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(0.30) (Job 30:27)

tn The last clause reads “and they [it] are not quiet” or “do not cease.” The clause then serves adverbially for the sentence—“unceasingly.”

(0.30) (Job 29:2)

tn The imperfect verb here has a customary nuance—“when God would watch over me” (back then), or “when God used to watch over me.”

(0.30) (Job 18:11)

sn Bildad is referring here to all the things that afflict a person and cause terror. It would then be a metonymy of effect, the cause being the afflictions.

(0.30) (Job 15:2)

tn The image is rather graphic. It is saying that he puffs himself up with the wind and then brings out of his mouth blasts of this wind.

(0.30) (Job 9:14)

tn The LXX goes a different way after changing the first person to the third: “Oh then that he would hearken to me, or judge my cause.”

(0.30) (Job 1:11)

tn The force of the imperatives in this sentence are almost conditional—if God were to do this, then surely Job would respond differently.

(0.30) (2Ch 7:17)

sn Verse 17 is actually a lengthy protasis (“if” section) of a conditional sentence, the apodosis (“then” section) of which appears in v. 18.

(0.30) (2Ki 15:16)

tn Heb “then Menahem attacked Tiphsah and all who were in it and its borders from Tirzah, for it would not open, and he attacked.”

(0.30) (1Ki 9:24)

tn Heb “As soon as Pharaoh’s daughter went up from the City of David to her house which he built for her, then he built the terrace.”

(0.30) (Rut 4:4)

tn Heb “if you will redeem, redeem” (KJV, NASB, NRSV all similar); NCV “If you want to buy back the land, then buy it.”

(0.30) (Rut 3:13)

tn Heb “but if he does not want to redeem you, then I will redeem you, I, [as] the Lord lives” (NASB similar).

(0.30) (Rut 2:4)

tn Heb “and look”; NIV, NRSV “Just then.” The narrator invites the audience into the story, describing Boaz’s arrival as if it were witnessed by the audience.

(0.30) (Rut 1:3)

tn Heb “And Elimelech, the husband of Naomi, died.” The vav (ו) functions in a consecutive sense (“then”), but the time-frame is not explicitly stated.

(0.30) (Num 30:2)

tn The legal construction states the class to which the law applies, and then lays down the condition: “men [man]—if….”

(0.30) (Num 9:21)

tn The construction in this half of the verse uses two vav (ו) consecutive clauses. The first is subordinated to the second as a temporal clause: “when…then….”

(0.30) (Num 5:15)

tn All the conditions have been laid down now for the instruction to begin—if all this happened, then this is the procedure to follow.

(0.30) (Lev 7:3)

tn Heb “then he.” This pronoun refers to the offerer, who was responsible for slaughtering the animal. Contrast v. 2 above and v. 5 below.

(0.30) (Lev 3:3)

tn Heb “Then he”; the referent (the person presenting the offering) has been specified in the translation for clarity (cf. the note on Lev 1:5).

(0.30) (Exo 37:19)

tn Heb “the one branch.” But the repetition of “one…one” means here one after another, or the “first” and then the “next.”

(0.30) (Exo 27:8)

tn The verb is used impersonally; it reads “just as he showed you.” This form then can be made a passive in the translation.



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