(0.63) | (Mic 3:6) | 3 tn Heb “and the day will be dark over them.” |
(0.63) | (Mic 3:6) | 2 tn Heb “it will be dark for you without divination.” |
(0.63) | (Lam 4:7) | 3 sn Lapis lazuli is a dark-blue semiprecious stone. |
(0.63) | (Isa 59:9) | 7 tn Or “walk about”; NCV “all we have is darkness.” |
(0.63) | (Isa 58:10) | 4 tn Heb “and your darkness [will be] like noonday.” |
(0.63) | (Isa 29:15) | 2 tn Heb “and their works are in darkness, and they say.” |
(0.63) | (Isa 5:11) | 2 tn Heb “[who] delay until dark, [until] wine enflames them.” |
(0.63) | (Psa 104:20) | 1 tn Heb “you make darkness, so that it might be night.” |
(0.63) | (Jos 24:7) | 2 tn Or “put darkness between you and the Egyptians.” |
(0.63) | (Num 28:4) | 1 tn Heb “between the evenings” meaning between dusk and dark. |
(0.62) | (Pro 2:13) | 3 tn Heb “ways of darkness.” Darkness is often metaphorical for sinfulness, ignorance, or oppression. Their way of life lacks spiritual illumination. |
(0.58) | (Job 10:22) | 3 tn The verse multiplies images for the darkness in death. Several commentators omit “as darkness, deep darkness” (כְּמוֹ אֹפֶל צַלְמָוֶת, kemo ʾofel tsalmavet) as glosses on the rare word עֵיפָתָה (ʿefatah, “darkness”) drawn from v. 21 (see also RSV). The verse literally reads: “[to the] land of darkness, like the deep darkness of the shadow of death, without any order, and the light is like the darkness.” |
(0.54) | (2Pe 2:17) | 2 tn Grk “utter darkness of darkness.” Verse 4 speaks of wicked angels presently in “chains of utter darkness,” while the final fate of the false teachers is a darker place still. |
(0.54) | (Job 29:3) | 5 tn The accusative (“darkness”) is here an adverbial accusative of place, namely, “in the darkness,” or because he was successfully led by God’s light, “through the darkness” (see GKC 374 §118.h). |
(0.54) | (Exo 14:20) | 1 tn The two nouns “cloud” and “darkness” form a nominal hendiadys: “and it was the cloud and the darkness” means “and it was the dark cloud.” Perhaps this is what the Egyptians saw, preventing them from observing Moses and the Israelites. |
(0.53) | (Rev 9:17) | 5 tn On this term BDAG 1022 s.v. ὑακίνθινος states, “hyacinth-colored, i.e., dark blue (dark red?) w. πύρινος Rv 9:17.” |
(0.53) | (Jer 2:31) | 1 tn Heb “a land of the darkness of Yah [= thick or deep darkness].” The idea of danger is an added connotation in this context. |
(0.53) | (Isa 5:30) | 4 tn Heb “and one will gaze toward the land, and look, darkness of distress, and light will grow dark by its [the land’s?] clouds.” |
(0.53) | (Psa 143:3) | 5 sn Dark regions refers to Sheol, which the psalmist views as a dark place located deep in the ground (see Ps 88:6). |
(0.53) | (Job 28:3) | 2 tn The verse ends with “the stone of darkness and deep darkness.” The genitive would be location, describing the place where the stones are found. |