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Job 3:16

Context

3:16 Or why 1  was 2  I not buried 3 

like a stillborn infant, 4 

like infants 5  who have never seen the light? 6 

Job 35:7

Context

35:7 If you are righteous, what do you give to God,

or what does he receive from your hand?

Job 38:5-6

Context

38:5 Who set its measurements – if 7  you know –

or who stretched a measuring line across it?

38:6 On what 8  were its bases 9  set,

or who laid its cornerstone –

Job 38:36

Context

38:36 Who has put wisdom in the heart, 10 

or has imparted understanding to the mind?

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[3:16]  1 tn The verb is governed by the interrogative of v. 12 that introduces this series of rhetorical questions.

[3:16]  2 tn The verb is again the prefix conjugation, but the narrative requires a past tense, or preterite.

[3:16]  3 tn Heb “hidden.” The LXX paraphrases: “an untimely birth, proceeding from his mother’s womb.”

[3:16]  4 tn The noun נֵפֶל (nefel, “miscarriage”) is the abortive thing that falls (hence the verb) from the womb before the time is ripe (Ps 58:9). The idiom using the verb “to fall” from the womb means to come into the world (Isa 26:18). The epithet טָמוּן (tamun, “hidden”) is appropriate to the verse. The child comes in vain, and disappears into the darkness – it is hidden forever.

[3:16]  5 tn The word עֹלְלִים (’olÿlim) normally refers to “nurslings.” Here it must refer to infants in general since it refers to a stillborn child.

[3:16]  6 tn The relative clause does not have the relative pronoun; the simple juxtaposition of words indicates that it is modifying the infants.

[38:5]  7 tn The particle כּ (ki) is taken here for a conditional clause, “if you know” (see GKC 498 §159.dd). Others take it as “surely” with a biting irony.

[38:6]  13 tn For the interrogative serving as a genitive, see GKC 442 §136.b.

[38:6]  14 sn The world was conceived of as having bases and pillars, but these poetic descriptions should not be pressed too far (e.g., see Ps 24:2, which may be worded as much for its polemics against Canaanite mythology as anything).

[38:36]  19 tn This verse is difficult because of the two words, טֻחוֹת (tukhot, rendered here “heart”) and שֶׂכְוִי (sekhvi, here “mind”). They have been translated a number of ways: “meteor” and “celestial appearance”; the stars “Procyon” and “Sirius”; “inward part” and “mind”; even as birds, “ibis” and “cock.” One expects them to have something to do with nature – clouds and the like. The RSV accordingly took them to mean “meteor” (from a verb “to wander”) and “a celestial appearance.” But these meanings are not well-attested.



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