(1.00) | (Deu 28:53) | 2 tn Heb “siege and stress.” |
(0.50) | (Act 13:40) | 1 sn The speech closes with a warning, “Watch out,” that also stresses culpability. |
(0.50) | (Pro 9:9) | 2 sn The parallelism shows what Proverbs will repeatedly stress, that the wise person is the righteous person. |
(0.50) | (Job 13:2) | 2 tn The pronoun makes the subject emphatic and stresses the contrast: “I know—I also.” |
(0.50) | (Num 35:30) | 1 tn Heb “at the mouth of”; the metonymy stresses it is at their report. |
(0.50) | (Num 23:11) | 1 tn The Hebrew text uses הִנֵּה (hinneh) here to stress the contrast. |
(0.50) | (Num 11:21) | 2 tn The Hebrew sentence stresses the number. The sentence begins “600,000….” |
(0.50) | (Num 11:13) | 2 tn The cohortative coming after the imperative stresses purpose (it is an indirect volitive). |
(0.44) | (Rom 3:4) | 1 tn Grk “every man,” but ἄνθρωπος (anthrōpos) is used in a generic sense here to stress humanity rather than masculinity. |
(0.44) | (Luk 13:3) | 1 sn Jesus was stressing that all stand at risk of death, if they do not repent and receive life. |
(0.44) | (Eze 20:12) | 1 sn Ezekiel’s contemporary, Jeremiah, also stressed the importance of obedience to the Sabbath law (Jer 17). |
(0.44) | (Pro 8:36) | 2 tn The Qal active participle functions verbally here. The word stresses both social and physical harm and violence. |
(0.44) | (Pro 1:23) | 6 tn Here too the form is the cohortative, stressing the resolution of wisdom to reveal herself to the one who responds. |
(0.44) | (Psa 63:2) | 1 tn The Hebrew particle כֵּן (ken) is used here to stress the following affirmation (see Josh 2:4). |
(0.44) | (Job 35:11) | 2 tn Some would render this “teaches us by the beasts.” But Elihu is stressing the unique privilege humans have. |
(0.44) | (Num 23:10) | 5 tn The use of נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) for the subject of the verb stresses the personal nature—me. |
(0.44) | (Num 20:1) | 2 tn The Hebrew text stresses this idea by use of apposition: “the Israelites entered, the entire community, the wilderness.” |
(0.44) | (Num 17:13) | 2 tn The verse stresses the completeness of their death: “will we be consumed by dying” (הַאִם תַּמְנוּ לִגְוֹעַ, haʾim tamnu ligvoaʿ). |
(0.44) | (Exo 22:26) | 1 tn The construction again uses the infinitive absolute with the verb in the conditional clause to stress the condition. |
(0.44) | (Exo 12:15) | 2 tn Or “you will eat.” The statement stresses their obligation—they must eat unleavened bread and avoid all leaven. |