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OET (OET-LV) And_she/it_gave_birth a_son and_he/it_called DOM his/its_name Gērəshom if/because he_said a_sojourner I_have_become in_land foreign.
OET (OET-RV) When she gave birth to a son, he named him ‘Gershom’ (which means ‘foreigner’) because he said, “I’ve become a foreigner living in a foreign land.”
Note 1 topic: figures-of-speech / quotemarks
גֵּ֣ר הָיִ֔יתִי בְּאֶ֖רֶץ נָכְרִיָּֽה
alien been in=land foreign
Only this portion is a quotation. As a possibility for clarity, the UST includes both speech events as one quotation. It may be helpful to your readers to indicate this with first-level quotation marks or with whatever other punctuation or convention your language uses to indicate a quotation.
Note 2 topic: translate-names
גֵּרְשֹׁ֑ם
Gērəshom
His name, Gershom, sounds somewhat like the Hebrew for “a stranger here.” You may consider using a footnote to explain that.
גֵּ֣ר הָיִ֔יתִי בְּאֶ֖רֶץ נָכְרִיָּֽה
alien been in=land foreign
Alternate translation: “stranger in a foreign land”
2:1-25 Chapter 1 established the need for rescue; ch 2 describes the preparation of Moses, the rescuer. God used the destruction of the Hebrew boy babies to ensure that the rescuer would be trained (see study note on 2:10) for his task.
OET (OET-LV) And_she/it_gave_birth a_son and_he/it_called DOM his/its_name Gērəshom if/because he_said a_sojourner I_have_become in_land foreign.
OET (OET-RV) When she gave birth to a son, he named him ‘Gershom’ (which means ‘foreigner’) because he said, “I’ve become a foreigner living in a foreign land.”
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.