Douay-Rheims ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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She gleaned therefore in the field till evening: and beating out with a rod, and threshing what she had gleaned, she found about the measure of an ephi of barley, that is, three bushels:
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King James ¿µ¾î¼º°æ
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So she gleaned in the field until even, and beat out that she had gleaned: and it was about an ephah of barley.
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Louis Second ºÒ¾î¼º°æ
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Elle glana dans le champ jusqu'au soir, et elle battit ce qu'elle avait glané. Il y eut environ un épha d'orge
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Martin Luther µ¶¾î¼º°æ
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Also las sie auf dem Felde bis zum Abend und schlug es aus, was sie aufgelesen hatte; und es war bei einem Epha Gerste.
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Vulgate ¶óƾ¾î¼º°æ
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collegit ergo in agro usque ad vesperam et quae collegerat virga caedens et excutiens invenit hordei quasi oephi mensuram id est tres modios
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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
ergo : (gen. +) on account of, because of. ergo : (adv.) accordingly, then, therefore. in : (+ acc.) into, toward, against. in : (+ abl.) in. usque : all the way, up (to), even (to). 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 . virga : a green twig, rod, stick, wand, broom, streak, stripe. quasi : as if, just as, just as if, as it were /a sort of.
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