(1.00) | (Jdg 6:5) | 2 tn Heb “numerous.” |
(0.80) | (Psa 35:18) | 2 tn Heb “among numerous people.” |
(0.80) | (1Ki 3:9) | 7 tn Heb “your numerous people.” |
(0.80) | (Jdg 9:29) | 4 tn Heb “Make numerous.” |
(0.60) | (Jer 3:16) | 1 tn Heb “you will become numerous and fruitful.” |
(0.60) | (Isa 51:2) | 4 tn Heb “and I made him numerous.” |
(0.60) | (2Ch 1:10) | 6 tn Heb “these numerous people of yours.” |
(0.50) | (Pro 7:26) | 2 tn Heb “numerous” (so NAB, NASB, NRSV, NLT) or “countless.” |
(0.40) | (Luk 18:3) | 3 tn This is an iterative imperfect; the widow did this on numerous occasions. |
(0.40) | (Hos 12:10) | 1 tn Heb “I myself multiplied vision[s]”; cf. NASB “I gave numerous visions.” |
(0.40) | (Dan 10:5) | 2 tn Heb “one.” The Hebrew numerical adjective is used here like an English indefinite article. |
(0.40) | (Jer 5:6) | 2 tn Heb “their rebellions are so many, and their unfaithful acts so numerous.” |
(0.40) | (Isa 31:1) | 3 tn Heb “and in horsemen for they are very strong [or “numerous”].” |
(0.40) | (Psa 25:19) | 1 tn Heb “see my enemies for they are numerous, and [with] violent hatred they hate me.” |
(0.35) | (Sos 6:8) | 1 sn The sequence “sixty…eighty…without number” is an example of a graded numerical sequence and is not intended to be an exact numeration (see W. G. E. Watson, Classical Hebrew Poetry [JSOTSup], 144-50). |
(0.35) | (1Sa 1:12) | 2 tn Heb “she made numerous to pray.” The Hiphil from of the verb רָבָה (ravah; “to be many”) means to “make numerous, plentiful, or continuous” (HALOT s.v. 1 רָבָה) |
(0.35) | (Jos 11:4) | 1 tn Heb “They and all their camps with them came out, a people as numerous as the sand which is on the edge of the sea in multitude, and [with] horses and chariots very numerous.” |
(0.35) | (Dan 8:3) | 3 tn Heb “one.” The Hebrew numerical adjective occasionally functions like an English indefinite article. See GKC 401 §125.b. |
(0.35) | (Pro 6:16) | 2 sn This saying involves a numerical ladder, paralleling six things with seven things (e.g., also 30:15, 18, 21, 24, 29). The point of such a numerical arrangement is that the number does not exhaust the list (W. M. Roth, “The Numerical Sequence x / x +1 in the Old Testament,” VT 12 [1962]: 300-311; and his “Numerical Sayings in the Old Testament,” VT 13 [1965]: 86). |
(0.35) | (Job 3:19) | 3 tn The plural “masters” could be taken here as a plural of majesty rather than as referring to numerous masters. |