NETBible KJV GRK-HEB XRef Names Arts Hymns

Exodus 7:1--12:51

7:1

See <07200> [See.]

God <0430> [a god.]


7:2


7:3

harden <07185> [And I.]

multiply <07235> [multiply.]


7:4

will <05414> [that I.]

regiments <06635> [armies.]

great <01419> [by great.]


7:5

<04714> [Egyptians.]

extend <05186> [I stretch.]


7:6


7:7


7:9

<05414> [Shew.]

Take <03947> [Take.]

snake <08577> [a serpent.]


7:10

Lord <03068> [as the Lord.]

9

snake <08577> [it became.]


7:11

wise men <02450> [wise men.]

sorcerers <03784> [sorcerers.]

{Mechashshaphim,} probably from the Arabic {kashapha,} to discover, reveal, signifies diviners, or those who pretended to reveal futurity, to discover things lost, or to find hidden treasures.

did <06213> [they also.]

secret arts <03858> [enchantments.]

By the word {lahatim,} from {lahat,} to burn, may be meant such incantations as required lustral fires, fumigations, etc.


7:12

Aaron's <0175> [but Aaron's.]


7:13


7:14

Pharaoh's <06547> [Pharaoh's.]

refuses <03985> [he refuseth.]


7:15

out <03318> [he goeth.]

staff <04294> [the rod.]


7:16

Lord <03068> [The Lord.]

people <05971> [Let my.]

serve <05647> [serve.]


7:17

know <03045> [thou shalt.]

turned <02015> [and they.]


7:18

Fish <01710> [the fish.]

<04714> [Egyptians.]

"The water of Egypt," says Abb‚ Mascrier, "is so delicious, that one would not wish the heat to be less, or to be delivered from the sensation of thirst. The Turks find it so exquisite, that they excite themselves to drink of it by eating salt." "A person," adds Mr. Harmer, "who never before heard of the deliciousness of the Nile water, and of the large quantities which on that account are drunk of it, will, I am sure, find an energy in those words of Moses to Pharaoh, the Egyptians shall loathe to drink of the water of the river, which he never did before."

[shall loathe.]


7:19

stretch <05186> [stretch.]

reservoirs <04723> [their pools. Heb. gathering of their waters.]


7:20

raised <07311> [he lifted.]

water ................... water <04325> [all the waters.]

As the Nile was held sacred by the Egyptians, as well as the animals it contained, to which they annually sacrificed a girl, or as others say, both a boy and girl, God might have designed this plague as a punishment for such idolatry and cruelty; and to shew them the baseness of those elements which they reverenced, and the insufficiency of the gods in which they trusted. All the punishments brought upon them bore a strict analogy to their crimes.


7:21

The first miracle of Christ turned water into wine, the first plague upon Egypt turned all their water into blood.


7:22

magicians <02748> [magicians.]

Pharaoh's <06547> [and Pharaoh's.]

Lord <03068> [as the.]

3


7:23

pay <07896> [neither.]


7:24

could <03201> [for they.]


7:25


8:1

Go ........... Release <0935 07971> [Go.]

people <05971> [Let my.]


8:2

refuse <03986> [refuse.]

frogs <06854> [frogs.]

The Hebrew {tzephardˆim} is evidently the same with the Arabic {zafda,} Chaldaic {oordeƒnaya,} and Syriac {oordeai,} all of which denote frogs, as almost all interpreters, both ancient and modern, agree to render it; Bochart conceives, from {tzifa,} a bank, and {radƒ,} mud, because of delighting in muddy and marshy places.


8:3

kneading troughs <04863> [kneading troughs. or, dough.]


8:4


8:5


8:6

frogs <06854> [and the frogs.]

Whether the frog among the Egyptians was an object of reverence or abhorrence is uncertain. It might have been both at the same time, as many objects are known to have been among particular nations; for proof of which see the very learned Jacob Bryant, on the Plagues of Egypt, pp. 31-34.


