(1.00) | (Eze 27:2) | 1 tn Heb “lift up over Tyre a lament.” |
(0.94) | (Eze 26:6) | 1 sn That is, the towns located inland that were under Tyre’s rule. |
(0.83) | (Eze 29:18) | 2 sn Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre from 585 to 571 b.c. |
(0.83) | (Eze 28:21) | 2 sn Sidon was located 25 miles north of Tyre. |
(0.83) | (Eze 27:8) | 3 sn Sidon and Arvad, like Tyre, were Phoenician coastal cities. |
(0.83) | (Eze 26:2) | 1 sn Tyre was located on the Mediterranean coast north of Israel. |
(0.67) | (Act 21:7) | 1 sn Tyre was a city and seaport on the coast of Phoenicia. |
(0.67) | (Act 12:20) | 3 sn Tyre was a city and seaport on the coast of Phoenicia. |
(0.67) | (Amo 1:9) | 2 tn Heb “Because of three violations of Tyre, even because of four.” |
(0.67) | (Joe 3:4) | 1 tn Heb “What [are] you [doing] to me, O Tyre and Sidon?” |
(0.67) | (Eze 29:20) | 1 tn Heb “for which he worked,” referring to the assault on Tyre (v. 18). |
(0.67) | (Eze 27:3) | 1 tn Heb “entrances.” The plural noun may reflect the fact that Tyre had two main harbors. |
(0.67) | (Eze 27:4) | 1 tn The city of Tyre is described in the following account as a merchant ship. |
(0.67) | (Isa 23:5) | 1 tn Heb “they will be in pain at the report of Tyre.” |
(0.59) | (Isa 23:4) | 2 sn The sea is personified here as a lamenting childless woman. The foreboding language anticipates the following announcement of Tyre’s demise, viewed here as a child of the sea, as it were. |
(0.58) | (Act 21:7) | 2 sn Ptolemais was a seaport on the coast of Palestine about 30 mi (48 km) south of Tyre. |
(0.58) | (Jer 25:22) | 3 sn The connection with Tyre and Sidon suggests that these were Phoenician colonies. See also Isa 23:2. |
(0.58) | (Isa 23:15) | 4 tn Heb “At the end of 70 years it will be for Tyre like the song of the prostitute.” |
(0.58) | (2Ch 2:14) | 1 tn Heb “a son of a woman from the daughters of Dan, and his father a man of Tyre.” |
(0.58) | (Eze 27:9) | 3 sn The reference to “all the ships of the sea…within you” suggests that the metaphor is changing; previously Tyre had been described as a magnificent ship, but now the description shifts back to an actual city. The “ships of the sea” were within Tyre’s harbor. Verse 11 refers to “walls” and “towers” of the city. |