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  1. Strong's Exhaustive Concordance by James Strong, S.T.D., LL.D. 1890 Public Domain -- Copy Freely For a hundred years Strong's Dictionaries have been popular with Bible students. By assigning numbers to each unique word in the Old and New Testaments and listing each word with its number, Strong produced a standard, still used today,

  2. Moses, is followed by: d 68-1. This means that it is discussed in note d, page 68, column 1. The new Testament references and page num-bers are distinguished with an asterisk. Had the note on Brother of Moses been in the New Testament it would have been marked thus: d 68-1*. Of the 12,143 English Bible words below, about 89 percent,

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  4. May 2, 2011 · The exhaustive concordance of the Bible: showing every word of the text of the common English version of the canonical books, and every occurrence of each word in regular order; together with A comparative concordance of the authorized and revised versions, including the American variations; also brief dictionaries of the Hebrew and Greek words of the original, with references to English words:

  5. Every word in the Bible is listed in this Index in alphabetical order, besides many other words related to Scripture but not actually found in the text itself. A number in parentheses following a word tells how many times it is used in the Bible. Aaron (322), for instance, means

  6. Strong’s Greek Concordance (KJV) Christian Resource Center–NH (www.crcnh.org) 1 [G1] (a/al'-fah) of Hebrew origin; the first letter of the alphabet; figuratively, only (from its use as a numeral) the first: --Alpha. Often used (usually an, before a vowel) also in composition (as a contraction from 427) in the sense of privation; so,

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  7. The Bible has two main sections, known as ‘Testaments’. This word means ‘covenant’ or ‘promise’ and refers to the promises God made to his people. The first section, called by Christians the Old Testament, contains the story of God’s relationship with his people, now known as the Jews. This part of the Bible is seen as

  8. Dr. James Strong, formerly professor of exegetical theology at Drew Theological Seminary, spent more than thirty-five years preparing his landmark concordance. First published in 1890 with the help of more than one hundred colleagues, Strong's remains the definitive concordance compiled on the King James Version of the Bible. W. E.