Apart from a brief foray into Proverbs, every single one of the passages was from the Psalms. |
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Quoting Proverbs, the priest said virtue would elevate a nation to a higher plane, while vice would degrade it. |
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The habits of the coney are very accurately. portrayed in the Psalms and in Proverbs. |
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Proverbs 16:24 adds that pleasant words are like honey and medicine to our bodies. |
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Twice in the Psalms and several times in Proverbs, there is both a paragogic nun and an object suffix which means an analysis will indicate two suffixes. |
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The price of a virtuous woman, says Proverbs, is more than that of rubies. |
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Proverbs 6:1-5 also says that if you have become a guarantor for your neighbor, you have to quickly go to the neighbor and continually and repeatedly ask him to be released. |
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Proverbs 11:24, 25 God calls us to give what we have. |
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In both the biblical book of Proverbs and the apocryphal book of Wisdom of Solomon, Wisdom is personified and is said to participate in God's creative activity. |
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When you think of Proverbs, you picture expressions of ancient wisdom. |
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Rather than such Hellenic greatness of soul, Proverbs emphasized humbleheartedness. |
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It would be possible to draw up a list of charisms, focussing for the most part on that of leadership, starting from the sapiential literature of Proverbs, Wisdom, Ecclesiastes of Qoheleth and Ecclesiasticus of Ben Sirach. |
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Verse 5 of the 15th chapter of Proverbs is an example of a simple antithetic saying: He who spurns his father's discipline is a fool, he who accepts correction is discreet. |
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Borlase published Proverbs and Rhymes in Cornish in 1866 while A Glossary of Cornish Place Names was produced by John Bannister in the same year. |
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I would also like to commend and thank the negotiating teams-led by Lheidli T'enneh Chief Negotiator Mark Stevenson, Chief Provincial Negotiator Trevor Proverbs, and Chief Federal Negotiator Tom Molloy. |
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He also reflected on Proverbs 3:27-34 and asked us to consider if how we lived in community was truly a blessing to ourselves, and those around us. |
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As the distillation of generations of learned scribes, the Book of Proverbs is an excellent source for the sapiential tradition in the Old Testament. |
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It's tough to choose a single epitaph for a man who invoked so many epigrams and proverbs. |
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Riddles and proverbs can influence each other and sometimes a piece of advice in proverb form can be turned into a riddle, or vice versa. |
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Sheikh Mo, who fancies himself a prophet of modernisation, likes to impress visitors with clever proverbs and heavy aphorisms. |
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Norwegians tend to integrate sayings and proverbs into daily conversations. |
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The sayings are in the form of proverbs, parables, aphorisms, and exhortations. |
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He is well known for weaving proverbs and traditional storytelling into the western form of the novel. |
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Songs, stories, proverbs, and sayings have been passed down over thousands of years. |
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Riddles, proverbs, and sayings that describe proper behavior for both young and old Kenyans are still common. |
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It lacks narrative forms, is not reducible to conventional proverbs, and is driven by grievance against God and the world. |
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There are frescoed walls and ceilings, weighty beams inscribed with German proverbs, and a preponderance of carved and knotted pine. |
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The Akan have more than 3,600 proverbs, and many of the proverbs are represented in the visual arts. |
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Some of the stories suitably blend the wisdom of the proverbs and the story line. |
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All the ethnic groups of Uganda have a rich oral tradition of tales, legends, stories, proverbs, and riddles. |
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The subject areas in which he was most interested were fishing, folk medicine, proverbs and sayings. |
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The Philosopher's Room is a heady mix of high art and popular culture, decorated with samplers embroidered with witty, mock-homespun proverbs. |
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A number of proverbs are shared among Antiguans and Barbudans to reflect on aspects of daily life. |
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He learnt over 10,000 proverbs by memorising them as his father, S. Parasuraman, read out from various Tamil books. |
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A rich variety of proverbs exist in the Sierra Leonean languages, and witty exchanges of proverbs are a conversational tradition. |
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Tibetans liberally sprinkle proverbs into daily conversations as a substitute for slang phrases. |
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Romani uses many idiomatic expressions, proverbs, and sayings, often with metaphorical qualities. |
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Cameroonian folklore has many intriguing myths, legends, and proverbs from its varied cultural groups. |
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This experience reinforced Udechukwu's growing curiosity about Igbo life, evidenced in the collection of Igbo proverbs he made at the time. |
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Now whatever the intrinsic value of these proverbs, there's no taking away from the harm they cause. |
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As he ponders the next option in his club career, it is just possible that a few proverbs from his native land are springing to mind once again. |
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The epic by Waris is interspersed with proverbs, sayings, folktales, history and poetry par excellence. |
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His sayings and proverbs, which embodied his philosophy of life, were handed down from generation to generation. |
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Adinkra symbols usually represent popular proverbs, adages or traditional concepts in Ghanaian culture. |
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Another striking similarity between Gullah and the languages of West Africa is the use of proverbs to teach and advise. |
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The Ewe divide proverbs into two groups of metaphorical use according to social status and age of their performers. |
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It seems possible that optical illusions may have had a role to play in the coining of several common proverbs regarding the use of vision as the sole source of information. |
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Some of these examples are maxims, precepts, quips, proverbs and epigrams. |
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She hilariously explains Chinese proverbs when someone sneezes off-camera during interviews. |
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One of the hallmarks of apraxia is the relative preservation of automatic or over learned speech sequences such as greetings, leave-takings and proverbs. |
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The section on markers discusses rhyme and alliteration, oppositions, word repetition, paradox, metaphor, pithiness and aspects of the syntax of proverbs. |
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The shrewdness and sharpness of his proverbs and his forceful epigrams serve, in an exceptional degree, to make ethical ideas a popular possession. |
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Sometimes proverbs come in pairs, the first one providing the context, the second, the revision. |
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In turn, these responsa were synthesized into rules, and maxims became the pithy expression, often expressed as proverbs, of these rules. |
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There are many different symbols with distinct meanings, often linked with proverbs. |
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In the picture, Nevsky used a number of Russian proverbs, tying Nevsky firmly to Russian tradition. |
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There are verse translations of the Gloria in Excelsis, the Lord's Prayer, and the Apostles' Creed, as well as some hymns and proverbs. |
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Scattered through the book are a number of additional proverbs not recorded elsewhere. |
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Idioms are also not to be confused with proverbs, which are simple sayings that express a truth based on common sense or practical experience. |
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Linguistics traced the Viking Age origins of rural idioms and proverbs. |
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Steve Kquofi and Peace Amate from the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana, carried out a study on the significance of Akan proverbs. |
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Today, the Sephardim have preserved the romances and the ancient melodies and songs of Spain and Portugal, as well as a large number of old Portuguese and Spanish proverbs. |
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Jesus' method of teaching involved parables, metaphor, allegory, sayings, proverbs, and a small number of direct sermons such as the Sermon on the Mount. |
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These include oral traditions such as tales, proverbs and jokes. |
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