An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, and twenty-sixth chapters of the book of Job being the summe of thirty-seven lectures, delivered at Magnus near London Bridge. By Joseph Caryl, preacher of the Word, and pastour of the congregation there.

Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673
Publisher: printed by M Simmons and are to be sould at her house in Aldersgate streete the next dore to the Gilded Lyon
Place of Publication: London
Publication Year: 1655
Approximate Era: Interregnum
TCP ID: A81199 ESTC ID: R222627 STC ID: C769A
Subject Headings: Bible. -- O.T. -- Job. -- XXII-XXVI -- Commentaries; Sermons, English -- 17th century;
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Segment 2387 located on Page 121

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Location Text Standardized Text Parts of Speech
In-Text Thou sayest, How doth God know? Wee may answer; First, Negatively, Not by sence, as wee; Thou Sayest, How does God know? we may answer; First, Negatively, Not by sense, as we; pns21 vv2, q-crq vdz np1 vvi? pns12 vmb vvi; ord, av-j, xx p-acp n1, c-acp pns12;




Quotations and Paraphrases (QP)

Adjacent References with Relevance: Job 22.13 (AKJV); Psalms 81.6 (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
Job 22.13 (AKJV) - 0 job 22.13: and thou sayest, how doth god know? thou sayest, how doth god know? wee may answer; first, negatively, not by sence True 0.716 0.918 0.701
Job 22.13 (Douay-Rheims) - 1 job 22.13: what doth god know? thou sayest, how doth god know? wee may answer; first, negatively, not by sence True 0.627 0.802 0.262




Citations
i
The index of citation indicates its position within the text of the segment or a particular note of the segment. For example, if 'Note 0' (i.e., the first note) of this segment has three citations, the citation with index 0 is its first citation, inclusive of all its parsed components.

Location Phrase Citations Outliers