OT Lexicon
I would like to know if anyone knows what OT Lexicon works with the KJV that will link with it?
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Hi Matt - and welcome to the forums
matt said:I would like to know if anyone knows what OT Lexicon works with the KJV that will link with it?
If you right-click a word in the OT in the KJV and ensure the lemma is selected on the right you should see up to five lexicons that have entries on that word on the left side of the menu. Clicking one will open it to the relevant article.
What specifically are you looking for?
Graham
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What I am really looking for is something to help understand a pharse example: do not turn to the left or to the righ in Joshua, what the left and right represent? Hoping the lexicon would give some insight but not to sure.
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matt said:
What I am really looking for is something to help understand a pharse example: do not turn to the left or to the righ in Joshua, what the left and right represent? Hoping the lexicon would give some insight but not to sure.
Using the technique I mentioned above I found this
But you're probably better off consulting commentaries - such as NAC
But it very much depends on what resources you have.
Try running a Passage Guide on that verse and see what your commentaries say
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Thank you for your help and what is the NAC.
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matt said:
Thank you for your help and what is the NAC.
You are welcome - and sorry the NAC is the "New American Commentary" series - https://www.logos.com/product/55024/the-new-american-commentary-series
But I was just using that as an example.
As suggested try running a Passage Guide on Joshua 1:7 and see what the commentaries you have in your library say about this
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nothing I have has that much info in it, it really glosses over exactly what I am looking for. Thanks for your help, though.
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I think the allusion makes considerable more sense in pre-car days. An animal that had a habit of becoming distracted, attracted to yummy plants instead of the path, was an infernal animal. He'd be lucky to arrive safely home, the owner wondering what he might be worth.
"If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.
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