(0.11) | Ecc 1:8 | All this 1 monotony 2 is tiresome; no one can bear 3 to describe it: 4 The eye is never satisfied with seeing, nor is the ear ever content 5 with hearing. |
(0.11) | Ecc 1:17 | So I decided 1 to discern the benefit of 2 wisdom and knowledge over 3 foolish behavior and ideas; 4 however, I concluded 5 that even 6 this endeavor 7 is like 8 trying to chase the wind! 9 |
(0.11) | Ecc 4:3 | But better than both is the one who has not been born 1 and has not seen the evil things that are done on earth. 2 |
(0.11) | Ecc 4:10 | For if they fall, one will help his companion up, but pity 1 the person who falls down and has no one to help him up. |
(0.11) | Ecc 5:11 | When someone’s 1 prosperity 2 increases, those who consume it also increase; so what does its owner 3 gain, except that he gets to see it with his eyes? 4 |
(0.11) | Ecc 5:13 | Here is 1 a misfortune 2 on earth 3 that I have seen: Wealth hoarded by its owner to his own misery. |
(0.11) | Ecc 6:6 | if he should live a thousand years twice, yet does not enjoy his prosperity. For both of them die! 1 |
(0.11) | Ecc 6:8 | So what advantage does a wise man have over a fool? 1 And what advantage 2 does a pauper gain by knowing how to survive? 3 |
(0.11) | Ecc 7:6 | For like the crackling of quick-burning thorns 1 under a cooking pot, so is the laughter of the fool. This kind of folly 2 also is useless. 3 |
(0.11) | Ecc 10:3 | Even when a fool walks along the road he lacks sense, 1 and shows 2 everyone what a fool he is. 3 |
(0.11) | Ecc 10:14 | yet a fool keeps on babbling. 1 No one knows what will happen; who can tell him what will happen in the future? 2 |
(0.11) | Ecc 11:10 | Banish 1 emotional stress 2 from your mind. 3 and put away pain 4 from your body; 5 for youth 6 and the prime of life 7 are fleeting. 8 |
(0.11) | Ecc 12:7 | and the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the life’s breath 1 returns to God who gave it. |
(0.11) | Ecc 12:11 | The words of the sages are like prods, 1 and the collected sayings are like firmly fixed nails; they are given by one shepherd. |
(0.11) | Sos 1:5 | The Beloved to the Maidens: I am dark but lovely, O maidens 1 of Jerusalem, dark 2 like the tents of Qedar, 3 lovely 4 like the tent curtains 5 of Salmah. 6 |
(0.11) | Sos 3:6 | The Speaker: 1 Who is this coming up from the desert like a column of smoke, like 2 a fragrant billow 3 of myrrh and frankincense, 4 every kind of fragrant powder 5 of the traveling merchants? 6 |
(0.11) | Sos 4:2 | Your teeth are like a flock of newly-shorn sheep coming up from the washing place; 1 each of them has a twin, and not one of them is missing. |
(0.11) | Sos 4:6 | Until the dawn arrives 1 and the shadows flee, I will go up to the mountain of myrrh, and to the hill of frankincense. |
(0.11) | Sos 5:5 | I arose to open for my beloved; my hands dripped with myrrh – my fingers flowed with myrrh on the handles of the lock. |
(0.11) | Sos 5:8 | The Beloved to the Maidens: O maidens of Jerusalem, I command you – If you find my beloved, what will you tell him? Tell him that I am lovesick! 1 |