That's a great question! Yes The Bible states that God's original purpose was for a man to have one wife and stick with her (1 Timothy 3: 2, Genesis 2: 24, Matthew 19: 4-6). This is why Adam only had Eve. However, God allowed and regulated polygamy so that his people would be able to multiply faster. Jehovah God tolerated this until the time of Jesus Christ and the Christian congregation, and then it was considered unscriptural.
Mary is more noticeable women in the Bible.
English is spoke more
I spoke to... The prepositon TO must be used after the verbs TO SPEAK and TO TALK.
The phrasing of your question is unclear, but if you are asking about a specific woman I mentioned earlier, please provide more context or details so I can give you an accurate response.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton. See related link for more details:
Gen:2:23: And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.Mt:19:6: Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.
Maybe you are referring to Rahab who was a woman who lived in Jericho in the times of Joshua.
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
The people of the town in which she lived. The Bible doesn't qualify it more than that.
There is no difference, but spoke is much more common.
More people spoke English in the North, because it had a larger population
True. Martin Luther helped to popularize his faith by translating the Bible into German, making it more accessible to the common people who spoke that language. This contributed to the spread of Protestantism during the Reformation.