Location | Text | Standardized Text | Parts of Speech |
---|---|---|---|
In-Text | For any fire may be quenched with water, but the force of water, if it begins to be violent, can not by any power of man be resisted. | For any fire may be quenched with water, but the force of water, if it begins to be violent, can not by any power of man be resisted. | p-acp d n1 vmb vbi vvn p-acp n1, cc-acp dt n1 pp-f n1, cs pn31 vvz pc-acp vbi j, vmb xx p-acp d n1 pp-f n1 vbb vvn. |
Verse & Version | Verse Text | Text | Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note | Cosine Similarity Score | Cross Encoder Score | Okapi BM25 Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wisdom 16.27 (ODRV) | wisdom 16.27: for that which could not be destroyed by fyre, forthwith being heated with a litle beame of the sunne did melt: | for any fire may be quenched with water | True | 0.625 | 0.434 | 0.0 |
Location | Phrase | Citations | Outliers |
---|