(1.00) | (Mat 21:22) | 1 tn Grk “believing”; the participle here is conditional. |
(0.83) | (2Pe 1:8) | 1 tn The participles are evidently conditional, as most translations render them. |
(0.83) | (Joh 4:10) | 4 tn This is a second class conditional sentence in Greek. |
(0.83) | (Luk 23:35) | 3 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.83) | (Luk 22:67) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.83) | (Luk 12:28) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.83) | (Luk 12:26) | 1 tn This is a first class condition in the Greek text. |
(0.83) | (Luk 5:12) | 5 tn Grk “full of leprosy” (an idiom for a severe condition). |
(0.83) | (Luk 4:9) | 6 tn This is another first class condition, as in v. 3. |
(0.83) | (Psa 136:23) | 1 tn Heb “who, in our low condition, remembered us.” |
(0.83) | (Lev 7:20) | 1 tn Heb “and his unclean condition is on him.” |
(0.82) | (Exo 22:26) | 1 tn The construction again uses the infinitive absolute with the verb in the conditional clause to stress the condition. |
(0.71) | (Luk 12:45) | 1 tn In the Greek text this is a third class condition that for all practical purposes is a hypothetical condition (note the translation of the following verb “should say”). |
(0.71) | (Mat 24:48) | 1 tn In the Greek text this is a third class condition that for all practical purposes is a hypothetical condition (note the translation of the following verb “should say”). |
(0.71) | (Pro 2:4) | 1 tn The conditional particle now reiterates the initial conditional clause of this introductory section (1-4); the apodosis will follow in v. 5. |
(0.71) | (Job 7:20) | 1 tn The simple perfect verb can be used in a conditional sentence without a conditional particle present (see GKC 494 §159.h). |
(0.67) | (1Jo 4:11) | 1 tn Grk “and.” The Greek conjunction καί (kai) introduces the apodosis of the conditional sentence. |
(0.67) | (Rom 9:3) | 1 tn Or “For I would pray.” The implied condition is “if this could save my fellow Jews.” |
(0.67) | (Rom 6:21) | 2 tn Grk “have,” in a tense emphasizing their customary condition in the past. |
(0.67) | (Luk 23:37) | 1 tn This is also a first class condition in the Greek text. |