1. Song of Songs - Noun
2. Song of Songs - Proper noun
an Old Testament book consisting of a collection of love poems traditionally attributed to Solomon but actually written much later
Source: WordNetNothing in the entire world is worthy but for that day on which The Song of Songs was given to Israel. Akiba ben Joseph
Following the dissemination of the Zohar in the 13th century, Jewish mysticism took on a metaphorically anthropomorphic erotic element, and Song of Songs is an example of this. Source: Internet
Aknin boasts that no one preceded him in this approach to an interpretation of the Song of Songs. Source: Internet
Furthermore, despite having canonized the 1769 edition of the Authorized King James Bible, Joseph Smith Jr. made a note that the Song of Songs was not inspired, and therefore it is considered Apocrypha despite it being contained in the canon. Source: Internet
Nautin has argued that they were all preached in a three-year liturgical cycle some time between 238 and 244, preceding the Commentary on the Song of Songs, where Origen refers to homilies on Judges, Exodus, Numbers, and a work on Leviticus. Source: Internet
King Solomon, in his great wisdom, writes in the second chapter of Song of Songs: “There He stands behind our wall, gazing through the windows, peering through the lattices”. Source: Internet