Exodus 20:17, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour's.
Precisely 11
A "head" of cattle is just another way of saying herd of cattle. Instead of saying I have 100 herd of cattle, you would say I have 100 head of cattle (this way you are specifying the exact number of cows you have in your herd)
Alfred Hitchcock's
Exodus 20 thou shalt not kill
After Odysseus men ate his cattle he threaten Zeus saying he will go to the underworld and light the world of the dead instead of the world of the living if Zeus didn't avenge his cattle.
In my bible, Page 49 and Exodus 19-20,32-34 10 Commandments is what I am saying
no. to show possession you just say "that's yours" or something like that :) Ok thank you! But if I am saying for example (That is your tool kit, isn't it?) The word (your) doesn't get an aposthrope?
The word "maverick" comes from Texas cattle owner Sam Maverick - he refused to brand any of his cattle, and cowboys started saying that any wild, unbranded cow "must belong to Maverick." This was shortened over the years to "it's a maverick."
It depends on what you mean by the overly ambiguous term "cattle." Are these cattle Black Angus cattle as well of the same blood-line as the bull you are interested in using, or not? Are these cattle of yours commercial stock of mixed breeds, or purebred Angus/Hereford/Simmental? If the cows you are using these bulls on are purebred Angus cows with known genetic history you don't need to. You can use these bulls for inbreeding to purify your cowherd. You can also use bulls of a different blood-line to improve your herd. I'm not saying you should or shouldn't--that's your decision--I'm saying that you can or can't.
Yes, if you were saying, for example, Bob's house, you would add an apostrphe.
"Ah nae" in Korean means "yes" or "okay." It is a casual and colloquial way of expressing agreement or acknowledgment in Korean.
1) At the Burning Bush (Exodus ch.3-4). 2) At Mount Sinai (Exodus ch.19-20), along with the Israelites.3) On every occasion that the Torah states "And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying...".See also:Torah-scroll factsHow was the Torah written?More about Moses