8:7


8:8

Pray <06279> [Intreat.]

people ....... people <05971> [and I will.]


8:9

honor .... when <06286 04970> [Glory over me. or, Have this honour over me.]

when <04970> [when. or, against when. to destroy. Heb. to cut of.]


8:10

Tomorrow <04279> [To-morrow. or, against to-morrow.]

Lord <03068> [there is none.]


8:11


8:12


8:13


8:14

land <0776> [and the.]


8:15

saw <07200> [saw.]

hardened <03513> [he hardened.]


8:16

Extend <05186> [Stretch.]

gnats <03654> [lice.]

The word {kinnim} is rendered by the LXX. [skiphes, skipes,] or [skn‚phes,] and by the Vulgate {sciniphes,} Gnats; and Mr. Harmer supposes he has found out the true meaning in the word {tarrentes,} a species of worm. Bochart, however, seems to have proved that lice, and not gnats, are meant; because, 1. they sprang from the dust, and not from the waters; 2. they were on both man and beast, which cannot be said of gnats; 3. their name is derived from {koon,} to make firm, fix, establish, which cannot agree with gnats, flies, etc., which are ever changing place, and almost constantly on the wing; 4. the term {kinnah} is used by the Talmudists to express the louse. This insect must have been a very dreadful and afflicting plague to the Egyptians, and especially to the priests, who were obliged to shave all their hair off, and to wear a single linen tunic, to prevent vermin harbouring about them.


8:17

gnats ... people ............ gnats <0120 03654> [lice in man.]


8:18

magicians <02748> [the magicians.]

could <03201> [they could.]


8:19

finger <0676> [This is.]

Pharaoh ......... Pharaoh's <06547> [and Pharaoh's.]


8:20

out <03318> [lo.]

people <05971> [Let my.]

1


8:21

swarms of flies ......................... flies <06157> [swarms. or, a mixture of noisome beasts, etc.]

The word {arov} is rendered [kunomwea,] kunomuia,] the dog-fly, by the LXX. (who are followed by the learned Bochart,) which must have been particularly hateful to the Egyptians, because they held dogs in the highest veneration, under which form they worshipped Anubis.


8:22

mark <06395> [sever.]

know <03045> [know.]

midst <07130> [midst.]


8:23

division <06304> [a division. Heb. a redemption.]

tomorrow <04279> [to-morrow. or, by to-morrow.]


8:24

came <0935> [there.]

land ..... land <0776> [the land.]

How intolerable a plague of flies can prove, is evident from the fact that whole districts have been laid waste by them. The inhabitants have been forced to quit their cities, not being able to stand against the flies and gnats with which they were pestered. Hence different people had deities whose office it was to defend them against flies. Among these may be reckoned Baalzebub, the fly-god of Ekron; Hercules, {muscarum abactor,} Hercules the expeller of flies; and hence Jupiter had the titles of [apomuios, muiagros, muiochoros,] because he was supposed to expel flies, and especially clear his temples of these insects. See Bryant.

ruined <07843> [corrupted. or destroyed.]


8:25


8:26

right <03559> [It is not.]

sacrifices ................... sacrifices <02076> [we shall.]

abomination ............ abomination <08441> [the abomination. i.e.,]

The animals which they worshipped; for an account of which, see note on ch. 9:3.


8:27

three-day <07969> [three days'.]

telling <0559> [as he shall.]


8:28

release <07971> [I will.]

pray <06279> [intreat.]


8:29

tomorrow <04279> [to-morrow.]

falsely <02048> [deal.]


8:30

[entreated.]


8:32


9:1


9:2


9:3

hand <03027> [the hand.]

plague <01698> [murrain.]

We may observe a particular scope and meaning in this calamity, if we consider it in regard to the Egyptians, which would not have existed in respect to any other people. They held in idolatrous reverence almost every animal, but some they held in particular veneration; as the ox, cow, and ram. Among these, {Apis} and {Mnevis} are well known; the former being a sacred bull, worshipped at Memphis, as the latter was at Heliopolis. A cow or heifer had the like honours at Momemphis; and the same practice seems to have been adopted in most of the Egyptian {nomes.} By the infliction of this judgment, the Egyptian deities sank before the God of the Hebrews. See Bryant, pp. 87-93.


