(1.00) | (2Ch 2:17) | 1 tn Heb “Solomon counted.” |
(0.75) | (Joh 6:63) | 1 tn Grk “the flesh counts for nothing.” |
(0.62) | (Psa 147:5) | 2 tn Heb “to his wisdom there is no counting.” |
(0.62) | (2Ch 2:2) | 1 tn Heb “counted,” perhaps “conscripted” (so NAB, NIV, NRSV). |
(0.62) | (Lev 25:8) | 1 tn Heb “And you shall count off for yourself.” |
(0.62) | (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. |
(0.50) | (Act 1:26) | 3 tn Or “he was counted as one of the apostles along with the eleven.” |
(0.50) | (Job 34:20) | 2 tn R. Gordis (Job, 389) thinks “people” here mean the people who count, the upper class. |
(0.50) | (1Ch 21:2) | 2 tn Heb “Go, count Israel.” See the note on “had” in v. 1. |
(0.50) | (Num 31:26) | 1 tn The idiom here is “take up the head,” meaning take a census, or count the totals. |
(0.50) | (Num 26:37) | 1 sn This is a significant reduction from the first count of 40,500. |
(0.50) | (Num 23:10) | 1 tn The question is again rhetorical; it means no one can count them—they are innumerable. |
(0.50) | (Gen 32:12) | 4 tn Heb “which cannot be counted because of abundance.” The imperfect verbal form indicates potential here. |
(0.44) | (Num 18:27) | 1 tn The verb is חָשַׁב (khashav, “to reckon; to count; to think”); it is the same verb used for “crediting” Abram with righteousness. Here the tithe of the priests will be counted as if it were a regular tithe. |
(0.44) | (Luk 10:16) | 2 sn Jesus linked himself to the disciples’ message: Responding to the disciples (listens to you) counts as responding to him. |
(0.44) | (Isa 10:19) | 1 tn Heb “and the rest of the trees of his forest will be counted, and a child will record them.” |
(0.42) | (Ecc 1:15) | 4 tn Heb “cannot be counted” or “cannot be numbered.” The term הִמָּנוֹת (himmanot, Niphal infinitive construct from מָנָה, manah, “to count”) is rendered literally by most translations: “[cannot] be counted” or “[cannot] be numbered” (KJV, ASV, RSV, MLB, NEB, NASB, NIV, NRSV, JPS, NJPS). However, the nuance “count” might function as a metonymy of effect for cause, that is, “to supply.” What is absent cannot be supplied (cause) therefore, it cannot be counted as present (effect). NAB adopts this approach: “what is missing cannot be supplied.” |
(0.37) | (Job 16:22) | 1 tn The expression is “years of number,” meaning that they can be counted, and so “the years are few.” The verb simply means “comes” or “lie ahead.” |
(0.37) | (1Ch 21:1) | 3 tn Heb “and incited David to count Israel.” As v. 5 indicates, David was not interested in a general census, but in determining how much military strength he had. |
(0.37) | (Gen 46:27) | 1 tn The LXX reads “nine sons,” probably counting the grandsons of Joseph born to Ephraim and Manasseh (cf. 1 Chr 7:14-20). |