(1.00) | (1Pe 4:12) | 1 tn Or “do not be surprised, taken aback.” The same verb occurs in 4:4. |
(1.00) | (1Pe 4:4) | 2 tn Or “are surprised, are taken aback.” The same verb occurs in 4:12. |
(1.00) | (Jer 13:21) | 1 tn Or what is perhaps more rhetorically equivalent, “Will you not be surprised?” |
(1.00) | (2Ch 20:22) | 1 tn Heb “set ambushers against.” This is probably idiomatic here for launching a surprise attack. |
(0.75) | (Joh 4:27) | 2 tn BDAG 444 s.v. θαυμάζω 1.a.γ has “be surprised that” followed by indirect discourse. The context calls for a slightly stronger wording. |
(0.75) | (Luk 24:5) | 5 sn By referring to Jesus as the living, the angels make it clear that he is alive. There should be no surprise. |
(0.75) | (Luk 19:32) | 2 sn Exactly as he had told them. Nothing in Luke 19-23 catches Jesus by surprise. Often he directs the action. |
(0.75) | (Luk 5:9) | 1 sn An explanatory conjunction (For) makes it clear that Peter’s exclamation is the result of a surprising set of events. He speaks, but the others feel similarly. |
(0.75) | (Sos 2:8) | 1 tn Heb “The voice of my beloved!” The exclamation קוֹל (qol, “Listen!”) is an introductory exclamatory particle used to emphasize excitement and the element of surprise. |
(0.75) | (Job 14:3) | 2 tn The verse opens with אַף־עַל־זֶה (ʾaf ʿal zeh), meaning “even on such a one!” It is an exclamation of surprise. |
(0.75) | (Exo 34:30) | 1 tn This clause is introduced by the deictic particle הִנֵּה (hinneh); it has the force of pointing to something surprising or sudden. |
(0.63) | (Act 17:20) | 2 tn Grk “these things,” but since the referent (“surprising things”) is so close, the repetition of “these things” sounds redundant in English, so the pronoun “they” was substituted in the translation. |
(0.63) | (Act 4:27) | 1 sn The application of Ps 2:1-2 is that Jews and Gentiles are opposing Jesus. The surprise of the application is that Jews are now found among the enemies of God’s plan. |
(0.63) | (Luk 24:6) | 2 sn While he was still in Galilee looks back to the beginning of Jesus’ ministry. So the point is that this was announced long ago, and should come as no surprise. |
(0.63) | (Luk 18:14) | 1 sn The prayer that was heard and honored was the one given with humility; in a surprising reversal it was the tax collector who went down to his home justified. |
(0.63) | (Luk 17:26) | 3 sn Like the days of Noah, the time of the flood in Gen 6:5-8:22, the judgment will come as a surprise as people live their day to day lives. |
(0.63) | (Luk 9:53) | 3 sn Jerusalem is to be the place of rejection, as Luke 9:44 suggested. Jesus had resolved to meet his fate in Jerusalem, so the rejection was no surprise. |
(0.63) | (Luk 2:18) | 1 tn Grk “marveled.” It is a hard word to translate with one term in this context. There is a mixture of amazement and pondering at work in considering the surprising events here. See Luke 1:21, 63; 2:33. |
(0.63) | (Luk 1:63) | 4 sn The response, they were all amazed, expresses a mixture of surprise and reflection in this setting where they were so certain of what the child’s name would be. |
(0.63) | (Mat 24:37) | 1 sn Like the days of Noah, the time of the flood in Gen 6:5-8:22, the judgment will come as a surprise as people live their day to day lives. |