Douay-Rheims ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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For which cause there sprung even from one (and him as good as dead) as the stars of heaven in multitude and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable.
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King James ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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Therefore sprang there even of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable.
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Louis Second ºÒ¾î¼º°æ
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C'est pourquoi d'un seul homme, déjà usé de corps, naquit une postérité nombreuse comme les étoiles du ciel, comme le sable qui est sur le bord de la mer et qu'on ne peut compter
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Martin Luther µ¶¾î¼º°æ
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Darum sind auch von einem, wie wohl erstorbenen Leibes, viele geboren wie die Sterne am Himmel und wie der Sand am Rande des Meeres, der unzählig ist.
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Vulgate ¶óƾ¾î¼º°æ
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propter quod et ab uno orti sunt et haec emortuo tamquam sidera caeli in multitudinem et sicut harena quae est ad oram maris innumerabilis
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
propter : (+ acc.) near, close, on account of, because of. 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. caeli : skies, heavens, vault of heauen. in : (+ acc.) into, toward, against. in : (+ abl.) in. sicut : as, just as, as it were, (+verb in subj.) just as if. quae : (neut. plur. nom.) WHAT cannot be avoided must be endured. quae : (neut. pl. acc.) those things WHICH we must have. quae : (fem. pl. nom.) Let THOSE (women) WHO have ears to hear .
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