Fondare 17 Risultati per: well-trained

  • As soon as Abram heard that his brother had been taken away captive, he assembled and led forth his trained men born in his house, three hundred and eighteen men and set off in pursuit as far as Dan. (Genesis 14, 14)

  • The people of Reuben, Gad, and half tribe of Manasseh, were 44,760 valiant men, well-trained in the use of shields, swords, and bows. (1 Chronicles 5, 18)

  • Of the sons of Simeon; 7,100 well-trained men. (1 Chronicles 12, 26)

  • All of these, whether of Asaph, Jeduthun or Heman, who were trained in singing to Yahweh, all of them skilled men, were altogether two hundred and eighty-eight. (1 Chronicles 25, 7)

  • They built and prospered. Asa had an army of three hundred thousand Judaeans armed with buckler and spear, and two hundred eighty thousand Benjaminites bearing shield and wielding the bow, all of them brave, well-trained men. (2 Chronicles 14, 7)

  • Under their command was a trained army of three hundred and seven thousand five hundred fighting men, a powerful force to support the king against the enemy. (2 Chronicles 26, 13)

  • They saw the camp of the pagans with its strong fortifications and the calvary surrounding it - all trained men in war. (1 Maccabees 4, 7)

  • As soon as Lysias learned of the king's death, he proclaimed his son Antiochus as his successor, for he himself had trained him from childhood and had named him Eupator. (1 Maccabees 6, 17)

  • His forces numbered a hundred thousand infantry, twenty thousand horsemen and thirty-two elephants trained for battle. (1 Maccabees 6, 30)

  • A wife who knows how to be silent is a gift from the Lord; the well-trained wife is invaluable. (Ecclesiasticus 26, 14)

  • They were allotted a daily portion of food and wine from the king's table and were to be trained for three years, after which they were to enter the king's service. (Daniel 1, 5)

  • whose pious parents had trained her in the law of Moses. (Daniel 13, 3)


“O medo excessivo nos faz agir sem amor, mas a confiança excessiva não nos deixa considerar o perigo que vamos enfrentar”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina