ملكوت
But Matthew has more chapters.
Luke's version is the more, well, popular version.For excample: this version included the manger, shephers, magi, and so on.Mathew's version took place in Mathew's home.and the magi and shepherds did not come.so think of it this way: Luke's gospel is more of the traveling and scene, when Mathew's is like the dreams, and home.
There were 45 miracles of Jesus recorded in the Bible, of which 29 are recorded in Mathew's Gospel; 24 in Mark's Gospel; 23 in Luke's and 10 in John's. So you may say that the 3 Gospels of Mathew, Mark and Luke emphasised Christ's miracles. By the way he did many more which are nor recorded, as John writes in his Gospel: " And there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written. Amen."
The mode is defined as the term which is repeated for the highest number of times in an array or a sequence. If many terms are repeated for a similar number of times and highest, that array has more than one value for mode.
Yes.
Mark's Gospel, the first gospel to be written, divided the last twenty four hours in the life of Jesus into eight periods of three hours each. Mark has Jesus go to the Garden of Gethsemane at 9 pm, where his closest disciples, Peter, James and John, were not able to remain awake. "Could you not watch one hour?" Jesus asked. The process was repeated two more times and each time the disciples fell asleep. It was now midnight, and Jesus had prayed three times.
In the King James version, "abide" appears ten times in the Gospel of John. It is translated from the Greek word menō, meaning to remain or dwell. Also, in the Gospel of John, the Greek word menō translates as abideth, abode, remain, tarry, dwelleth, continue, and more. It appears a total of 41 times in the Gospel of John.
Schnell. Sometimes, it's repeated 2 or more times to suggest urgency. (Eg., "Schnell, schnell!")
There is no indication that they came more than the once mentioned in St Luke's Gospel.
Titration is repeated multiple times to ensure precision and accuracy in the results. By taking an average of the multiple titration trials, any errors or inconsistencies in measurements can be identified and minimized, leading to a more reliable determination of the unknown concentration of a solution.
He is actually only 5' 10", but you'd have thought it was more because he's very skinny. Source; Mathew Baynton at Hamilton Hodell
It eliminates conclusions being made based on what could be flukes. The more times an experiment is repeated with the same results, the more likely it is that that result is the real result.