The Earlier Prophecies of Isaiah |
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Page vii
... natural reluctance to con- fess how little after all has been accomplished . To some it will probably be no commendation of the work to say , that the author has considered it his duty to record the failure as well as the suc- cess of ...
... natural reluctance to con- fess how little after all has been accomplished . To some it will probably be no commendation of the work to say , that the author has considered it his duty to record the failure as well as the suc- cess of ...
Page x
... natural figure in all languages for speech , and more especially for public , solemn , and continuous discourse . In ... naturally than to any other . For example , when Abraham is called a prophet ( Gen. 20 : 7 ) , there is no need of ...
... natural figure in all languages for speech , and more especially for public , solemn , and continuous discourse . In ... naturally than to any other . For example , when Abraham is called a prophet ( Gen. 20 : 7 ) , there is no need of ...
Page xix
... naturally led to its insertion in the same part of the Canon with the Psalms . Another objection to this whole explana ... natural solution is , that the first two divisions having been distinguished by appropriate names , the third was ...
... naturally led to its insertion in the same part of the Canon with the Psalms . Another objection to this whole explana ... natural solution is , that the first two divisions having been distinguished by appropriate names , the third was ...
Page xxvi
... natural result was a grotesque disguise and mutilation of the book by means of numberless erasures , transpositions , combinations , gratuitous assump- tions of imaginary authors , two or more of whom were often thought to be identified ...
... natural result was a grotesque disguise and mutilation of the book by means of numberless erasures , transpositions , combinations , gratuitous assump- tions of imaginary authors , two or more of whom were often thought to be identified ...
Page xlviii
... natural and unstudied form , in which the Hebrew mind expressed itself without regard to rules or systems , into a rigorous scholastic scheme of prosody . The recurrence of a certain theme , refrain , or burden at nearly equal intervals ...
... natural and unstudied form , in which the Hebrew mind expressed itself without regard to rules or systems , into a rigorous scholastic scheme of prosody . The recurrence of a certain theme , refrain , or burden at nearly equal intervals ...
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The Earlier Prophecies of Isaiah: 1100 (Classic Reprint) Joseph Addison Alexander No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
Aben Ezra according agreed Ahaz allusion ancient versions applied Assyria Babylon Babylonian Barnes Calvin chapter Clericus Cocceius common commonly connexion construction context deliverance denote described desolation destruction divine Edom Egypt enemies English Version Ephraim Ewald explained exposition expression favour figure Gesenius give God's Grotius Hebrew Henderson Hendewerk Hezekiah Hitzig hypothesis idea implying interpreters interpunction Isaiah Israel J. D. Michaelis Jarchi Jehovah Jehovah of Hosts Jerusalem Jews Judah judgment Junius Kimchi king Knobel land last clause later writers literally Lowth Luther Maurer meaning mentioned Messiah Moab nations natural noun objection older writers parallel participle passage Peshito phrase plural poetical prediction preposition preterite probably promise prophecy Prophet reference regard reign rendered Rosenmüller says seems Sennacherib sense Septuagint Shebna suffix supposes supposition Syria Targum thee thou threatening tion translation Umbreit understood usage verb verse vide supra Vitringa Vulgate whole words Zion