(1.00) | (Joh 19:28) | 1 tn Or “that already.” |
(1.00) | (Joh 11:39) | 3 tn Grk “already he stinks.” |
(0.88) | (Eph 1:12) | 1 tn Or “who had already hoped.” |
(0.75) | (Ecc 6:10) | 1 tn Heb “already its name was called.” |
(0.75) | (Ecc 4:2) | 2 tn Heb “the dead who had already died.” |
(0.50) | (1Jo 2:7) | 2 tn “Already” is not in the Greek text, but is supplied for clarity. |
(0.50) | (Joh 11:17) | 4 tn Grk “he had already had four days in the tomb” (an idiom). |
(0.50) | (Psa 106:45) | 1 tn The Niphal of נָחַם (nakham) refers here to God relenting from a punishment already underway. |
(0.50) | (Gen 44:14) | 1 sn Judah and his brothers. The narrative is already beginning to bring Judah to the forefront. |
(0.44) | (Ecc 2:16) | 3 tn The preposition ב (bet) on בְּשֶׁכְּבָר (beshekkevar, the adverb כְּבָר [kevar, “already”] plus relative pronoun שֶׁ [she] plus preposition ב) is probably best classified as causal: “Because…already.” |
(0.44) | (Psa 85:10) | 1 tn The psalmist probably uses the perfect verbal forms in v. 10 in a dramatic or rhetorical manner, describing what he anticipates as if it were already occurring or had already occurred. |
(0.44) | (Luk 22:67) | 3 tn This is a third class condition in the Greek text. Jesus had this experience already in 20:1-8. |
(0.44) | (Luk 2:45) | 2 sn The return to Jerusalem would have taken a second day, since they were already one day’s journey away. |
(0.44) | (Psa 129:8) | 1 tn The perfect verbal form is used for rhetorical effect; it describes an anticipated development as if it were already reality. |
(0.44) | (Psa 85:11) | 1 sn The psalmist already sees undeniable signs of God’s faithfulness and expects deliverance to arrive soon. |
(0.44) | (Job 30:23) | 1 tn The imperfect verb would be a progressive imperfect, it is future, but it is also already underway. |
(0.44) | (Exo 30:13) | 1 sn Each man was to pass in front of the counting officer and join those already counted on the other side. |
(0.44) | (Gen 49:11) | 1 tn The perfect verbal form is used rhetorically, describing coming events as though they have already taken place. |
(0.38) | (2Pe 2:6) | 2 tn The perfect participle τεθεικώς (tetheikōs) suggests an antecedent act. More idiomatically, the idea seems to be, “because he had already appointed them to serve as an example.” |
(0.38) | (Act 28:15) | 1 sn Mention of Christian brothers from there (Rome) shows that God’s message had already spread as far as Italy and the capital of the empire. |