(1.0024393125) | (1Ch 14:12) |
1 tn Heb “abandoned.” |
(0.8179465625) | (1Ki 19:10) |
3 tn Heb “abandoned your covenant.” |
(0.8179465625) | (1Ki 19:14) |
3 tn Heb “abandoned your covenant.” |
(0.6334538125) | (Joh 8:29) |
1 tn That is, “he has not abandoned me.” |
(0.54120734375) | (Psa 27:10) |
1 tn Or “though my father and mother have abandoned me.” |
(0.54120734375) | (Isa 54:6) |
1 tn Heb “like a woman abandoned and grieved in spirit.” |
(0.4489609625) | (Job 1:12) |
2 tn The versions add a verb here: “delivered to” or “abandoned to” the hand of Satan. |
(0.40283775) | (Isa 60:15) |
1 tn Heb “Instead of your being abandoned and despised, with no one passing through, I will make you.” |
(0.3567145625) | (Psa 22:1) |
3 sn From the psalmist’s perspective it seems that God has abandoned him, for he fails to answer his cry for help (vv. 1b-2). |
(0.3567145625) | (Pro 12:15) |
1 sn The way of a fool describes a headlong course of actions (“way” is an idiom for conduct) that is not abandoned even when wise advice is offered. |
(0.34088760625) | (Jer 16:11) |
1 tn These two sentences have been recast in English to break up a long Hebrew sentence and incorporate the oracular formula “says the |
(0.3105913875) | (Gen 44:10) |
4 sn The rest of you will be free. Joseph’s purpose was to single out Benjamin to see if the brothers would abandon him as they had abandoned Joseph. He wanted to see if they had changed. |
(0.3105913875) | (Jer 16:11) |
4 tn Heb “But me they have abandoned and my law they have not kept.” The objects are thrown forward to bring out the contrast which has rhetorical force. However, such a sentence in English would be highly unnatural. |
(0.3105913875) | (Act 2:31) |
3 tn Or “abandoned in the world of the dead.” The translation “world of the dead” for Hades is suggested by L&N 1.19. The phrase is an allusion to Ps 16:10. |
(0.3105913875) | (Phm 1:24) |
2 sn Demas is most likely the same individual mentioned by the Apostle Paul in 2 Tim 4:10. Apparently, he later on abandoned the faith because of his love of the world. |
(0.2756595625) | (Job 16:1) |
1 sn In the next two chapters we have Job’s second reply to Eliphaz. Job now feels abandoned by God and by his friends, and so complains that this all intensifies his sufferings. But he still holds to his innocence as he continues his appeal to God as his witness. There are four sections to this speech: in vv. 2-5 he dismisses the consolation his friends offered; in vv. 6-17 he laments that he is abandoned by God and man; in 16:8–17:9 he makes his appeal to God in heaven as a witness; and finally, in 10-16 he anticipates death. |
(0.2644681875) | (Gen 21:15) |
1 tn Heb “threw,” but the child, who was now thirteen years old, would not have been carried, let alone thrown under a bush. The exaggerated language suggests Ishmael is limp from dehydration and is being abandoned to die. See G. J. Wenham, Genesis (WBC), 2:85. |
(0.2644681875) | (Exo 32:25) |
2 tn The last two words of the verse read literally “for a whispering among those who rose up against them.” The foes would have mocked and derided them when they heard that they had abandoned the God who had led them out of Egypt (S. R. Driver, Exodus, 354). |
(0.2644681875) | (2Ki 9:8) |
2 tn Heb “and I will cut off from Ahab those who urinate against a wall, [including both those who are] restrained and let free [or, ‘abandoned’] in Israel.” On the phrase וְעָצוּר וְעָזוּב (vÿ’atsur vÿ’azur, translated here “weak and incapacitated”) see the note at 1 Kgs 14:10. |
(0.2644681875) | (2Ki 14:26) |
2 tn Heb “[there was] none but the restrained, and [there was] none but the abandoned, and there was no deliverer for Israel.” On the meaning of the terms עָצוּר (’atsur) and עָזוּב (’azur), see the note at 1 Kgs 14:10. |