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@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ The ULB is intended to be used with other resources that help to clarify the mea
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The ULB seeks to represent the language forms of the original in a way that also makes sense in English and other Gateway Languages.
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* The ULB tends to reflect the grammatical structures of the biblical languages.
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* The ULB tends to reflect the parts of speech of the biblical languages. For example, it seeks to use nouns where the original language uses nouns, adjectives where the original language uses adjectives, and so forth.
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* The ULB tneds to reflect the semantically complex vocabulary of the original languages.
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* The ULB tends to reflect the semantically complex vocabulary of the original languages.
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* The ULB seeks to reproduce the form of the logical connections in the biblical languages. Thus, for example, the ULB has "the righteousness of faith" in Romans 4:13, and the logical relationship between righteousness and faith is not further specified. (Is it the righteousness that comes by faith? Is it the righteousness that vindicates faith?) All that "the righteousness of faith" explicitly signals is that there is some close association in the text between righteousness and faith, and that we can probably rule out a number of conceivable logical relationships between the two concepts, but not all possible relationships, as the foregoing example illustrates.
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* The ULB usually reproduces the linear succession of ideas found in the original, even when English may prefer a different arrangement of the same ideas.
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* The ULB does not normally present information that is only implied in the original. For example, in Matthew 26:5, "For they were saying, 'Not during the festival, so that a riot does not arise among the people.'" The implied information is, "Let us not arrest Jesus [during the festival]." The ULB does not overtly represent this implied information.
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