No
Not all Presbyterians use the same version of the Bible. Recently, the Presbyterian church that I attend switched from the New International Version (NIV) to the English Standard Version (ESV).
There is not a specific Calvin version of the Bible (unless you are referring to the Geneva Bible, and the answer would be the same), but the Bible that John Calvin would have conformed to and based his theology on contains 66 books, like the King James Version, the New International Version, the English Standard version, and others.
Pumice does not occur in the New International Version of the Bible at all.
The Bible doesn't say that. The words "Woman" and "Liar" don't even occur in the same verse anywhere in the English Standard Version (ESV) of the Bible. See related link.
Baptists and Methodists do use the same Bible. The Methodists are more into new translations while many Baptist enjoy the text of the King James Version. The Catholic church uses a version of the Bible that includes the Apocrypha.
The Bible version that predates the King James Version is the Geneva Bible.
According to the King James Version of the Bible, animals are not explicitly mentioned as having souls in the same way that humans do.
The word "all" is in the King James Version of the Bible 5621 times. It is in 4664 verses.
The New International Version of the Bible NIV and the New King James Version of the Bible NKJV.
The word 'praise' appears 259 times in the KJV Bible, and in the many other versions it is about the same.
It depends on which translations you look in. In Kings James Version, its not used at all, the same for the English Standard Version, but in Young's Literal Translation it is used 8 times.
You should specify the version for questions like this; not all words are necessarily translated in precisely the same way across all versions of the bible, even across the very high quality versions.