Oval in N.T. generally with dat.; Matt, xviii. 7, xxiii. 14, 15, 23, Luke vi. 24, 25 (nom.), x. 13, xxi. 23. MSS. vary between acc. and dat. in Rev. viii. 13. In Rev. ix. 12, xi. 14, ovai is used as indecl. substan- tive ; so in Ezek. ii. 10, vii. 26, cf. Jerem. xlvi. (xxvi.) 19, which differs from the Hebrew. οἱ l^xvorm] The Heb. has this in singular, as a further attribute of the Lord.' Most Lucianic MSS. have roU laxCovau A reads Ἰݲλݲηݲμݲ for Ἰݲηݲλݲ, prob. an inadvertence. 25. At Kofopdv] The neut. adjective is equivalent to an abstract substantive. This is found in classical Greek, especially Plato and. Thucydides : e.g. Thuc. 11. 43, τὸ εὔδαιμον τὸ ἐλεύθερον, τὸ δέ ἐλεύθερον τὸ εὔψυχον κρίναντες: 111. 43, ἀπὸ τοῦ εὐθέος...ἐκ τοῦ προφανοῦς. ads] A late form of future. πάντας ἀνόμους] Α paraphrase. Heb. ‘thine alloy.’ The addition at the end of the verse is not in B, but in most uncials and about twenty cursives, including most of the Lucianic and 106; the verb ταπεινώσω is omitted by κη] 109 301 305 and five others. It begins a fresh line in A; and perhaps comes from xiii. 11.