with the Cerastes, or horned viper, so called because of having two short horns on its head. It is a small destructive snake, rarely more than two feet long. It is called in the margin an arrow-snake. It lies in holes or ruts and darts upon an animal passing: and this well agrees with the above text, where Dan is compared to “an adder in the path that biteth the horse heels, so that his rider shall fall backward” typical of apostasy and the power of Satan.
Horned Viper

“Asp” From Concise Bible Dictionary:

The word is pethen: it has been identified with the naja haje, a snake that has the power of expelling its deadly poison to some distance, which has caused the Dutch colonists at the Cape to call them the spitting snake. Its “cruel venom” is used symbolically to describe the wine of the wicked (Deut. 32:33; compare. Rom. 3:13), and the inward misery of those who are secretly wicked (Job 20:14,16). In the millennium a child will play harmlessly at its hole (Isa. 11:8).
Egyptian Cobra – Naja Haje

Strong’s Dictionary of Hebrew Words:

Transliteration:
pethen
Phonic:
peh’-then
Meaning:
from an unused root meaning to twist; an asp (from its contortions)
KJV Usage:
adder