9:4


9:5

appointed time <04150> [a set time.]


9:6


9:7

heart <03820> [the heart.]


9:8

Take handfuls <03947 02651> [Take to.]

This was a significant command; not only referring to the fiery furnace, which was a type of the slavery of the Israelites, but to a cruel rite common among the Egyptians. They had several cities styled Typhonian, in which at particular seasons they sacrificed men, who were burnt alive; and the ashes of the victim were scattered upwards in the air, with the view, probably, that where any atom of dust was carried, a blessing was entailed. The like, therefore, was done by Moses, though with a different intention, and more certain effect. See Bryant, pp. 93-106.


9:9

boils <07822> [a boil.]


9:10

boils <07822> [a boil.]


9:11


9:12

Hardness of heart is a figurative expression, denoting that insensibility of mind upon which neither judgments nor mercies make any abiding impressions; but the conscience being stupefied, the obdurate rebel persists in determined disobedience.


9:13


9:14

send .... plagues <07971 04046> [send all.]

know <03045> [that thou.]


9:15

stretched out <07971> [stretch.]

struck <05221> [that.]

destroyed <03582> [cut off.]


9:16

for ... purpose <05668> [deed.]

stand <05975> [raised thee up. Heb. made thee stand. for to.]

name <08034> [that my.]


9:17


9:18

tomorrow <04279> [to-morrow.]

rain <04305> [I will cause.]

This must have been a circumstance of all others the most incredible to an Egyptian; for in Egypt there fell no rain, the want of which was supplied by dews, and the overflowing of the Nile. The Egyptians must, therefore, have perceived themselves particularly aimed at in these fearful events, especially as they were very superstitious. There seems likewise a propriety in their being punished by fire and water, as they were guilty of the grossest idolatry towards these elements. Scarcely any thing could have distressed the Egyptians more than the destruction of the flax, as the whole nation wore linen garments. The ruin of their barley was equally fatal, both to their trade and to their private advantage. See Bryant, pp. 108-117.


9:19

gather <05756> [and gather.]

hail <01259> [the hail.]


9:20


9:21

take ... word ..... seriously <07760 01697> [regarded not. Heb. set not his heart unto.]


9:22


9:23

Lord sent ............. Lord <05414 03068> [the Lord sent.]

hail ............ hail <01259> [and hail.]


9:24

not ......... land <03808 0776> [none like.]


9:25

struck ................... struck .... grows <05221 06212> [smote every.]


9:26


9:27

sinned <02398> [I have.]

Lord <03068> [the Lord.]


9:28

Pray <06279> [Intreat.]

mighty thunderings <06963 0430> [mighty thunderings. Heb. voices of God.]

stay <05975> [ye shall.]


9:29

spread <06566> [spread.]

earth <0776> [that the earth.]


9:30


9:31

flax ................. flax <06594> [flax.]

The word {pishteh,} flax, Mr. Parkhurst thinks may be derived from {pashat,} to strip, because the substance which we call flax is properly the filaments of the bark or rind of the vegetable, stripped off the stalks. From time immemorial, Egypt was celebrated for the production and manufacture of flax; and hence the linen and fine linen of Egypt, so often spoken of in scripture and ancient authors.

barley ......... barley <08184> [the barley.]

The Hebrew {se¢rah,} barley, in Arabic {shair,} and {shairat,} is so called from its rough, bristly beard, with which the ears are covered and defended; from {saƒr,} to stand on end as the hair of the head: hence {seƒr,} the hair of the head. So its Latin name {hordeum} is from {horreo,} to stand on end as the hair. Dr. Pococke has observed that there is a double seed time and harvest in Egypt; rice, India wheat, and a grain called the corn of Damascus, are sown and reaped at a very different time from wheat, barley, and flax. The first are sown in March, before the overflowing of the Nile, and reaped about October; whereas the wheat and barley are sown in November and December, as soon as the Nile has gone off, and reaped before May.


