(1.00) | (Joh 4:10) | 4 tn This is a second class conditional sentence in Greek. |
(1.00) | (Luk 23:35) | 3 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(1.00) | (Luk 22:67) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(1.00) | (Luk 12:28) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(1.00) | (Luk 12:26) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(1.00) | (Luk 4:9) | 6 tn This is another first class condition, as in v. 3. |
(0.80) | (Luk 23:37) | 1 tn This is also a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.80) | (Luk 22:68) | 1 tn This is also a third class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.80) | (Luk 19:8) | 2 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. It virtually confesses fraud. |
(0.80) | (Luk 10:13) | 2 tn This introduces a second class (contrary to fact) condition in the Greek text. |
(0.80) | (Mat 11:21) | 2 tn This introduces a second class (contrary to fact) condition in the Greek text. |
(0.80) | (Job 34:20) | 2 tn R. Gordis (Job, 389) thinks “people” here mean the people who count, the upper class. |
(0.80) | (Exo 8:4) | 1 tn Here again is the generic use of the article, designating the class—frogs. |
(0.71) | (1Jo 4:11) | 2 tn This is a first-class conditional sentence with εἰ (ei) + aorist indicative in the protasis. Reality is assumed for the sake of argument with a first-class condition. |
(0.71) | (Act 5:39) | 1 tn This is expressed in a first class condition, in contrast to the condition in v. 38b, which is third class. As such, v. 39 is rhetorically presented as the more likely option. |
(0.71) | (Job 11:13) | 1 tn The pronoun is emphatic, designed to put Job in a different class than the hollow men—at least to raise the possibility of his being in a different class. |
(0.70) | (Luk 22:67) | 3 tn This is a third class condition in the Greek text. Jesus had this experience already in 20:1-8. |
(0.70) | (Luk 17:3) | 2 tn Both the “if” clause in this verse and the “if” clause in v. 4 are third class conditions in Greek. |
(0.70) | (Luk 13:9) | 4 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text, showing which of the options is assumed. |
(0.70) | (Luk 11:36) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text, so the example ends on a hopeful, positive note. |