(0.44) | (Lev 4:8) | 1 tn Heb “all the fat of the bull of the sin offering he shall take up from it.” |
(0.44) | (Lev 4:3) | 3 tn Heb “and he shall offer on his sin which he sinned, a bull, a son of the herd, flawless.” |
(0.44) | (Lev 3:6) | 1 tn Heb “a male or female without defect he shall present it”; cf. NLT “must have no physical defects.” |
(0.44) | (Exo 26:6) | 1 tn Heb “one”; KJV “it shall be one tabernacle”; NRSV “that the tabernacle may be one whole”; NLT “a single unit.” |
(0.43) | (Job 11:15) | 4 tn The form מֻצָק (mutsaq) is a Hophal participle from יָצַק (yatsaq, “to pour”). The idea is that of metal being melted down and then poured to make a statue, and so hard, firm, solid. The LXX reads the verse, “for thus your face shall shine again, like pure water, and you shall divest yourself of uncleanness, and shall not fear.” |
(0.43) | (Lev 14:3) | 1 tn Heb “and he shall be brought to the priest and the priest shall go out to from outside to the camp and the priest shall see [it].” The understood “it” refers to the skin infection itself (see the note on 13:3 above). The referent has been specified in the translation for clarity. |
(0.42) | (Lev 14:40) | 1 tn Heb “and the priest shall command and they shall pull out the stones which in them is the infection, and they shall cast them.” The second and third verbs (“they shall pull out” and “they shall throw”) state the thrust of the priest’s command, which suggests the translation “that they pull out…and throw” (cf. also vv. 4a, 5a, and 36a above), and for the impersonal passive rendering of the active verb (“be pulled and thrown”) see the note on v. 4 above. |
(0.38) | (Lev 14:36) | 1 tn Heb “And the priest shall command and they shall clear the house.” The second verb (“and they shall clear”) states the thrust of the priest’s command, which suggests the translation “that they clear” (cf. also vv. 4a and 5a above), and for the impersonal passive rendering of the active verb (“that the house be cleared”) see the note on v. 4 above. |
(0.38) | (Col 2:8) | 1 tn The Greek construction here is somewhat difficult and can be literally rendered “Be careful, lest someone shall be the one who takes you captive.” |
(0.38) | (Hos 7:16) | 3 tn Heb “this [will] be for scorn in the land of Egypt”; cf. NIV “they will be ridiculed (NAB “shall be mocked”) in the land of Egypt.” |
(0.38) | (Dan 12:4) | 1 tn Or “will run back and forth”; KJV “shall run to and fro”; NIV “will go here and there”; CEV “will go everywhere.” |
(0.38) | (Jer 33:17) | 1 tn Heb “a man shall not be cut off to David [i.e., belonging to the Davidic line] sitting on the throne of the house of Israel.” |
(0.38) | (Job 6:20) | 3 tn The LXX misread the prepositional phrase as the noun “their cities”; it gives the line as “They too that trust in cities and riches shall come to shame.” |
(0.38) | (2Ki 20:9) | 1 tn The Hebrew הָלַךְ (halakh, a perfect), “it has moved ahead,” should be emended to הֲיֵלֵךְ (hayelekh, an imperfect with interrogative he [ה] prefixed), “shall it move ahead.” |
(0.38) | (Num 30:9) | 1 tn The Hebrew text says her vow “shall stand against her.” In other words, she must fulfill, or bear the consequences of, whatever she vowed. |
(0.38) | (Num 22:35) | 2 tn The Hebrew word order is a little more emphatic than this: “but only the word which I speak to you, it you shall speak.” |
(0.38) | (Num 15:4) | 1 tn The three words at the beginning of this verse are all etymologically related: “the one who offers his offering shall offer.” |
(0.38) | (Num 10:6) | 2 tn The Hebrew text has “they shall blow an alarm”; the sentence without a formal subject should be taken as a passive idea. |
(0.38) | (Num 10:2) | 4 tn Heb “and they shall be for you for assembling,” which is the way of expressing possession. Here the intent concerns how Moses was to use them. |
(0.38) | (Num 8:7) | 1 tn Or, more literally, “and thus you shall do.” The verb is the imperfect tense of instruction or legislation. Here it introduces the procedures to be followed. |