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(0.30) (Pro 10:12)

sn Love acts like forgiveness. Hatred looks for and exaggerates faults, but love seeks ways to make sins disappear (e.g., 1 Pet 4:8).

(0.30) (Psa 35:21)

tn Heb “our eye sees.” Apparently this is an idiom meaning to “look in triumph” or “gloat over” (see Ps 54:7).

(0.30) (Psa 17:2)

tn Heb “May your eyes look at what is right.” The prefixed verbal form is understood as jussive. (See also the preceding note on the word “behalf.”)

(0.30) (Job 7:3)

tn “Thus” indicates a summary of vv. 1 and 2: like the soldier, the mercenary, and the slave, Job has labored through life and looks forward to death.

(0.30) (Job 3:12)

sn The sufferer is looking back over all the possible chances of death, including when he was brought forth, placed on the knees or lap, and breastfed.

(0.30) (2Ch 25:17)

tn Heb “let us look at each other [in the] face.” The expression refers here not to a visit but to meeting in battle. See v. 21.

(0.30) (2Ch 25:21)

tn Heb “looked at each other [in the] face.” See the note on the expression “Come on, face me on the battlefield” in v. 17.

(0.30) (2Ch 24:27)

tn Heb “and the founding of the house of God, look, they are written on the writing of the scroll of the kings?”

(0.30) (2Ki 15:11)

tn Heb “As for the rest of the events of Jeroboam, look, they are written on the scroll of the events of the days of the kings of Israel.”

(0.30) (2Ki 14:8)

tn Heb “let us look at each other [in the] face.” The expression refers here to meeting in battle. See v. 11.

(0.30) (2Ki 8:5)

tn Heb “and look, the woman whose son he had brought back to life was crying out to the king for her house and her field.”

(0.30) (2Ki 7:13)

tn Heb “Let them take five of the remaining horses that remain in it. Look, they are like all the people of Israel that remain in it. Look, they are like all the people of Israel that have come to an end.” The MT is dittographic here; the words “that remain in it. Look they are like all the people of Israel” have been accidentally repeated. The original text read, “Let them take five of the remaining horses that remain in it. Look, they are like all the people of Israel that have come to an end.”

(0.30) (2Ki 3:20)

tn Heb “and in the morning, when the offering is offered up, look, water was coming from the way of Edom, and the land was filled with water.”

(0.30) (1Ki 3:12)

tn This statement is introduced in the Hebrew text by the particle הִנֵּה (hinneh, “look”) which draws attention to and emphasizes what follows.

(0.30) (1Ki 1:22)

tn Heb “look.” The particle הִנֵּה (hinneh) here draws attention to Nathan’s arrival and invites the audience to view the scene through the eyes of the participants.

(0.30) (Rut 2:4)

tn Heb “and look”; NIV, NRSV “Just then.” The narrator invites the audience into the story, describing Boaz’s arrival as if it were witnessed by the audience.

(0.30) (Jdg 9:33)

tn Heb “Look! He and the people who are with him will come out to you, and you will do to him what your hand finds [to do].”

(0.30) (Jdg 6:28)

tn Heb “look!” The narrator uses this word to invite his audience/readers to view the scene through the eyes of the men.

(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) (Num 15:31)

tn The verb בָּזָה (bazah, “to despise”) means to treat something as worthless, to treat it with contempt, to look down the nose at something as it were.



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