It usually doesn't matter which language The Bible is translated into as each should say (word for word translation) or convey (paraphrasing translation) the same thing. Consider this Scripture:
Luke 16:18New International Version (NIV)
18 "Anyone who divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery, and the man who marries a divorced woman commits adultery.
The New International Version of the Bible NIV and the New King James Version of the Bible NKJV.
The word "alter," meaning "another" is not in the Bible. The word "altar" is in the King James Version of the Bible 378 times. It is in 321 verses.
John 13:34
NLT means "New Living Translation." It's just another translation of the Bible, like the English Standard Version (ESV) or the New King Jame Version (NKJV). I hope that was helpful!
King James Version New International Version Revised Standard Version The Living Bible New Living Translation World English Bible New King James Version New International Readers Editions American Standard Version New American Standard Version Young's Literal Translation Plain English Bible New English Bible Amplified Bible Basic English Bible Translator's NT 20th Century Bible Modern King James Version The Message New Jerusalem Bible Hebrew Names Version of World English Bible Contemporary English Version English Version for the Death Good News Version New Century Version New Revised Standard Version J. B. Phillips New Testament, modern English
No results were found for by in the version New International Version.-- another answer --In the King James versionthe word - by - appears 2624 times
Lü Zhenzhong's version of the Bible was created in 1970.
They use it but it is not the only version of the Bible they use.
In the King James version the word - another - appears 448 times, 54 of those are in the phrase - one another.
Yes, there were six other English versions of The Bible prior to the King James version. They were, in order of oldest to the most recent, the Tyndale Bible, the Coverdale Bible, the Matthew Bible, the Gret Bible, the Geneva Bible, and the Bishops Bible.
Yes, there were six other English versions of the Bible prior to the King James version. They were, in order of oldest to the most recent, the Tyndale Bible, the Coverdale Bible, the Matthew Bible, the Gret Bible, the Geneva Bible, and the Bishops Bible.
King James version of the Bible was completed in 1611.