9:32

later crops <0648> [not grown up. Heb. hidden, or dark.]


9:33

spread out <06566> [spread.]

the <06963> [and the thunders.]


9:34

saw <07200> [saw.]

hardened <03513> [and hardened.]


10:1

hardened <03513> [I have hardened.]

display <07896> [that I.]


10:2

tell how ......... about <05608> [And that.]

know <03045> [that ye.]


10:3

How <04970> [How long.]

humble <06031> [humble.]


10:4

[tomorrow.]

locusts <0697> [locusts.]

The word {arbeh,} Locust, is derived from {ravah,} to multiply, be numerous, etc., because they are more prolific than any other insect, and because of the immense swarms of them by which different countries, especially the East, are infested. The locust, in entomology, belongs to a genus of insects known among naturalists by the name of Grylli; which includes three species, crickets, grasshoppers, and locusts. The common great brown locust is about three inches in length; has two antenn‘ about an inch long, and two pair of wings. The head and horns are brown; the mouth and inside of the larger legs bluish; the upper side of the body and upper wings brown, the former spotted with black, and the latter with dusky spots. The back is defended by a shield of a greenish hue: the under wings are of a light brown, tinctured with green, and nearly transparent. It has a large open mouth, in the two jaws of which it has four teeth, which traverse each other like scissors, being calculated, from their mechanism, to gripe or cut. The general appearance of the insect is that of the grasshopper. The Egyptians had gods in whom they trusted to deliver them from these terrible invaders; but by this judgment they were taught that it was impossible to stand before Moses, the servant of Jehovah.


10:5

surface <05869> [face. Heb. eye.]

remainder <03499> [the residue.]


10:6

fill <04390> [fill.]

fathers .... grandfathers <01> [which.]

turned <06437> [And he.]


10:7

menace <04170> [How long.]

3

menace <04170> [snare.]

Egypt <04714> [that Egypt.]


10:8

So <07725> [brought.]

Go .......... going <01980> [who. Heb. who, and who, etc.]


10:9

<03212> [We will go.]

sheep <06629> [our flocks.]

feast <02282> [a feast.]


10:10

release <07971> [be so.]

Watch ... Trouble <07200 07451> [look to it.]


10:11

want <01245> [for that.]

driven out <01644> [And they.]


10:12

Extend <05186> [Stretch.]

eat .... grows <0398 06212> [eat every.]


10:13

east wind ................ east wind <07307 06921> [east wind.]


10:14

locusts ........................... locusts <0697> [the locusts.]

was very severe <03966 03515> [very grievous.]

before <06440> [before.]


10:15

covered <03680> [For they.]

ate <0398> [did eat.]


10:16

summoned Moses <07121 04872> [called for. Heb. hastened to call. I have.]


10:17

forgive <05375> [forgive.]

pray <06279> [and intreat.]

death <04194> [this death.]


10:18

out <03318> [went.]

prayed <06279> [and intreated.]


10:19

very <03966> [a mighty.]

blew <08628> [cast. Heb. fastened. the Red sea.]


10:20


10:21

Extend <05186> [Stretch.]

darkness ........ darkness <02822> [darkness.]

As the Egyptians not only worshipped the light and sun, but also paid the same veneration to night and darkness, nothing could be more terrible than this punishment of palpable and coercive darkness, such as their luminary Osiris could not dispel. See Bryant, pp. 141-160.

darkness ........ darkness ....... felt <02822 04959> [even darkness which may be felt. Heb. that one may feel darkness.]


10:22

absolute darkness <02822 0653> [thick darkness.]


10:23

Israelites <01121> [but all.]


10:24

serve <03212 05647> [Go ye.]

flocks <06629> [flocks.]

families <02945> [little ones.]


