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ParallelVerse GEN EXO LEV NUM DEU JOB JOS JDG RUTH 1 SAM 2 SAM PSA AMOS HOS 1 KI 2 KI 1 CHR 2 CHR PROV ECC SNG JOEL MIC ISA ZEP HAB JER LAM YNA NAH OBA DAN EZE EZRA EST NEH HAG ZEC MAL YHN MARK MAT LUKE ACTs YAC GAL 1 TH 2 TH 1 COR 2 COR ROM COL PHM EPH PHP 1 TIM TIT 1 PET 2 PET 2 TIM HEB YUD 1 YHN 2 YHN 3 YHN REV
Neh Intro C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13
Neh 7 V1 V4 V7 V10 V13 V16 V22 V25 V28 V31 V34 V37 V40 V43 V46 V49 V52 V55 V58 V61 V64 V67 V70 V73
Note: This view shows ‘verses’ which are not natural language units and hence sometimes only part of a sentence will be visible. Normally the OET discourages the reading of individual ‘verses’, but this view is only designed as a tool for doing comparisons of different translations. Click on any Bible version abbreviation down the left-hand side to see the verse in more of its context. The OET segments on this page are still very early looks into the unfinished texts of the Open English Translation of the Bible. Please double-check these texts in advance before using in public.
Text critical issues=none Clarity of original=clear Importance to us=normal (All still tentative.)
OET (OET-RV) • 2,067 descendants of Bigvai,
OET-LV the_descendants_of Bigvay two_thousand sixty and_seven.
UHB בְּנֵ֣י בִגְוָ֔י אַלְפַּ֖יִם שִׁשִּׁ֥ים וְשִׁבְעָֽה׃ס ‡
(bənēy ⱱigvāy ʼalpayim shishshim vəshiⱱˊāh.§)
Key: .
Note: Automatic aligning of the OET-RV to the LV is done by some temporary software, hence the OET-RV alignments are incomplete (and may occasionally be wrong).
BrLXX No BrLXX NEH book available
BrTr The children of Bagoi, two thousand and sixty-seven.
ULT The sons of Bigvai were 2,067.
UST 2067 men from the clan of Bigvai;
BSB • the descendants of Bigvai,2,067
MSB • the descendants of Bigvai,2,067
OEB The children of Bigvai, two thousand and sixty-seven.
WEBBE • The children of Bigvai: two thousand and sixty-seven.
WMBB (Same as above)
NET the descendants of Bigvai, 2,067;
LSV sons of Bigvai, two thousand sixty-seven;
FBV the sons of Bigvai, 2,067.
T4T • 2,067 men from the clan of Bigvai;
LEB No LEB NEH book available
BBE The children of Bigvai, two thousand and sixty-seven.
Moff No Moff NEH book available
JPS The children of Bigvai, two thousand threescore and seven.
ASV The children of Bigvai, two thousand threescore and seven.
DRA The children of Beguai, two thousand sixty-seven.
YLT Sons of Bigvai: two thousand sixty and seven.
Drby The children of Bigvai, two thousand and sixty-seven.
RV The children of Bigvai, two thousand threescore and seven.
SLT The sons of Bigvai, two thousand sixty and seven.
Wbstr The children of Bigvai, two thousand and sixty seven.
KJB-1769 The children of Bigvai, two thousand threescore and seven.
KJB-1611 The children of Biguai, two thousand, threescore and seuen.
(Modernised spelling is same as from KJB-1769 above, apart from punctuation)
Bshps No Bshps NEH book available
Gnva The sonnes of Biguai, two thousand three score and seuen.
(The sons of Bigvai, two thousand three score and seven. )
Cvdl No Cvdl NEH book available
Wycl No Wycl NEH book available
Luth No Luth NEH book available
ClVg filii Beguai, duo millia sexaginta septem:
(children Beguai, two thousands sixty seven: )
RP-GNT No RP-GNT NEH book available
7:8-38 the family of: This list is similar to that in Ezra 2:3-35, with some differences in names and the number of people in each family. People were listed by family (Neh 7:8-25) and by the town where they settled (7:26-38). Most of the towns were north of Jerusalem.
Note 1 topic: figures-of-speech / metaphor
בְּנֵ֣י בִגְוָ֔י
sons_of Bigvay
Sons means “descendants.” Alternate translation: [from the descendants of Bigvai]
Note 2 topic: translate-names
בִגְוָ֔י
Bigvay
Bigvai is the name of a man.
The Temple of the Lord in Jerusalem, where all Israelite males were commanded to offer sacrifices to the Lord (Exodus 23:14-19; Deuteronomy 16:16-17), underwent several stages of reconstruction and development over hundreds of years. The first Temple was built by King Solomon to replace the aging Tabernacle, and it was constructed on a threshing floor on high ground on the north side of the city (2 Samuel 24; 1 Chronicles 21). Hundreds of years later King Hezekiah expanded the platform surrounding the Temple. When Jerusalem fell to the Babylonians in 586 B.C., the Temple was completely destroyed (2 Kings 25:1-21; 2 Chronicles 36:17-21; Jeremiah 39:1-10; 52:1-30). It was rebuilt in 515 B.C. after a group of Jews returned to Judea from exile in Babylon (Ezra 1:5-6:15; Nehemiah 7:5-65). Herod the Great completely rebuilt and expanded the Temple once again around 20 B.C., making it one of the largest temples in the Roman world. Jesus’ first believers often met together in Solomon’s Colonnade, a columned porch that encircled the Temple Mount, perhaps carrying on a tradition started by Jesus himself (John 10:23; Acts 3:11; 5:12). But Herod’s Temple did not last long: After many Jews revolted against Rome, the Romans eventually recaptured Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple in A.D. 70.