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Exodus 10:19

Context
10:19 and the Lord turned a very strong west wind, 1  and it picked up the locusts and blew them into the Red Sea. 2  Not one locust remained in all the territory of Egypt.

Exodus 23:31

Context
23:31 I will set 3  your boundaries from the Red Sea to the sea of the Philistines, and from the desert to the River, 4  for I will deliver the inhabitants of the land into your hand, and you will drive them out before you.

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[10:19]  1 tn Or perhaps “sea wind,” i.e., a wind off the Mediterranean.

[10:19]  2 tn The Hebrew name here is יַם־סוּף (Yam Suf), sometimes rendered “Reed Sea” or “Sea of Reeds.” The word סוּף is a collective noun that may have derived from an Egyptian name for papyrus reeds. Many English versions have used “Red Sea,” which translates the name that ancient Greeks used: ejruqrav qalavssa (eruqra qalassa).

[23:31]  3 tn The form is a perfect tense with vav consecutive.

[23:31]  4 tn In the Hebrew Bible “the River” usually refers to the Euphrates (cf. NASB, NCV, NRSV, TEV, CEV, NLT). There is some thought that it refers to a river Nahr el Kebir between Lebanon and Syria. See further W. C. Kaiser, Jr., “Exodus,” EBC 2:447; and G. W. Buchanan, The Consequences of the Covenant (NovTSup), 91-100.



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