| Charles Buck - 1810 - 488 pages
...London. There have been various editionsof this in folio, quarto, and octavo ; to which have been added the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the new. The best of them all is the first, which is in folio, 1571. Since the reformation, there have been... | |
| Charles Buck - 1815 - 546 pages
...books made within these 200 years The this in folio, quarto, and octavo , to which have been added the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the Ne wThe best of them all is the first, which is in folio, 1571. Since the reformation, there have been... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - 1818 - 576 pages
...translators, who, to use their own words, " thought it not much," after having first Set before them " the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the New," " to consult the translators or commentators, Chaldee, Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, or Latin, no, nor the... | |
| John Milner (bp. of Castabala.) - 1822 - 384 pages
...or Epistle to the reader : " if you ask what they, the translators, had before them ? Truly it was the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the New. These are the two golden pipes or rather conduits where-through the olive branches emptie themselves... | |
| Samuel Miller - 1824 - 92 pages
...is at liberty to teach the great truths of revelation in any other way than by literally repeating the Hebrew text of the old testament, and the Greek of the new, in the hearing of the people. So extreme is the absurdity to which an erroneous principle will not... | |
| Thomas Frognall Dibdin - 1827 - 596 pages
...there referred to. Hebrew, Greek, Chaldee, and Syriac dictionaries and grammars — in the second, the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the New, with a Latin version interlined — in the third, treatises on the idioms of speech, weights, measures,... | |
| Charles Buck - 1829 - 614 pages
...been va- " — •--• nous editions of this in folio, quarto, and octavo ; to which have been added the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the New. The best of them all is the first, which is in folio, 1571. Since the reformation, there have been... | |
| William Fulke - 1842 - 640 pages
...me somewhat; for in the margin is noted "Discovery of the Kock, p. 147." where, indeed, speaking of the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, and the Greek of the New, the Greek translation of the Septuagint, and the common Latin translation, I say the Tridentine Council... | |
| William Fulke - 1848 - 450 pages
...same Decree of Gelasius, admitting but one book of Esdras, excludeth the Canonical book of Xchcmias3; and receiveth but one book of the Maccabees4, which...authentic tongues and copies than we have. I answer, the Trident ine Council alloweth none for authcntical but the common Latin translation; that is the worst... | |
| John Kitto - 1849 - 420 pages
...of 369, with matters which seem to have little concern with this object ; such as the Divisions in the Hebrew Text of the Old Testament and the Greek of the New ; the Origin, Genius, and History of the Hebrew Language ; the Nature, History, and Syntax of the New... | |
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