Douay-Rheims ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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Thy lips are as a scarlet lace: and thy speech sweet. Thy cheeks are as a piece of a pomegranate, besides that which lieth hid within.
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King James ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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Thy lips are like a thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely: thy temples are like a piece of a pomegranate within thy locks.
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Louis Second ºÒ¾î¼º°æ
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Tes lèvres sont comme un fil cramoisi, Et ta bouche est charmante; Ta joue est comme une moitié de grenade, Derrière ton voile
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Martin Luther µ¶¾î¼º°æ
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Deine Lippen sind wie eine rosinfarbene Schnur, und deine Rede lieblich. Deine Wangen sind wie der Ritz am Granatapfel zwischen deinen Zöpfen.
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Vulgate ¶óƾ¾î¼º°æ
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sicut vitta coccinea labia tua et eloquium tuum dulce sicut fragmen mali punici ita genae tuae absque eo quod intrinsecus latet
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
sicut : as, just as, as it were, (+verb in subj.) just as if. fragmen : fragminis : a breaking / fragments, remains, ruins. ita : so, thus. ita : (in narration) and so; (with adj. or adv.) so, so very. absque : (+ ablative) without, except. eo : to advance, march on, go, leave. quod : (neut. sing. acc.) (the sea), WHICH you cannot drink dry. quod : (+ comparative) the x the better (quod celior = the faster the. quod : (beginning sentence) and, but, now. quod : (neut. sing. nom.) (the war), WHICH killed so many. quod : (with time) since, as far as, to the extent that. quod : because, whereas, the point that, the fact that. latet : to be unknown.
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