10:25

<03027> [us. Heb. into our hands. sacrifices.]


10:26

livestock <04735> [cattle.]

know <03045> [and we.]


10:27


10:28

Watch <03212 08104> [Get thee.]

when <03117> [for in that.]


10:29

see <07200> [I will see.]


11:1

bring <0935> [Yet will.]

after <0310> [afterwards.]

drive ..... from <01644> [thrust you.]


11:2

request <07592> [borrow.]

items <03627> [jewels.]


11:3

Lord <03068> [the Lord.]

Moses <04872> [Moses.]


11:4

midnight <03915> [About.]

<03318> [will I go.]


11:5

firstborn ........... firstborn son ........... firstborn son ............... firstborn <01060> [the firstborn.]

<0310> [behind.]


11:6


11:7

dog <03611> [dog.]

distinguishes <06395> [a difference.]


11:8

servants .................. people <05650 05971> [And all.]

follow .... after <07272 0310> [follow thee. Heb. is at they feet.]

great anger <0639 02750> [a great anger. Heb. heat of anger.]


11:9

Pharaoh <06547> [Pharaoh.]

wonders <04159> [wonders.]


11:10

Lord <03068> [the Lord.]


12:1

1


12:2

[A.M. 2513. B.C. 1491. An. Exod. Isr. 1. Abib or Nisan.]


12:3

Tell .... community <01696 05712> [Speak ye.]

tenth <06218> [in the tenth.]

each ... take <03947 0376> [take to.]

lamb ......... lamb <07716> [lamb. or, kid.]

The word {seh} means the young of both sheep and goats, and may be indifferently rendered either lamb or kid. It is evident from ver. 5 that the Hebrews might take either; but they generally preferred a lamb, from being of a more gentle nature.

household <01004> [an house.]

The Israelites were divided into twelve tribes, these tribes into families, the families into houses, and the houses into particular persons.


12:5

perfect <08549> [be without.]

male ... year old <02145 01121 08141> [a male of the first year. Heb. son of a year.]


12:6

fourteenth <0702> [fourteenth.]

whole <03605> [the whole.]

around sundown <06153 0996> [in the evening. Heb. between the two evenings.]

The Jews divided the day into morning and evening: till the sun passed the meridian, all was morning or forenoon; after that, all was evening or afternoon. Their first evening began just after twelve o'clock, and continued till sunset; their second evening began at sunset, and continued till night, i.e., during the whole time of twilight; between twelve o'clock, therefore, and the termination of twilight, the passover was to be offered. See Parallel Passages.


12:7


12:8

eat ... meat ....... eat <0398 01320> [eat the.]

roasted <06748> [roast.]

bread made without yeast <04682> [unleavened.]

bitter herbs <04844> [with bitter.]


12:9

roast ..... fire <06748 0784> [but roast with fire.]


12:10


12:11

travel <04975> [loins.]

sandals <05275> [shoes.]

Lord's <03068> [it is the.]


12:12

pass through <05674> [pass.]

attack <05221> [will smite.]

gods <0430> [against.]

gods <0430> [gods. or, princes.]

Lord <03068> [I am the Lord.]


12:13

blood .................... blood <01818> [the blood.]

see <07200> [and when.]

destroy ..... attack <04889 05221> [to destroy you. Heb. for a destruction.]


12:14

memorial <02146> [memorial.]

celebrate ..... festival ....... celebrate <02282 02287> [a feast.]

ordinance <02708> [by an ordinance.]


12:15

seven <07651> [Seven.]

<05315> [that soul.]


12:16

first day ............ day <03117 07223> [first day.]

work <04399> [no manner.]

[man Heb. soul.]


12:17

very <06106> [in this selfsame.]

ordinance <02708> [an ordinance.]


12:18


12:19

seven <07651> [Seven.]

<05315> [even that.]

foreigner <01616> [whether.]


12:21

elders <02205> [elders.]

<03947> [and take.]

lamb <06629> [lamb. or, kid.]

