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“Do not covet your neighbor’s wife or desire your neighbor’s house, his field, his male or female slave, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor.
‘You shall not covet [that is, desire and seek to acquire] your neighbor’s wife, nor desire your neighbor’s house, his field, his male servant or his female servant, his ox or his donkey or anything that belongs to your neighbor.’
وَلاَ تَشْتَهِ امْرَأَةَ قَرِيبِكَ، وَلاَ تَشْتَهِ بَيْتَ قَرِيبِكَ وَلاَ حَقْلَهُ وَلاَ عَبْدَهُ وَلاَ أَمَتَهُ وَلاَ ثَوْرَهُ وَلاَ حِمَارَهُ وَلاَ كُلَّ مَا لِقَرِيبِكَ.
In 1867, John Nelson Darby translated the New Testament from Greek into English. Further revisions were done in 1872 and 1884. Darby’s work was first published as The Holy Scriptures: A New Translation from the Original Languages by J. N. Darby. After Darby’s death in 1882, some of his students worked together to produce the complete Darby Bible based on the Masoretic Hebrew text, Darby’s German (Elberfelder), and the French (Pau) translations. In 1890, the first complete Darby Bible was published in English. This translation of the Bible is in the public domain.
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