사무엘 (Korean Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "사무엘" in Korean language version.

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biblegateway.com

biblehub.com

  • Hebrew Ephrathi, which is interpreted as meaning "Ephraimite" by Gesenius [3], and a variety of translations including NIV, NLT, NASB, HCSB, NET, JPS(1917), ASV [4]. See the Jewish Encyclopedia, "Elkanah" for details. [5]

blueletterbible.org

  • Hebrew Ephrathi, which is interpreted as meaning "Ephraimite" by Gesenius [3], and a variety of translations including NIV, NLT, NASB, HCSB, NET, JPS(1917), ASV [4]. See the Jewish Encyclopedia, "Elkanah" for details. [5]

books.google.com

chabad.org

doi.org

dx.doi.org

  • McCown, Chester Charlton (1921). “Muslim Shrines in Palestine”. 《The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research in Jerusalem》 2: 56. doi:10.2307/3768451. JSTOR 3768451. 

jewishencyclopedia.com

  • The Bible does not say specifically say that Elkanah lived in a place known as Zuph. There is, however, a "land of Zuph" mentioned (once only) in 1 Samuel 9:5, an area in which Samuel is said to have been found. Furthermore, 1 Samuel 1:1, as the text now stands, mentions Zuph as an ancestor of Elkanah. And, according to the theory explained in the Jewish Encyclopedia, "Elkanah" [1] the term "Zophim" in 1:1 is a corruption of the original identification of Elkanah as a "Zuphite." For confirmation that more contemporary scholarship still considers this theory seriously, see the Holman Bible Dictionary, "Ramathaim-Zophim." [2]
  • Hebrew Ephrathi, which is interpreted as meaning "Ephraimite" by Gesenius [3], and a variety of translations including NIV, NLT, NASB, HCSB, NET, JPS(1917), ASV [4]. See the Jewish Encyclopedia, "Elkanah" for details. [5]
  • "Hence in I Sam. i. 1 his ancestral line is carried back to Zuph (comp. I Sam. ix. 5 et seq.). The word צופים in I Sam. i. 1 should be amended to הצופי ('the Zuphite'), the final mem being a dittogram of that with which the next word, מהר, begins; as the LXX. has it, Σειφὰ. Elkanah is also represented in I Sam. i. 1 as hailing from the mountains of Ephraim, the word here אפרתי denoting this (comp. Judges xii. 5; I Kings xi. 26)—if indeed אפרתי is not a corruption for 'Ephraimite'—and not, as in Judges i. 2 and I Sam. xvii. 12, an inhabitant of Ephrata (see LXX.)." "Elkanah," in the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia.
  • Hirsch, Emil G.; Bacher, Wilhelm; Lauterbach, Jacob Zallel (1906). 〈Samuel〉. 《Jewish Encyclopedia》. 

jpost.com

jstor.org

  • McCown, Chester Charlton (1921). “Muslim Shrines in Palestine”. 《The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research in Jerusalem》 2: 56. doi:10.2307/3768451. JSTOR 3768451. 

oca.org

studylight.org

  • The Bible does not say specifically say that Elkanah lived in a place known as Zuph. There is, however, a "land of Zuph" mentioned (once only) in 1 Samuel 9:5, an area in which Samuel is said to have been found. Furthermore, 1 Samuel 1:1, as the text now stands, mentions Zuph as an ancestor of Elkanah. And, according to the theory explained in the Jewish Encyclopedia, "Elkanah" [1] the term "Zophim" in 1:1 is a corruption of the original identification of Elkanah as a "Zuphite." For confirmation that more contemporary scholarship still considers this theory seriously, see the Holman Bible Dictionary, "Ramathaim-Zophim." [2]

worldcat.org

  • Drane, John William (2009). 《The world of the Bible》 Fir판. Oxford, England : Chicago : Grand Rapids, Michigan: Lion ; Distributed in the USA by Trafalgar Square Publushing ; Also distributed in the USA by USA Christian Market. ISBN 978-0-7459-5250-5.