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.
3.5 or 4.0
The King James version is most easily the most read .
Catholics most often refer to the Bible as "The Holy Bible". The official version of the Catholic Bible is the Latin Vulgate, the most accurate translation of the Bible ever done. In English, the most accurate version is the Douay Rheims translation, though one can get the Challoner version as the English is rather archiac in the original.
The most recent Movie Maker for Windows XP is version 2.1.
The original manuscripts
0.3.0 which was the most recent update.
THe Gideon International Bible is most certainly not a Bible approved by the Catholic Church.
It could be the N.I.V. version.
According to the New Testament, there is no earthly head of the church, and therefore each congregation of the Churches of Christ are autonomous. Therefore, there is no policy-making board, congress or convention to declare an "official" version of the Bible for use in Churches of Christ. However, most members of the Church of Christ would place confidence in the King James Version, New King James Version, the American Standard Version and the New American Standard Version. Gaining more acceptance in recent years has been the English Standard Version. Most members that I know find some potential problems using versions like the NIV, The Living Bible and versions that simply paraphrase the thought rather than directly translate the Greek and Hebrew words in which the Bible was written.
The most recent one (which will vary depending on when the user reads this answer).