(0.10) | Pro 24:16 | Although 1 a righteous person may fall seven times, he gets up again, but the wicked will be brought down 2 by calamity. |
(0.10) | Pro 27:18 | The one who tends a fig tree 1 will eat its fruit, 2 and whoever takes care of 3 his master will be honored. |
(0.10) | Pro 28:10 | The one who leads the upright astray in an evil way will himself fall into his own pit, 1 but the blameless will inherit what is good. 2 |
(0.10) | Ecc 2:12 | Next, I decided to consider 1 wisdom, as well as foolish behavior and ideas. 2 For what more can the king’s successor do than what the king 3 has already done? |
(0.10) | Ecc 2:18 | So I loathed all the fruit of 1 my effort, 2 for which I worked so hard 3 on earth, 4 because 5 I must leave it 6 behind 7 in the hands of my successor. 8 |
(0.10) | Ecc 3:22 | So I perceived there is nothing better than for people 1 to enjoy their work, 2 because that is their 3 reward; for who can show them what the future holds? 4 |
(0.10) | Ecc 4:16 | There is no end to all the people 1 nor to the past generations, 2 yet future generations 3 will not rejoice in him. This also is profitless and like 4 chasing the wind. |
(0.10) | Ecc 7:12 | For wisdom provides 1 protection, 2 just as 3 money provides protection. 4 But the advantage of knowledge is this: Wisdom preserves the life 5 of its owner. |
(0.10) | Ecc 9:5 | For the living know that they will die, but the dead do not know anything; they have no further reward – and even the memory of them disappears. 1 |
(0.10) | Ecc 9:16 | So I concluded that wisdom is better than might, 1 but a poor man’s wisdom is despised; no one ever listens 2 to his advice. 3 |
(0.10) | 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 |
(0.10) | Ecc 12:3 | when those who keep watch over the house 1 begin to tremble, 2 and the virile men begin to stoop over, 3 and the grinders 4 begin to cease because they grow few, and those who look through the windows grow dim, 5 |
(0.10) | Ecc 12:12 | Be warned, my son, of anything in addition to them. 1 There is no end to the making 2 of many books, and much study is exhausting to the body. 3 |
(0.10) | Sos 1:16 | The Beloved to Her Lover: Oh, how handsome you are, my lover! 1 Oh, 2 how delightful 3 you are! The lush foliage 4 is our canopied bed; 5 |
(0.10) | Sos 2:9 | My lover is like a gazelle or a young stag. 1 Look! There he stands behind our wall, gazing through the window, peering through the lattice. |
(0.10) | Sos 2:17 | The Beloved to Her Lover: Until the dawn arrives 1 and the shadows flee, turn, 2 my beloved – be like a gazelle or a young stag on the mountain gorges. 3 |
(0.10) | Sos 3:8 | All of them are skilled with a sword, 1 well-trained in the art of warfare. 2 Each has his sword at his side, to guard against the terrors of the night. |
(0.10) | Sos 4:4 | Your neck is like the tower 1 of David built with courses of stones; 2 one thousand shields are hung on it – all shields of valiant warriors. 3 |
(0.10) | Sos 4:12 | The Lover to His Beloved: You are a locked garden, 1 my sister, my bride; you are an enclosed spring, a sealed-up fountain. |
(0.10) | 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. |