Douay-Rheims ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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Where without any want thou shalt eat thy bread, and enjoy abundance of all things: where the stones are iron, and out of its hills are dug mines of brass:
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King James ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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A land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarceness, thou shalt not lack any thing in it; a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig brass.
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Louis Second ºÒ¾î¼º°æ
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pays où tu mangeras du pain avec abondance, où tu ne manqueras de rien; pays dont les pierres sont du fer, et des montagnes duquel tu tailleras l'airain
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Martin Luther µ¶¾î¼º°æ
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ein Land, da du Brot genug zu essen hast, da auch nichts mangelt; ein Land, dessen Steine Eisen sind, da du Erz aus den Bergen hauest.
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Vulgate ¶óƾ¾î¼º°æ
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ubi absque ulla penuria comedes panem tuum et rerum omnium abundantia perfrueris cuius lapides ferrum sunt et de montibus eius aeris metalla fodiuntur
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
ubi : when, as soon as / wherein, whereby, whereas. absque : (+ ablative) without, except. penuria : penurium :lack, want, penury. abundantia : abundance, bounty, plenty. cuius : (masc. sing. gen.) (the saint) WHOSE virtues were many. cuius : (fem. sing. gen.) (the queen), the vices OF WHOM were many. cuius : (neut. sing. gen) (the building) the size OF WHICH was great. ferrum : iron, sword. ferrum : sword, arms, iron, horseshoe. de : (prep. + abl.) down from, from, concerning, about.
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