(1.00) | (Jdg 9:56) | 1 tn Heb “70 brothers.” |
(0.75) | (Eze 41:12) | 1 tn Heb “70 cubits” (36.75 meters). |
(0.50) | (1Co 16:17) | 1 tn Or “they have made up for your absence” (BDAG 70 s.v. ἀναπληρόω 3). |
(0.50) | (Psa 90:10) | 1 tn Heb “the days of our years, in them [are] 70 years.” |
(0.44) | (Exo 33:16) | 1 sn See W. Brueggemann, “The Crisis and Promise of Presence in Israel,” HBT 1 (1979): 47-86; and N. M. Waldman, “God’s Ways—A Comparative Note,” JQR 70 (1979): 67-70. |
(0.44) | (Luk 23:3) | 4 sn The reply “You say so” is somewhat enigmatic, like Jesus’ earlier reply to the Jewish leadership in 22:70. |
(0.44) | (Luk 22:59) | 2 sn According to Mark 14:70 it was Peter’s accent that gave him away as a Galilean. |
(0.44) | (Isa 23:15) | 4 tn Heb “At the end of 70 years it will be for Tyre like the song of the prostitute.” |
(0.38) | (Zec 1:12) | 3 sn The 70 years refers to the predicted period of Babylonian exile, a period with flexible beginning and ending points depending on the particular circumstances in view (cf. Jer 25:1; 28:1; 29:10; Dan 9:2). Here the end of the 70 years appears to be marked by the completion of the temple in 516 b.c., exactly 70 years after its destruction in 586. |
(0.37) | (Act 20:14) | 3 sn Mitylene was the most important city on the island of Lesbos in the Aegean Sea. It was about 44 mi (70 km) from Assos. |
(0.37) | (Luk 17:2) | 1 tn This term refers to the heavy upper stone of a grinding mill (L&N 7.70; BDAG 660 s.v. μυλικός). |
(0.37) | (Mar 15:2) | 4 sn The reply “You say so” is somewhat enigmatic, like Jesus’ earlier reply to the Jewish leadership (mentioned in Matt 26:64 and Luke 22:70). |
(0.37) | (Mar 13:2) | 1 sn With the statement not one stone will be left on another Jesus predicted the total destruction of the temple, something that did occur in a.d. 70. |
(0.37) | (Mat 24:2) | 3 sn With the statement not one stone will be left on another Jesus predicted the total destruction of the temple, something that did occur in a.d. 70. |
(0.37) | (Psa 78:72) | 1 tn Heb “He”; the referent (David, God’s chosen king, mentioned in v. 70) has been specified in the translation for clarity. |
(0.37) | (Psa 70:1) | 1 sn Psalm 70. This psalm is almost identical to Ps 40:13-17. The psalmist asks for God’s help and for divine retribution against his enemies. |
(0.37) | (Est 9:16) | 1 tc For this number much of the Greek MS tradition reads “15,000.” The Lucianic Greek recension reads “70,100.” |
(0.31) | (1Th 2:18) | 1 tn Or “several times”; Grk, “both once and twice.” The literal expression “once and twice” is frequently used as a Greek idiom referring to an indefinite low number, but more than once (“several times”); see L&N 60.70. |
(0.31) | (Phi 4:16) | 2 tn Or “several times”; Grk, “both once and twice.” The literal expression “once and twice” is frequently used as a Greek idiom referring to an indefinite low number, but more than once (“several times”); see L&N 60.70. |
(0.31) | (Act 25:17) | 1 tn BDAG 969-70 s.v. συνέρχομαι 2 states, “συνελθόντων ἐνθάδε prob. means (because of συνκαταβάντες 25:5) they came back here with (me) 25:17.” |