Douay-Rheims ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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Now he being dead, his brethren were afraid, and talked one with another: Lest perhaps he should remember the wrong he suffered, and requite us all the evil that we did to him.
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King James ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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And when Joseph's brethren saw that their father was dead, they said, Joseph will peradventure hate us, and will certainly requite us all the evil which we did unto him.
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Louis Second ºÒ¾î¼º°æ
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Quand les frères de Joseph virent que leur père était mort, ils dirent: Si Joseph nous prenait en haine, et nous rendait tout le mal que nous lui avons fait
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Martin Luther µ¶¾î¼º°æ
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Die Brüder Josephs aber fürchteten sich, da ihr Vater gestorben war, und sprachen: Joseph möchte uns gram sein und vergelten alle Bosheit, die wir an ihm getan haben.
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Vulgate ¶óƾ¾î¼º°æ
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quo mortuo timentes fratres eius et mutuo conloquentes ne forte memor sit iniuriae quam passus est et reddat nobis malum omne quod fecimus
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
quo : to which place, to what place, whither, where. quo : (neut. sing. abl.) (the eagerness) THROUGH WHICH he died. quo : (masc. sing. abl.) (the money) BY means of WHICH he lived. mutuo : to borrow, procure. ne : (conj.) that .. not, in order that .. not, in order not to. forte : perchance. forte : by chance, by luck, accidentally. memor : mindful, remembering, grateful, thoughful, prudent. quam : (fem. sing. acc.) (the church), WHICH the Lord loved. quam : (adv. and conj.) how, than, as .. as possible. nobis : (dat.) us /the world belongs to US. nobis : (abl.) us /there'll be no one as happy as US. malum : evil, misfortune, misdeed, crime, injury, damage. 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.
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