Fondare 24 Risultati per: Figs
They also made their way to the Ravine of Grapes and cut off a branch with a cluster hanging from it, that needed two men with a pole to carry it; these they brought with them, as well as some of the pomegranates and figs that grew there. (Numbers 13, 24)
Why must you take us away from Egypt, and bring us out to this sorry place we cannot cultivate? Figs and grapes and pomegranates it yields none, and we have no water, even, to drink. (Numbers 20, 5)
Abigail wasted no time; she brought out two hundred loaves, two skins of wine, five rams ready cooked, five pecks of flour, a hundred clusters of raisins, and two hundred cakes of dried figs; all these she loaded on asses, (1 Samuel 25, 18)
and part of a cake of dried figs, and two bunches of raisins; he must be restored and revived, after three days and three nights without food or drink. (1 Samuel 30, 12)
When David passed a little way beyond the top of the hill, there was Siba, the servant of Miphiboseth, coming to meet them. He had two asses with him, laden with two hundred loaves, and a hundred bunches of raisins, and a hundred cakes of figs, and a skin of wine. (2 Samuel 16, 1)
Then Isaias bade them bring a lump of figs, and when this was brought and laid on the king’s ulcer, he recovered. (2 Kings 20, 7)
nay, there were asses and camels and mules and oxen bringing them food from their neighbours, as far away as Issachar, Zabulon and Nephthali; flour and figs and raisins and wine and oil; cattle, too and rams they had in great abundance. Such high festival they kept in the land of Israel. (1 Chronicles 12, 40)
Even now I found Jewish folk treading out their wine-presses and carrying burdens on the sabbath day. On the sabbath day they would load their asses with wine-skins, or grapes, or figs, or some other freight, and bring them to Jerusalem for sale. These I warned that they must find some other day for selling their wares; (Nehemiah 13, 15)
A bottle of wine she bade her serving-maid carry, and a phial of oil, parched corn and dry figs, and bread, and cheese, and so she went out on her journey. (Judith 10, 5)
If figs thou wouldst eat, tend thy fig-tree well; if honour thou wouldst have, wait well on thy master. (Proverbs 27, 18)
Note that Isaias bade them take a lump of figs, and make a plaster of it for the king’s ulcer, and this is how he was healed. (Isaiah 38, 21)
After king Nabuchodonosor, of Babylon, had carried off the king of Juda, Jechonias the son of Joachim, and taken him away to Babylon with all his nobles, and all the carpenters and smiths in Jerusalem, the Lord shewed me a vision. I saw two baskets of figs, set down at the gate of the Lord’s temple. (Jeremiah 24, 1)
