¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hexaplas
1. hexapla [n] - See also: hexapla
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hexaplas
Literary usage of Hexaplas
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Christian Remembrancer by William Scott (1862)
"... whom in our school days we ourselves remember it was the fashion to praise to
adulation —palmy days were they of ' English hexaplas' and ' Critical ..."
2. Fox's Book of Martyrs; Or, The Acts and Monuments of the Christian Church by John Foxe, John Malham, T. Pratt (1830)
"They had before published the Greek translation of the Septuagint, from Origen's
hexaplas, for the use of the Palestine churches; and they now composed an ..."
3. The British Millennial Harbinger by James Wallis, David King (1850)
"... with Polyglotte, hexaplas, and numerous translations, &c. — helps, indeed, of
great value to those who have learning enough to know how to use them. ..."
4. On the new Latin Prayer-books [the Lat. version of the Book of common prayer by William John Blew (1865)
"And this done, it would appear from the prefatory manuscript note that the hexaplas
of Montfaucon and Bahrdt were canvassed^ and the several fragmentary ..."