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(0.40) (Jdg 16:6)

tn Heb “how you can be subdued in order to be humiliated.”

(0.40) (Jos 24:10)

tn Heb “blessing.” Balaam’s “blessings” were actually prophecies of how God would prosper Israel.

(0.40) (Num 24:5)

tn Here מָה (mah) has an exclamatory sense: “How!” (see Gen 28:17).

(0.40) (Exo 26:1)

tn This is for the adverbial accusative explaining how the dwelling place is to be made.

(0.40) (Exo 1:10)

sn Pharaoh’s speech invites evaluation. How wise did his plans prove to be?

(0.40) (Gen 47:8)

tn Heb “How many are the days of the years of your life?”

(0.40) (Gen 43:6)

tn The infinitive construct here explains how they brought trouble on Jacob.

(0.40) (Gen 30:30)

tn Heb “How long [until] I do, also I, for my house?”

(0.35) (Act 20:37)

sn The Ephesians elders kissed Paul as a sign of both affection and farewell. The entire scene shows how much interrelationship Paul had in his ministry and how much he and the Ephesians meant to each other.

(0.35) (Act 8:31)

tn Grk “How am I able, unless…” The translation is based on the force of the conjunction γάρ (gar) in this context. The translation “How in the world can I?” is given in BDAG 189 s.v. γάρ 1.f.

(0.35) (Luk 24:35)

tn Grk “how he was made known to them”; or “how he was recognized by them.” Here the passive construction has been converted to an active one in the translation in keeping with contemporary English style.

(0.35) (Luk 14:21)

sn The poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame. Note how the list matches v. 13, illustrating that point. Note also how the party goes on; it is not postponed until a later date. Instead new guests are invited.

(0.35) (Luk 10:6)

sn The response to these messengers determines how God’s blessing is bestowed—if they are not welcomed with peace, their blessing will return to them. Jesus shows just how important their mission is by this remark.

(0.35) (Luk 9:26)

sn How one responds now to Jesus and his teaching is a reflection of how Jesus, as the Son of Man who judges, will respond then in the final judgment.

(0.35) (Mar 8:38)

sn How one responds now to Jesus and his teaching is a reflection of how Jesus, as the Son of Man who judges, will respond then in the final judgment.

(0.35) (Mat 10:13)

sn The response to these messengers determines how God’s blessing is bestowed—if the messengers are not welcomed, their blessing will return to them. Jesus shows just how important their mission is by this remark.

(0.35) (Psa 77:1)

sn Psalm 77. The psalmist recalls how he suffered through a time of doubt, but tells how he found encouragement and hope as he recalled the way in which God delivered Israel at the Red Sea.

(0.35) (Psa 6:3)

tn Heb “and you, Lord, how long?” The suffering psalmist speaks in broken syntax. He addresses God, but then simply cries out with a brief, but poignant, question: How long will this (= his suffering) continue?

(0.35) (1Ki 14:19)

tn Heb “As for the rest of the events of Jeroboam, how he fought and how he ruled, are they not written on the scroll of the events of the days of the kings of Israel?”

(0.35) (2Sa 1:5)

tc Instead of the MT “who was recounting this to him, ‘How do you know that Saul and his son Jonathan are dead?’” the Syriac Peshitta reads “declare to me how Saul and his son Jonathan died.”



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