1 Kings 22:25
Context22:25 Micaiah replied, “Look, you will see in the day when you go into an inner room to hide.”
1 Kings 3:4
Context3:4 The king went to Gibeon to offer sacrifices, for it had the most prominent of the high places. 1 Solomon would offer up 2 a thousand burnt sacrifices on the altar there.
1 Kings 13:3
Context13:3 That day he also announced 3 a sign, “This is the sign the Lord has predetermined: 4 The altar will be split open and the ashes 5 on it will fall to the ground.” 6
1 Kings 22:35
Context22:35 While the battle raged throughout the day, the king stood propped up in his chariot opposite the Syrians. He died in the evening; the blood from the wound ran down into the bottom of the chariot.
1 Kings 10:10
Context10:10 She gave the king 120 talents 7 of gold, a very large quantity of spices, and precious gems. The quantity of spices the queen of Sheba gave King Solomon has never been matched. 8
1 Kings 16:16
Context16:16 While deployed there, the army received this report: 9 “Zimri has conspired against the king and assassinated him.” 10 So all Israel made Omri, the commander of the army, king over Israel that very day in the camp.
1 Kings 8:64
Context8:64 That day the king consecrated the middle of the courtyard that is in front of the Lord’s temple. He offered there burnt sacrifices, grain offerings, and the fat from the peace offerings, because the bronze altar that stood before the Lord was too small to hold all these offerings. 11


[3:4] 1 tn Heb “for it was the great high place.”
[3:4] 2 tn The verb form is an imperfect, which is probably used here in a customary sense to indicate continued or repeated action in past time. See GKC 314 §107.b.
[13:3] 3 tn Heb “the fat.” Reference is made to burnt wood mixed with fat. See HALOT 234 s.v. דשׁן.
[13:3] 4 tn Heb “will be poured out.”
[10:10] 1 tn The Hebrew term כִּכָּר (kikkar, “circle”) refers generally to something that is round. When used of metals it can refer to a disk-shaped weight made of the metal or to a standard unit of weight, generally regarded as a talent. Since the accepted weight for a talent of metal is about 75 pounds, this would have amounted to about 9,000 pounds of gold (cf. NCV, NLT); CEV “five tons”; TEV “4,000 kilogrammes.”
[10:10] 2 tn Heb “there has not come like those spices yet for quantity which the queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon.”
[16:16] 1 tn Heb “and the people who were encamped heard.”
[16:16] 2 tn Heb “has conspired against and also has struck down the king.”
[8:64] 1 tn Heb “to hold the burnt sacrifices, grain offerings, and the fat of the peace offerings.”