The word Hell is a more modern word.., the words used in my Bible are She′ol and
Ha′des
(Psalm 16:10) For you will not leave my soul in She′ol. You will not allow your loyal one to see the pit.
(Psalm 30:3) O Jehovah, you have brought up my soul from She′ol itself; You have kept me alive, that I should not go down into the pit.
(Psalm 49:15) However, God himself will redeem my soul from the hand of She′ol, For he will receive me. Se′lah.
(Psalm 86:13) For your loving-kindness is great toward me, And you have delivered my soul out of She′ol, its lowest place.
(Psalm 89:48) What able-bodied man is there alive who will not see death? Can he provide escape for his soul from the hand of She′ol? Se′lah.
(Proverbs 23:14) With the rod you yourself should beat him, that you may deliver his very soul from She′ol itself.
(Acts 2:27) because you will not leave my soul in Ha′des, neither will you allow your loyal one to see corruption.
She'ol is thought by some linguists and semanticists to be a precursor to the English word, "hell". The Old Testament was written in Hebrew, and the term for hell in Hebrew is She'ol.
Hades was the Greek mythological word for the underworld, or what is now referred to as hell. Since the New Testament was originally written in Koine Greek, the use of the term, Hades, is perfectly understandable.
The word "hell" is in the King James Version of the Bible 54 times. It is in 54 verses.
It is hell it appears 117 times.
The word hell appears in 54 verses of the KJV bible.
The word "hell" is used 55 times in the King James Version of the Bible. "Tophet," another word used for hell, is used 9 times in the KJV. The words "gehenna" and "sheol" are used in some other versions of the Bible to refer to hell, but are not used in the KJV.
117
The Bible is the written word of God and gives the key to salvation from Hell.
There is no mention of "hell" in the Hebrew Bible, nor is there any ancient Hebrew word for "hell". The concept didn't exist until the time of the earliest of Christians.
In the King James version the word - hell - appears 54 times
In the "Gospel according to Saint John"" the word Hell does not appear in the KJV or the NKJV of the bible.
The word "hell" first appeared in the English translation of the Bible known as the Wycliffe Bible, which was completed in the late 14th century. This translation rendered the Latin term "infernum" as "hell." Subsequent translations, including the King James Version in 1611, also used the term "hell" to describe the concept of eternal punishment.
In the Bible Hades is another word for "Hell".
No it does not it does have the greek word "hades" meaning hell though.