Bible Concordance
Unfamiliar (1 Occurrence)Isaiah 42:16 And I will take the blind by a way of which they had no knowledge, guiding them by roads strange to them: I will make the dark places light before them, and the rough places level. These things will I do and will not give them up. (See NIV)
Thesaurus
Unfamiliar (1 Occurrence)... Multi-Version Concordance
Unfamiliar (1 Occurrence). Isaiah 42:16 And I
will take the blind by a way of which they had no knowledge
.../u/unfamiliar.htm - 6kNonimmersionist
... in the early centuries, whether Jews or Gentiles, could not have found this initiatory
rite, in which they expressed their new-born faith, utterly unfamiliar. ...
/n/nonimmersionist.htm - 38k
Non-immersionist
... in the early centuries, whether Jews or Gentiles, could not have found this initiatory
rite, in which they expressed their new-born faith, utterly unfamiliar. ...
/n/non-immersionist.htm - 38k
Unfanned (1 Occurrence)
/u/unfanned.htm - 6k
Ur (5 Occurrences)
... The writers of the Septuagint, either being unfamiliar with the site, or not
considering it a city, wrote chora, "land," instead of Ur. ...
/u/ur.htm - 15k
Unfalteringly (1 Occurrence)
/u/unfalteringly.htm - 6k
Unaccustomed (1 Occurrence)
... Noah Webster's Dictionary 1. (a.) Not used; not habituated; unfamiliar; unused; --
which to. 2. (a.) Not usual; uncommon; strange; new. ...
/u/unaccustomed.htm - 7k
Outlandish (1 Occurrence)
... Noah Webster's Dictionary 1. (a.) Unconventional; bizarre; unfamiliar; foreign;
as, an outlandish costume. 2. (a.) Hence: Not according ...
/o/outlandish.htm - 7k
Chaldees (13 Occurrences)
... The writers of the Septuagint, either being unfamiliar with the site, or not
considering it a city, wrote chora, "land," instead of Ur. ...
/c/chaldees.htm - 15k
View (86 Occurrences)
... in the early centuries, whether Jews or Gentiles, could not have found this initiatory
rite, in which they expressed their new-born faith, utterly unfamiliar. ...
/v/view.htm - 81k
Greek
5543. chrestos -- serviceable, good ... [" ("useful, kindly") was a common slave-name in the Graeco-Roman world.
It "appears as a spelling variant for the
unfamiliar ().
... /greek/5543.htm - 7k