“Earrings” From Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:
Included “nose-rings;” worn by both sexes (Gen. 35:4; Ex. 32:2; Judg. 8:24; Job 42:11); offerings (Num. 31:50).
“Jewel” From Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:
(joy). Ornament (Gen. 24:22; Num. 31:50).
“Ear-Ring” From Concise Bible Dictionary:
The well-known ornament worn by women and men in the East (Gen. 24:22, 30, 47; Job 42:11; Hos. 2:13; etc.). In Isaiah 3:20 the allusion is not to a ring for the ear, but to an amulet on which a charm could be written.
“Jewels” From Concise Bible Dictionary:
A general name for costly ornaments of dress, of silver, gold, or precious stones (Ex. 3:22; Song of Sol. 7:1; Isa. 3:21; Hos. 2:13, and others). In Genesis 24:53 the word is used for the equipment of the bride. In Malachi 3:17 it is used symbolically for the remnant that will be precious to the Lord of hosts in a future day, as the saints are now during the rejection of the Lord Jesus by the world.
Strong’s Dictionary of Hebrew Words:
Meaning:
from an unused root of uncertain meaning; a nose-ring
KJV Usage:
earring, jewel
From Manners and Customs of the Bible:
Genesis 35:4. They gave unto Jacob all the strange gods which were in their hand, and all their ear-rings which were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem.
Ear-rings were of various sizes, shapes, and material. At the present day, among the Orientals, they are of gold, silver, brass, ivory, horn, and wood; they are sometimes plain, and sometimes adorned with precious stones. Some are small, and fit closely to the ear, leaving no intermediate space; while others are large and heavy, and drop some distance below the ear. Some of these, by their weight, make a disagreeable-looking hole in the part of the ear whence they hang. MacGregor saw some men near Lake Huleh with ear-rings “not in the lobe of the ear, but in the projecting flesh.” (Rob Roy on the Jordan, p. 150). It is supposed by some that the use of ear-rings among the Hebrews was confined to the women. If so there must have been exceptions. See Exodus 32:2.
It is evident from this text that it was customary to connect the use of ear-rings with idolatry. This is further intimated in Hosea 2:13, where the wearing of ear-rings is associated with burning incense to Baal. Isaiah 3:20 is also supposed to refer to idolatrous practices. Ear-rings were doubtless used as amulets. With strange figures and characters engraved upon them they were considered as charms warding off evil. They are still thus used in the East. Jacob, being commanded to go to Bethel to renew his covenant with God, desired to put away every vestige of idolatry from the people, and for this reason buried these ear-ring amulets with the teraphim tinder the oak.