3 *marg:

Passover animals <06453> [the passover.]

That is, the lamb which was called the {paschal,} or passover lamb; the animal sacrificed obtaining the name of the institution. St. Paul copies the expression in 1 Co 5:7.


12:22

branch <092> [a bunch.]

hyssop <0231> [hyssop.]

The word {aizov,} which has been variously rendered, most probably denotes Hyssop; whence are derived the Chaldee {aizova,} Syriac {zupha,} Arabic {zupha,} Ethiopic {azab,} and {hushopa,} Greek [`ussopos,] hussopos <\\See definition 5301\\>,] Latin {hyssopus,} German {usop,} and our hyssop, a name retained, with little variation, in all the western languages. It is a plant of the gymnospermia (naked seeded) order, belonging to the didynamia class. It has bushy stalks, growing a foot and a half high; small spear-shaped, close-sitting, and opposite leaves, with several smaller ones rising from the same joint; and all the stalks and branches terminated by erect whorled spikes of flowers, of different colours in the varieties of the plant. The leaves have an aromatic smell, and a warm, pungent taste. Its detersive, cleansing, and medicinal qualities were probably the reason why it was so particularly recommended in Scripture.

apply <05060> [strike.]

7

<0376> [and none.]


12:23

pass <05674> [will pass through.]

will ... permit <05414> [and will not.]


12:24


12:25

enter <0935> [when.]

said <01696> [according.]


12:26

children <01121> [your children.]


12:27

sacrifice <02077> [It is the sacrifice.]

households <06915> [bowed.]


12:28


12:29

midnight <02677> [at midnight.]

Lord attacked <03068 05221> [the Lord smote.]

The infliction of this judgment on the Egyptians was most equitable; because, after their nation had been preserved by one of the Israelitish family, they had, contrary to all right, and in defiance of original stipulation, enslaved the people to whom they had been so much indebted, had murdered their offspring, and made their bondage intolerable. See Bryant, p. 160.

[the first-born of Pharaoh.]

prison <01004> [dungeon. Heb. house of the pit.]


12:30

great cry <01419 06818> [and there was a great cry.]

No people were more remarkable and frantic in their mournings than the Egyptians. When a relative died, every one left the house, and the women, with their hair loose, and their bosoms bare, ran wild about the street. The men also, with their apparel equally disordered, kept them company; all shrieking, howling, and beating themselves. What a scene of horror and distress must now have presented itself, when there was not a family in Egypt where there was not one dead!


12:31

summoned <07121> [called.]

Get <06965> [Rise up.]

Israelites <01121> [the children.]


12:32

flocks <06629> [your flocks.]

bless <01288> [bless me.]


12:33

urging <02388> [urgent.]

dead <04191> [We be all.]


12:34

kneading troughs <04863> [kneading troughs. or, dough.]

Probably like the kneading-troughs of the Arabs; comparatively small wooden bowls, which also serve them for dishes. Their being bound up in their clothes may mean no more than their being wrapped up in their {hykes,} or long, loose, garments. See Shaw's Travels, p. 224, 4to. edit.


12:35


12:36

Lord <03068> [the Lord.]

them ........ plundered <05337> [they spoiled.]


12:37

Israelites <01121> [the children.]

Rameses <07486> [Rameses.]

600,000 <03967 08337> [six hundred.]


12:38

mixed multitude <06154 07227> [And a mixed multitude. Heb. a great mixture.]


12:39

thrust out <01644> [thrust.]


12:40

The Samaritan Pentateuch reads, "Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, and of their fathers in the land of Canaan and in the land of Egypt, was 430 years." The Alexandrine copy of the LXX. has the same reading; and the same statement is made by the apostle Paul, in Ga 3:17, who reckons from the promise made to Abraham to the giving of the law. That these three witnesses have the truth, the chronology itself proves; for it is evident that the descendants of Israel did not dwell 430 years in Egypt; while it is equally evident, that the period from Abraham's entry into Canaan to the Exodus, is exactly that number. Thus, from Abraham's entrance into the promised land to the birth of Isaac, was 25 years; Isaac was 60 at the birth of Jacob; Jacob was 130 at his going into Egypt; where he and his children continued 215 years more; making in the whole 430 years. See Kennicott's Dissertation on the Hebrew Text.

length of time <04186> [sojourning.]

