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Showing results for greek:toy AND book:64 site:alkitab.sabda.org
... book. It focuses on the benefits of proverbs from ... 64:7). This is a more emphatic word than the one ... Toy explains, there will be no good outcome for ...
” C. H. Toy says that the text is ... Book of Proverbs,” VTSup 3 [1955]: 285). But even ... The Greek rendering suggests that those translators read it as “peace.
29:3 The man who loves wisdom brings joy to his father,. but whoever associates with prostitutes wastes his wealth.
... book. It focuses on the benefits of proverbs from ... Toy suggests emending the text to read ... The Greek evidence, however, is not strong. For the second ...
1:22 “How long will you simpletons love naiveté? How long will mockers delight in mockery.
The Greek translation “scarcely” could have come from a Vorlage of בַּצָּרָה (batsarah, “deficiency” or “want”) or בָּצַּר (batsar, “to cut off; to ...
... Greek word for “child-training.” [1:2] tn The infinitive construct + ל (lamed) here designates a second purpose of the book: to compare and to make proper ...
” C. H. Toy reminds the reader that there were many proverbs in existence that sounded similar to those in the book of Proverbs; these lines are in the Greek ...
15:4 Speech that heals is like a life-giving tree,. but a perverse tongue breaks the spirit.
... book: This focuses on the purpose of the book from the perspective of the student/disciple. The verb לָקַח (laqakh, “receive”) means to acquire something ...