I'm not sure of the exact time it took, but I believe it took two years.
Probably Wycliffe, Hus or Calvin. In terms of long term impact I would probably say Calvin
A little over 6 years.
John 3 is the shortest book in the bible. 14 verses long.
Im Not sure it depense how quick you are at reading and also how good you are at welsh :)
John Wycliffe is often referred to as "The Morning Star of the Reformation" because he was an early critic of the Catholic Church's practices and beliefs, advocating for reform long before the Protestant Reformation. His ideas influenced later reformers like Martin Luther, and his translation of the Bible into English helped pave the way for broader access to scripture.
All I know is that the Bible has been a top bestseller for a long time, and is available in 2426 languages according to Wycliffe Bible Translators. Or did you mean how many copies of the ORIGINAL Bible are in existence? No complete copies of the original Bible are in existence, but many thousands of manuscript fragments are in existence, enough to ensure, by comparing them to each other, that the Bible we have today is quite accurate. By contrast, many ancient works that are accepted as being totally accurate today, have only ONE copy left to us now.
1 night
if sally can paint a house in 4 hours and john can paint the same house in 6 hours, how long will it take for them to paint the house together?
20 years
You go on google translate
All night long is 'toute la nuit' in French.
The first Bible writer was Moses and he started writing his accounts in the year of 1513. The last Bible writer was John who wrote the Book of Revelation in the year 96 C.E. So, the Bible is made up of 66 books, they were written over a course of about 1600 years.