(0.49643036111111) | (Jdg 11:37) |
2 tn Heb “Leave me alone for two months so I can go and go down on the hills and weep over my virginity – I and my friends.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (Jdg 19:15) |
2 tn Heb “and he entered and sat down, and there was no one receiving them into the house to spend the night.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (Jdg 20:21) |
1 tn Heb “The sons of Benjamin came out of Gibeah and they struck down in Israel that day twenty-two thousand men to the ground.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (Jdg 20:35) |
1 tn Heb “And the sons of Israel struck down in Benjamin that day 25,100 men, all of these wielding the sword.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (Rut 3:7) |
3 sn Ruth must have waited until Boaz fell asleep, for he does not notice when she uncovers his legs and lies down beside him. |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Sa 13:3) |
1 tn Or perhaps “struck down the Philistine official.” See the note at 1 Sam 10:5. Cf. TEV “killed the Philistine commander.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Sa 23:8) |
1 tn Heb “So Saul mustered all his army for battle to go down to Keilah to besiege against David and his men.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Ki 2:32) |
2 tn Heb “because he struck down two men more innocent and better than he and he killed them with the sword, and my father David did not know.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Ki 15:8) |
1 tn Heb “lay down with his fathers.” The Old Greek also has these words: “in the twenty-eighth year of Jeroboam.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Ki 15:29) |
1 tn Heb “and when he became king, he struck down all the house of Jeroboam; he did not leave any breath to Jeroboam until he destroyed him.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (1Ki 16:7) |
2 tn Heb “angering him by the work of his hands, so that he was like the house of Jeroboam, and because of how he struck it down.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (2Ki 7:17) |
3 tn Heb “just as the man of God had spoken, [the word] which he spoke when the king came down to him.” |
(0.49643036111111) | (Job 4:3) |
4 tn The “feeble hands” are literally “hands hanging down.” This is a sign of weakness, helplessness, or despondency (see 2 Sam 4:1; Isa 13:7). |
(0.49643036111111) | (Job 28:4) |
3 sn This is a description of the mining procedures. Dangling suspended from a rope would be a necessary part of the job of going up and down the shafts. |
(0.49643036111111) | (Job 28:5) |
1 sn The verse has been properly understood, on the whole, as comparing the earth above and all its produce with the upheaval down below. |
(0.49643036111111) | (Psa 6:10) |
1 tn The four prefixed verbal forms in this verse are understood as jussives. The psalmist concludes his prayer with an imprecation, calling judgment down on his enemies. |
(0.49643036111111) | (Psa 11:6) |
3 sn The image of God “raining down” brimstone on the objects of his judgment also appears in Gen 19:24 and Ezek 38:22. |
(0.49643036111111) | (Psa 42:6) |
1 tn Heb “my God, upon me my soul bows down.” As noted earlier, “my God” belongs with the end of v. 6. |
(0.49643036111111) | (Psa 55:3) |
5 tc The verb form in the MT appears to be a Hiphil imperfect from the root מוֹט (mot, “to sway”), but the Hiphil occurs only here and in the Kethib (consonantal text) of Ps 140:10, where the form יַמְטֵר (yamter, “let him rain down”) should probably be read. Here in Ps 55:3 it is preferable to read יַמְטִירוּ (yamtiru, “they rain down”). It is odd for “rain down” to be used with an abstract object like “wickedness,” but in Job 20:23 God “rains down” anger (unless one emends the text there; see BHS). |
(0.49643036111111) | (Psa 62:4) |
5 sn The enemies use deceit to bring down their victim. They make him think they are his friends by pronouncing blessings upon him, but inwardly they desire his demise. |