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(0.37) (Psa 55:18)

tn The perfect verbal form is here used rhetorically to indicate that the action is certain to take place (the so-called perfect of certitude).

(0.37) (Psa 48:10)

tn Heb “like your name, O God, so [is] your praise to the ends of the earth.” Here “name” refers to God’s reputation and revealed character.

(0.37) (Psa 37:22)

tn Heb “those blessed by him.” The pronoun “him” must refer to the Lord (see vv. 20, 23), so the referent has been specified in the translation for clarity.

(0.37) (Psa 5:11)

tn The vav (ו) with prefixed verbal form following the volitional “shelter them” indicates purpose or result (“so that those…may rejoice).

(0.37) (Job 41:10)

sn The description is of the animal, not the hunter (or fisherman). Leviathan is so fierce that no one can take him on alone.

(0.37) (Job 40:23)

tn The word ordinarily means “to oppress.” So many commentators have proposed suitable changes: “overflows” (Beer), “gushes” (Duhm), “swells violently” (Dhorme, from a word that means “be strong”).

(0.37) (Job 38:38)

tn The word means “to flow” or “to cast” (as in casting metals). So the noun developed the sense of “hard,” as in cast metal.

(0.37) (Job 31:38)

sn Many commentators place vv. 38-40b at the end of v. 34, so that there is no return to these conditional clauses after his final appeal.

(0.37) (Job 28:6)

sn The modern stone known as sapphire is thought not to have been used until Roman times, and so some other stone is probably meant here, perhaps lapis lazuli.

(0.37) (Job 24:16)

tc This is not the idea of the adulterer, but of the thief. So some commentators reverse the order and put this verse after v. 14.

(0.37) (Job 23:9)

sn The text has “the left hand,” the Semitic idiom for directions. One faces the rising sun, and so left is north, right is south.

(0.37) (Job 22:16)

tn The verb קָמַט (qamat) basically means “to seize; to tie together to make a bundle.” So the Pual will mean “to be bundled away; to be carried off.”

(0.37) (Job 22:8)

tn Heb “and a man of arm, to whom [was] land.” The line is in contrast to the preceding one, and so the vav here introduces a concessive clause.

(0.37) (Job 21:19)

tn The imperfect verb after the jussive carries the meaning of a purpose clause, and so taken as a final imperfect: “in order that he may be humbled.”

(0.37) (Job 21:19)

tn The verb שָׁלַם (shalam) in the Piel has the meaning of restoring things to normal, making whole, and so reward, repay (if for sins), or recompense in general.

(0.37) (Job 21:16)

sn Even though their life seems so good in contrast to his own plight, Job cannot and will not embrace their principles—“far be from me their counsel.”

(0.37) (Job 21:12)

tn The verb is simply “they take up [or lift up],” but the understood object is “their voices,” and so it means “they sing.”

(0.37) (Job 19:4)

tn Job has held to his innocence, so the only way that he could say “I have erred” (שָׁגִיתִי, shagiti) is in a hypothetical clause like this.

(0.37) (Job 18:10)

tn Heb “his rope.” The suffix must be a genitive expressing that the trap was for him, to trap him, and so an objective genitive.

(0.37) (Job 18:2)

tn The verb is plural, and so most commentators make it singular. But it seems from the context that Bildad is addressing all of them, and not just Job.



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