![]() ![]() ![]() This dynamic largely eliminates any need for an interlinear, even if you know little or no Hebrew or Greek.Īnd if you want to go even further though with limited or no Hebrew and Greek skills, go to Help/Online Help Contents/Using Strong's Numbers for a nice video lesson on how to use Strong's numbers for doing a word study linked to the original languages. In short, "interlinear" is the static form demanded by a printed text, and the more dynamic form allowed by computerized hot links is what the previous two paragraphs describe. If youwant to read Hebrew or Greek and see what the English is, you can use the Hebrew, Septuagint, and Greek New Testaments and hover your cursor over the word in question to get anything from a brief gloss (i.e., definition) to a full lexicon article on the word. BibleWorks is the premier original languages Bible software program for exegesis and research. Then you can can hover your cursor over any word and see the Greek or Hebrew. BibleWorks served the church for 26 years by providing a suite of professional tools aimed at enabling students of the Word to rightly divide the word of truth. If you want to read English, and see which Hebrew or Greek word it represents, you need to use one of the English translations that are keyed to the Greek and Hebrew by Strong's numbersing system, such as KJV, NAS, or NAU. And in BibleWorks, the "interlinear" that you get with BGM and WTM provides an interlinear that gives the lexical entry in Hebrew or Greek with interlinear notes about grammatical parsing, not with an interlinear English gloss printed on-screen.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |