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OET (OET-LV) was_Bəʼērāh son_of_his whom he_took_into_exile Tiglat- pilʼeşer the_king_of ʼAshshūr he was_a_leader of_the_Rəʼūⱱēnites.
OET (OET-RV) Baal’s son was Beerah who became a leader of the Reubenites, but the Assyrian King Tiglat-Pileser captured him and took him back to Assyria.
Note 1 topic: translate-names
(Occurrence 0) Baal … Beerah … Tiglath-Pileser
(Some words not found in UHB: Bəʼērāh son_of,his which/who carried_away_into_exile Tiglat- -pilʼeşer king ʼAshshūr he/it leader of_the,Reubenites )
These are names of men.
5:6 Tiglath-pileser was king of Assyria (744–727 BC); he attacked the tribes of Transjordan during King Pekah’s reign (752–732 BC), taking the people into captivity (see 5:25-26; 2 Kgs 15:29).
OET (OET-LV) was_Bəʼērāh son_of_his whom he_took_into_exile Tiglat- pilʼeşer the_king_of ʼAshshūr he was_a_leader of_the_Rəʼūⱱēnites.
OET (OET-RV) Baal’s son was Beerah who became a leader of the Reubenites, but the Assyrian King Tiglat-Pileser captured him and took him back to Assyria.
Note: The OET-RV is still only a first draft, and so far only a few words have been (mostly automatically) matched to the Hebrew or Greek words that they’re translated from.
Acknowledgements: The Hebrew text, lemmas, and morphology are all thanks to the OSHB and some of the glosses are from Macula Hebrew.