Acts 27:27
ContextNET © | When the fourteenth night had come, while we were being driven 1 across the Adriatic Sea, 2 about midnight the sailors suspected they were approaching some land. 3 |
NIV © | On the fourteenth night we were still being driven across the Adriatic Sea, when about midnight the sailors sensed they were approaching land. |
NASB © | But when the fourteenth night came, as we were being driven about in the Adriatic Sea, about midnight the sailors began to surmise that they were approaching some land. |
NLT © | About midnight on the fourteenth night of the storm, as we were being driven across the Sea of Adria, the sailors sensed land was near. |
MSG © | On the fourteenth night, adrift somewhere on the Adriatic Sea, at about midnight the sailors sensed that we were approaching land. |
BBE © | But when the fourteenth day came, while we were going here and there in the Adriatic sea, about the middle of the night the sailors had an idea that they were getting near land; |
NRSV © | When the fourteenth night had come, as we were drifting across the sea of Adria, about midnight the sailors suspected that they were nearing land. |
NKJV © | Now when the fourteenth night had come, as we were driven up and down in the Adriatic Sea , about midnight the sailors sensed that they were drawing near some land. |
KJV | |
NASB © | |
GREEK | |
NET © [draft] ITL | |
NET © | When the fourteenth night had come, while we were being driven 1 across the Adriatic Sea, 2 about midnight the sailors suspected they were approaching some land. 3 |
NET © Notes |
1 tn Here “being driven” has been used to translate διαφέρω (diaferw) rather than “drifting,” because it is clear from the attempt to drop anchors in v. 29 that the ship is still being driven by the gale. “Drifting” implies lack of control, but not necessarily rapid movement. 2 sn The Adriatic Sea. They were now somewhere between Crete and Malta. 3 tn Grk “suspected that some land was approaching them.” BDAG 876 s.v. προσάγω 2.a states, “lit. ὑπενόουν προσάγειν τινά αὐτοῖς χώραν they suspected that land was near (lit. ‘approaching them’) Ac 27:27.” Current English idiom would speak of the ship approaching land rather than land approaching the ship. |