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(0.30) (Num 30:3)

tn The Hebrew text just has “in her father’s house” and not “who is still living,” but that is the meaning of the line.

(0.30) (Num 21:8)

tn The word order is slightly different in Hebrew: “and it shall be anyone who is bitten when he looks at it he shall live.”

(0.30) (Lev 19:34)

tn The noun “foreigner” (גֵּר; ger) is based on the same verbal root as “lives” (גּוּר; gur), which means “to sojourn, to dwell as an alien.”

(0.30) (Lev 17:12)

tn The noun “foreigner” (גֵּר; ger) is based on the same verbal root as “lives” (גּוּר; gur). See note at 17:10.

(0.30) (Lev 13:14)

tn Heb “and in the day of there appears in it living flesh.” Some English versions render this as “open sores” (cf. NCV, TEV, NLT).

(0.30) (Exo 30:16)

sn S. R. Driver says this is “to keep Jehovah in continual remembrance of the ransom which had been paid for their lives” (Exodus, 334).

(0.30) (Exo 13:11)

sn The name “the Canaanite” (and so collective for “Canaanites”) is occasionally used to summarize all the list of Canaanitish tribes that lived in the land.

(0.30) (Gen 47:9)

tn Heb “sojournings.” Jacob uses a term that depicts him as one who has lived an unsettled life, temporarily residing in many different places.

(0.30) (Gen 28:4)

tn Heb “the land of your sojournings,” that is, the land where Jacob had been living as a resident foreigner, as his future descendants would after him.

(0.30) (Gen 25:6)

tn Heb “And he sent them away from upon Isaac his son, while he was still living, eastward to the land of the east.”

(0.30) (Gen 19:15)

tn Heb “who are found.” The wording might imply he had other daughters living in the city, but the text does not explicitly state this.

(0.30) (Gen 14:13)

tn This parenthetical disjunctive clause explains how Abram came to be living in their territory, but it also explains why they must go to war with Abram.

(0.30) (Gen 14:12)

tn This disjunctive clause is circumstantial/causal, explaining that Lot was captured because he was living in Sodom at the time.

(0.30) (Gen 10:22)

sn The Hebrew name Elam (עֵילָם, ʿelam) means “highland.” The Elamites were a non-Semitic people who lived east of Babylon.

(0.30) (Gen 5:3)

tn Heb “and Adam lived 130 years.” In the translation the verb is subordinated to the following verb, “and he fathered,” and rendered as a temporal clause.

(0.30) (Gen 4:15)

sn God becomes Cain’s protector. Here is common grace—Cain and his community will live on under God’s care, but without salvation.

(0.28) (Jer 12:4)

tn Heb “he.” The referent is usually identified as God and is supplied here for clarity. Some identify the referent with Jeremiah. If that is the case, then he returns to his complaint about the conspirators. It is more likely, however, that it refers to God and Jeremiah’s complaint that the people live their lives apart from concern about God.

(0.28) (Isa 26:9)

tn The translation understands צֶדֶק (tsedeq) in the sense of “justice,” but it is possible that it carries the nuance “righteousness,” in which case one might translate, “those who live in the world learn to live in a righteous manner” (cf. NCV).

(0.28) (Pro 18:14)

sn The figure of a “crushed spirit” (ASV, NAB, NCV, NRSV “a broken spirit,” comparing depression to something smashed or crushed) suggests a broken will, a loss of vitality, despair, and emotional pain. In physical sickness one can fall back on the will to live, but in depression even the will to live is gone.

(0.28) (Pro 2:21)

tn Heb “the blameless” (so NASB, NIV); NAB “the honest”; NRSV “the innocent.” The term תְּמִימִים (temimim, “the blameless”) describes those who live with integrity. They are blameless in that they live above reproach according to the requirements of the law.



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