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Definition of Book of Isaiah
1. Noun. An Old Testament book consisting of Isaiah's prophecies.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Book Of Isaiah
Literary usage of Book of Isaiah
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1911)
"... 1894; TK Cheyne, Introduction to the Book of Isaiah, pp. 316-317, 363
sqq., London, 1895, and Jewish Religious Life after the Exile, pp. 25 sqq., ib. ..."
2. Bibliotheca Sacra by Dallas Theological Seminary (1890)
""The Book of Isaiah " treats of the first thirty-nine chapters only. The publishers
promise us another volume soon, by the same author, completing the book. ..."
3. The Prophecies of Isaiah by Thomas Kelly Cheyne (1880)
"THE CHRISTIAN ELEMENT IN THE Book of Isaiah. I. AN influential modern writer upon
the Old Testament, whose name is now at least as often heard as that of ..."
4. The Book of the Prophet Isaiah by J. Skinner (1896)
"CHAPTER V. PROBABLE COMPOSITION OF THE Book of Isaiah- CONTENTS OF CH. I.—XXXIX.
THE book which bears the name of Isaiah is in reality a collection of ..."
5. An Introduction to the Old Testament: Chronologically Arranged by Harlan Creelman (1917)
"The Book of Isaiah, 2 vols. (Expos. B.). 1889-90. SMITH (GA), JERUSALEM = Jerusalem
from the Earliest Times to AD 70. 2 vols. 1908. SMITH (GA), MODERN CRIT. ..."