Bearing or demeanor (Job 36:9)
While in Hebron, this wife of David bore him a son named Ithream (2 Samuel 3:5)
One of the seven sons of Noah’s son Japheth (Genesis 10:2)
This king of Syria cleared out the Jews from the Judaean city of Elath, frightening King Ahaz into turning to Assyria for help (2 Kings 16:6, 7)
The king of this city attacked the Israelites as they approached Canaan and took some of them captive (Numbers 21:1)
Contemptuously described in the Scriptures as harsh, bad, good-for-nothing, and senseless, he was struck dead by Jehovah (1 Samuel 25:3, 17, 25, 36-38)
Paul encountered these Greek philosophers when he was preaching in the marketplace at Athens (Acts 17:16-21)
By means of this standard Hebrew weapon, Phinehas pierced through both Zimri and Cozbi and brought a halt to the scourge that killed 24,000 Israelites on the Plains of Moab (Numbers 25:6-15)
He was one who attested by seal to Nehemiah’s “trustworthy arrangement” (Nehemiah 9:38; 10:13)
At this site David’s men twice struck down giant Philistine warriors (2 Samuel 21:18, 19)
Ancestor of a family of Nethinim temple slaves (Ezra 2:46)
Answerable (Matthew 5:21)
The channel that brought water to a pool near the King’s Garden (Nehemiah 3:15)
The large copper vessel used by the priests for washing themselves in the courtyard of Solomon’s temple was called this because of the large quantity of water it could contain (2 Chronicles 4:6)
Calling the scribes and the Pharisees this, Jesus mentioned that they “strain out the gnat but gulp down the camel” [2 words] (Matthew 23:24)
Borne or put on (Luke 8:27)
Seventh letter of the Greek alphabet
Job likened the sayings of his false comforters to proverbs of these (Job 13:12)
He and his sons were of “the sons of Gilead” (Numbers 26:30)