A:
There was no agreed Hebrew Bible during the first century, and certainly no New Testament. It is believed that the Jews agreed on a canon for their Bible, or Tanakh, at the Council of Jamnia in the 90s, although even that fact is sometimes disputed. Even after the Council of Jamnia, the different books of the Tanakh (in Christian terms, the Old Testament) remained separate scrolls.
The books of the New Testament appear all to have been written by 150 CE, or perhaps a decade or two earlier. By the third century, there was agreement as to what books were to be regarded as scriptural, but it was not until the fourth century that we find several books bound together in a single codex.
The word 'butterfly' does not exist in the KJV Bible.
The name "Austin" is not in the Bible. That name did not exist at the time the Bible was being written.
The word 'provider' does not exist in the King James version of the Bible.
The word 'inspire' does not exist in the King James version of the Bible.
The word 'Verile' does not exist in the King James version of the Bible.
roman times
No
Terrorists, as we know them today, did not exist in the Bible times.
In Roman times the concept of a "knight" did not exist. Your question is therefore meaningless.
Skegness probably did not exist in Roman times, but is a Danish settlement.
The word 'incomparable' does not exist in the KJV Bible.
The word 'compulsory' does not exist in the KJV Bible.
The word 'survive' does not exist in the KJV Bible.
The word 'butterfly' does not exist in the KJV Bible.
Michelle is a French name, the feminine of Michel, the French for Michael. It did not exist in Roman times.
The name "Austin" is not in the Bible. That name did not exist at the time the Bible was being written.
The word 'reunion' does not exist in the King James version of the Bible.