It is called the Septuagint.
The Bible view is true and the Greek view is false. There is always some mixed truth in a lie, but why go to a lie when you have the truth before you?
No, the Armenian version of the Bible was translated from Assyrian (Aramean) and partly from Greek.
St. Jerome translated the bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin. The translated version is called the Latin Vulgate.
There are no original versions of the Bible in the world today, but the closest we have now to the is the Received version of the New Testament in Greek and the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament.Answer:The book known as the Bible has been reworked and revisited many times during its existence from the first Jewish texts to the choice of the "official" Bible books during the middle ages. As a consequence there is no original version, just the present version.
depends on which version. In the original Greek it did not appear at all since thou is not a greek word.
The Greek Vulgate is the standard version of the Bible in Greek. The text is from the Septuagint for most of the Old Testament. The version of Theodotion is used for the Book of Daniel and the Greek New Testament, is typically Byzantine text. The Greek Vulgate is the standard text used in the Divine Liturgy and is used throughout the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Septuagint, the Greek version of the Hebrew Bible. It was the basis for Jerome's Latin translation of the Bible.
Jewish scholars in Alexandria translated the Hebrew Bible into Greek, a version known as the Septuagint.
a translation is taking the Hebrew or Greek and translating it into the language the person wants. a version is the name placed on it by the translators
The Vulgate is the Latin version of the Greek bible which Jerome was commissioned to translate
Septuagint |ˈsep ch oōəˌjint| noun a Greek version of the Hebrew Bible (or Old Testament), including the Apocrypha, made for Greek-speaking Jews in Egypt in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC and adopted by the early Christian Churches.
The "official" Catholic version of the Bible is the New Vulgate Bible, which is the official Latin translation of the Sacred Scriptures based on the Septuagint, which was the Greek translation that Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, used when He was quoting from the Old Testament, and from the original Latin translation made by St. Jerome, of the Greek New Testament books.