35 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
35 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
## Likewise ##
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"In the same way." This compares the tongue to the horses' bits and the ships' rudders in the previous verses.
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## boasts great things ##
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"a person can use it to speak very evil things"
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## Notice how great ##
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<b>Notice how great<b>- "Think about how great"
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## how great a forest is kindled by a spark! ##
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This can be translated as an active clause: "a small flame can start a fire that burns many trees!" (See:[[rc://en/ta/man/translate/figs-activepassive]])
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## tongue is also a fire ##
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Just as a fire consumes and destroys all it burns, the tongue, referring to what a person says (metonymy) can deeply hurt people (metaphor). Alternate translation: "the tongue is like a fire." (See: [[rc://en/ta/man/translate/figs-metaphor]] and [[rc://en/ta/man/translate/figs-metonymy]])
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## a world of sinfulness set among our body parts ##
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Alternate translation: "It is a small part of our body but it is capable of sinning in all kinds of ways."
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## which defiles the whole body ##
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This can be translated as a new sentence. "It can make us completely unpleasing to God" or "It can make us unacceptable to God."
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## and sets on fire the road of life ##
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The phrase "road of life" is a metaphor that refers to a person's entire life. This could be translated as "and it can ruin a person's entire life."
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## and itself is set on fire by hell ##
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The word "itself" refers to the tongue. Also, here "hell" is a metonym that refers to the powers of evil or to the Devil. This could be translated as an active clause: "because the Devil uses it for evil." |