Location | Text | Standardized Text | Parts of Speech |
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In-Text | And this is the meaning of the Spouse in that double expression, calling him the chiefest of ten thousands, and professing him to bee altogether lovely. The soul that loves Christ, may love other things, |
And this is the meaning of the Spouse in that double expression, calling him the chiefest of ten thousands, and professing him to be altogether lovely. The soul that loves christ, may love other things, and esteem them lovely; | cc d vbz dt n1 pp-f dt n1 p-acp d j-jn n1, vvg pno31 dt js-jn pp-f crd crd, cc vvg pno31 p-acp vbb av j. dt n1 cst vvz np1, vmb vvi j-jn n2, cc vvi pno32 j; |
Note 0 | Cant. 5.10.16. | Cant 5.10.16. | np1 crd. |
Verse & Version | Verse Text | Text | Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note | Cosine Similarity Score | Cross Encoder Score | Okapi BM25 Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canticles 5.10 (Geneva) | canticles 5.10: my welbeloued is white and ruddie, the chiefest of ten thousand. | and this is the meaning of the spouse in that double expression, calling him the chiefest of ten thousands, and professing him to bee altogether lovely | True | 0.727 | 0.459 | 2.41 |
Canticles 5.10 (AKJV) | canticles 5.10: my beloued is white and ruddy, the chiefest among tenne thousand. | and this is the meaning of the spouse in that double expression, calling him the chiefest of ten thousands, and professing him to bee altogether lovely | True | 0.721 | 0.432 | 2.3 |
Location | Phrase | Citations | Outliers |
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Note 0 | Cant. 5.10.16. | Canticles 5.10; Canticles 5.16 |