A Continuation of morning-exercise questions and cases of conscience practicaly resolved by sundry ministers in October, 1682.

Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696
Publisher: Printed by J A for John Dunton
Place of Publication: London
Publication Year: 1683
Approximate Era: CharlesII
TCP ID: A25467 ESTC ID: R25885 STC ID: A3228
Subject Headings: Sermons, English -- 17th century;
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Segment 3342 located on Page 138

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Location Text Standardized Text Parts of Speech
In-Text we are meer Beggers, and have nothing of our own, but are fain to beg our daily Bread of God, who keeps us from Hand to Mouth: we Are mere Beggars, and have nothing of our own, but Are fain to beg our daily Bred of God, who keeps us from Hand to Mouth: pns12 vbr j n2, cc vhb pix pp-f po12 d, cc-acp vbr av-j pc-acp vvi po12 j n1 pp-f np1, r-crq vvz pno12 p-acp n1 p-acp n1:




Quotations and Paraphrases (QP)

Adjacent References with Relevance: James 1; Matthew 6.11 (AKJV)
Only the top predictions per textual unit are considered for adjacency. An adjacent reference is located either in the same or an immediately neighboring segment/note as a given query reference. A reference is relevant to the query if they are identical, parallel texts of each other, or one is a known cross references of the other.
Verse & Version Verse Text Text Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note Cosine Similarity Score Cross Encoder Score Okapi BM25 Score
Matthew 6.11 (AKJV) matthew 6.11: giue vs this day our daily bread. are fain to beg our daily bread of god, who keeps us from hand to mouth True 0.61 0.556 1.164
Matthew 6.11 (Geneva) matthew 6.11: giue vs this day our dayly bread. are fain to beg our daily bread of god, who keeps us from hand to mouth True 0.608 0.502 0.182




Citations
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