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NASB | Genesis 1:28 God blessed them; and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth." |
AMPLIFIED 2015 | Genesis 1:28 And God blessed them [granting them certain authority] and said to them, "Be fruitful, multiply, and fill the earth, and subjugate it [putting it under your power]; and rule over (dominate) the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and every living thing that moves upon the earth." |
Subject: Is an Un-subdued Earth Good? |
Bible Note: Steve, I still say put the "Kye-Bosh" on something. I think it's a very New York expression, still widely in use. Check this out, from the Web Detective dictionary: "Youse been kiboshed. Dear Word Detective: Recently a friend of mine used the word "kabosh" meaning things were going well and then suddenly the "kabosh" was on and things weren't going so well. What can you tell me about the origins of this word? -- Jan Paul Novak, via the internet. Well, part of the mystery here lies in the fact that your friend is slightly mispronouncing the word, which would make it difficult to look up. What he or she means is "kibosh," usually pronounced "KYE-bosh." "Kibosh" is rarely used these days, so when I hear the word I immediately think back to the old "Bowery Boys" comedies of the 1940's, in which Leo Gorcey would often complain of someone "puttin' the kibosh" on the group's plans. He meant, of course, that their plans were stymied or frustrated, "kibosh" being a synonym for "roadblock." "Kibosh" is slang, and very old slang indeed -- Charles Dickens used it in his description of the squalid sections of London in 1836, although he spelled it "kye-bosk." Several authorities trace "kibosh" to the Yiddish words "kye" (meaning "eighteen") and "bosh" ("pence"), making a "kibosh" a coin worth a shilling and sixpence, a negligible sum. Thus, if you were "kiboshed," you were reduced to nearly nothing. Incidentally, the word "bosh," meaning nonsense, is not related and comes from the Turkish word "bosh," meaning "empty or worthless." Another, more likely, theory is about as far from eighteen pence as you can get. Some authorities believe that "kibosh" was based on the Gaelic phrase "cie bais" (pronounced "ky-bosh"), meaning "cap of death." Evidently, in trials in ancient Ireland, the cie bas, a black skullcap, was donned by the judge before he sentenced a prisoner to death, and apparently the phrase "cie bais" is an established metaphor in modern Irish. An added bit of evidence for this theory is that the Irish term is most often used in the phrase "put the cie bais on," meaning in Dublin just what "kibosh" meant to the Bowery Boys -- "end of story." Colin |