An Hebrew and English Lexicon: Without Points |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
according ancient animal appears applied Arabic body called cause Chald Chron Codices Comp denotes derived Deut earth Eccles edit Exod expression Ezek Ezra fire freq Greek hand Hebrew Hence Hiph Hist idea joined Josh Kennicott's kind king latter learned light manner masc means mentioned nature nearly Niph Note Nouns observe occurs once Participle Particle particularly passages perhaps person plur Prov Psal radical remarkable render Root round says seems sense signifies sometimes speaking thing thou tion translation Travels Verb viii Vulg whence xvii xviii xxii xxiv xxix xxvi xxxi xxxii xxxiv
Populaire passages
Pagina 74 - Whoever has tasted onions in Egypt must allow that none can be had better in any part of the universe. Here they are sweet, in other countries they are nauseous and strong; here they are soft, whereas in the north, and other parts, they are hard of digestion. Hence they cannot in any place be eaten with less prejudice and more satisfaction than in Egypt.
Pagina 46 - Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him ? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and earth ? saith the Lord.
Pagina 320 - That, changed through all, and yet in all the same; Great in the earth, as in the ethereal frame; Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze, Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees; Lives through all life, extends through all extent; Spreads undivided, operates unspent!
Pagina 411 - Thus the straw becomes every time smaller, till at last it resembles chopped straw. After this, with the fork just described, they cast the whole some yards from thence, and against the wind, which driving back the straw, the corn and the ears not threshed out fall apart from it and make another heap. A man collects the clods of dirt, and other impurities, to which any corn adheres, and throws them into a sieve. They afterwards place in a ring the heaps, in which a good many entire ears are still...
Pagina 259 - On further enquiry we found, that one of them had, two months before, washed the dead corpse of a chief, and that on this account she was not to handle any food for five months. The other had performed the same office to the corpse of another person of inferior rank, and was now under the...
Pagina 531 - ... ever he could, till he carried them several times round the village ; and it was impossible to stop him, otherwise than by obstructing the passage. This sight pleased me so well, that I w°ould have it repeated : and to try their strength, I made a full-grown negro mount the smallest, and two others the largest.
Pagina 95 - It was a custom of the ancient Heathens, when they had gathered in all their fruits, to take a kid, and boil it in the dam's milk, and then, in a magical way, to go about and besprinkle with it all their trees, and fields, and gardens, and orchards ; thinking by this means they should make them fructify and bring forth fruit again more abundantly the following year :"-" wherefore,
Pagina 399 - Moloch was of brass, sitting on a throne of the same metal, adorned with a royal crown, having the head of a calf, and his arms extended as if to embrace any one. When they...
Pagina 435 - It is the custom in almost all the East for the women to wear rings in their noses, in the left nostril, which is bored low down in the middle. These rings are of gold, and have commonly two pearls and one ruby between, placed in the ring. I never saw a girl or young woman in Arabia, or in all Persia, who did not wear a ring after this manner in her nostril.