1 sn Much of modern scholarship views this chapter as a distortion of traditions that were originally associated with Nabonidus rather than with Nebuchadnezzar. A Qumran text, the Prayer of Nabonidus, is often cited for parallels to these events.
2 tn The Aramaic indefinite active plural is used here like the English passive. So also in v. 28, 29,32.
3 tn Aram “from mankind.” So also in v. 32.
4 tn Aram “your dwelling will be.” So also in v. 32.
5 tn Or perhaps “be made to eat.”
6 sn Nebuchadnezzar’s insanity has features that are associated with the mental disorder known as boanthropy, in which the person so afflicted imagines himself to be an ox or a similar animal and behaves accordingly.
7 tn Aram “until.”