430 <03967 0702> [four hundred.]


12:41

very <06106> [selfsame.]

regiments <06635> [hosts.]


12:42

night ... vigil .................. night ........ vigil <08107 03915> [a night to be much observed. Heb. a night of observations. observed.]


12:43

foreigner <01121> [There shall.]


12:44

circumcised <04135> [circumcised.]


12:45


12:46

one house ............ house <01004 0259> [one house.]

break <07665> [neither.]


12:47

community <05712> [All the.]

observe <06213> [keep it. Heb. do it.]


12:48

foreigner <01616> [a stranger.]

males <02145> [let all.]

born <0249> [shall be.]


12:49


12:50

Lord <03068> [as the Lord.]

[by their armies.]


Psalms 78:43-51

78:43

performed <07760> [How.]

performed <07760> [wrought. Heb. set. wonders.]


78:44

The miracles mentioned in this and the four subsequent verses, evidently shew the power of God over the elements of nature, which at that time were the objects of Egyptian worship.


78:45

sent <07971> [sent.]

frogs <06854> [frogs.]


78:46

gave ... crops <05414 02981> [gave also.]

[the caterpillar.]

{Chosal,} from {chasal,} to consume, eat up, is rendered [\~broucov\~, brouchos] by the LXX., in 2 Ch 6:28, and Aquila here, and also the Vulgate in Chron. and Isa 33:4 and Jerome here, {bruchus,} the chaffer, which every one knows to be a great devourer of the leaves of trees. The Syriac in Joel 1:4; 2:25, renders it {tzartzooro,} which Michaelis, from the Arabic {tzartzar,} a cricket, interprets the mole-cricket, which in its grub state is also very destructive to corn, grass, and other vegetables, by cankering the roots on which it feeds.


78:47

destroyed <02026> [destroyed. or, killed. with hail.]

[sycamore.]

From the value of the sycamore in furnishing wood for various uses, from the grateful shade which its wide spreading branches afforded, and on account of the fruit, which Mr. Maillet says the Egyptians hold in the highest estimation, we may conceive somewhat of the loss they sustained when "their vines were destroyed with hail; and their sycamore trees with frost." See Note on 1 Ch 27:28.

driving rain <02602> [frost. or, great hailstones.]


78:48

rained ... down <05462> [gave up. Heb. shut up. hot thunderbolts. or, lightnings.]


78:49

sent <07971> [cast.]

lashed out <04917> [by sending.]


78:50

sent <06424> [made away. Heb. weighed a path. he spared.]

lives over ... destruction <05462 01698 02416> [life over to the pestilence. or, beasts to the murrain.]


78:51

struck <05221> [smote.]

firstfruits <07225> [the chief.]

tents <0168> [tabernacles.]


Psalms 105:27-36

105:27

They executed <07760> [They.]

signs <0226> [his signs. Heb. words of his signs. wonders.]


105:28

made <07971> [sent.]

disobey <04784> [rebelled.]


105:29


105:30

overrun <08317> [brought.]


105:31

come <0935> [there.]

gnats <03654> [and lice.]


105:32

hail ..... rain <01259 01653> [them hail for rain. Heb. their rain hail.]


105:33


105:34

locusts <0697> [the locusts.]


105:36

struck <05221> [He smote.]

firstfruits <07225> [chief.]


Psalms 135:8-9

135:8

struck <05221> [smote.]

men ... animals <0120 0929> [both of man and beast. Heb. from man unto beast.]


135:9

performed awesome <0226 07971> [sent tokens.]

Pharaoh <06547> [upon Pharaoh.]


Psalms 136:10

136:10




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