Proverbs 24:27
First make vp yi worke yt is wt out, & loke well vnto yt which thou hast in ye felde, & the buylde thine house.
First make vp yi worke yt is wt out, & loke well vnto yt which thou hast in ye felde, & the buylde thine house.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
28Be no false wytnesse agaynst yi neghbor, & hurte him not wt yi lyppes.
29Saye not: I wil hadle him, eue as he hath dealte wt me, & wil rewarde euery ma acordinge to his dedes.
30I wente by ye felde of ye slouthfull, & by ye vynyarde of the foolish ma.
5Buylde you houses to dwell therein: plate you gardes, yt ye maye enioye the frutes thereof:
3Thorow wy?dome an house shalbe buylded, & wt vnderstondinge it shalbe set vp.
13Wo worth him, that buyldeth his house with vnrightuousnes, ad his perlers with the good, that he hath gotten by violence: which neuer recompenseth his neghburs laboure, ner payeth him his hyre.
14He thinketh in himself: I wil buylde me a wyde house, ad gorgeous perlers: He causeth wyndowes to be hewen there in, and the sylinges and geastes maketh he off Cedre, and paynteth them with Zenober.
17and let him which is on the house toppe, not come downe to fet eny thinge out of his house:
18and let him which is in ye felde, not turne back to fetch his clothes.
30Thou shalt spouse a wife, but another shal lye with her. Thou shalt buylde an house, but another shall dwell therin. Thou shalt plante a vynyarde, but shalt not make it comen.
18His house shal endure as the moth, & as a bothe that the watch man maketh.
2For thou shalt eate the laboures of thine owne hondes: o well is the, happie art thou.
8Be not haistie to go to the lawe, lest happlie thou ordre yi self so at ye last, yt thy neghbor put ye to shame.
9Handle thy matter wt yi neghbor himself, & discouer not another mans secrete:
23Se yt thou knowe the nombre of thy catell thy self, and loke well to thy flockes.
1Excepte the LORDE buylde the house, their labour is but lost that buylde it.
1A wyse woma vpholdeth hir house, but a foolish wife plucketh it downe.
10That other men be not fylled with thy goodes, & that thy labours come not in a straunge house.
26He maketh him self to be well loued, that geueth a good answere.
17Withdrawe yi foote fro thy neghbours house, lest he be weery of the, and so abhorre the.
15Laye no preuy waite wickedly vpon ye house of ye rightuous, & disquiete not his restinge place.
28Thou shalt not remoue the lande marcke, which thy fore elders haue sett.
29Seist thou not, yt they which be diligent in their busines stonde before kynges, and not amonge the symple people?
6They reape the corne felde that is not their owne: and gather the grapes out of his vynyarde, whom they haue oppressed by violence.
44Therfore be ye ready also, for in the houre that ye thynke not, shal the sonne of man come.
15and let him that is on the house toppe not descede in to the house, ner come therin, to fetch eny thinge out of the house.
16And let him that is in the felde, not turne backe to fetch his clothes.
18Thorow slouthfulnesse the balkes fall downe, and thorow ydle hades it rayneth in at the house.
24It is better to syt in a corner vnder the rofe, then wt a braulynge woman in a wyde house.
12that (whan thou hast eaten & art fylled, and hast buylded goodly houses, & dwellest therin,
27She loketh wel to the wayes of hir housholde, & eateth not hir bred with ydilnes.
25Let thine eyes beholde the thinge yt is right, & let thine eye lyddes loke straight before the.
26Podre the path of thy fete, so shal all yi wayes be sure.
8Whan thou buyldest a new house, make a battelment aboute thy rofe, that thou lade not bloude vpon thine house, yf eny man fall therof.
31In that daye, who so is vpo the rofe, and his stuffe in ye house, let him not come downe to fetch it: Likewyse he that is in the felde, let him not turne backe, for it that is behynde him.
29where as thou hast now to geue him. Intende no hurte vnto thy neghboure, seynge he hopeth to dwell in rest by the.
13And the labourers wrought, so that ye repairinge in ye worke wente forwarde thorow their hande, and they set the house of God in his bewtye, and made it stronge.
8Kepe thy waye farre from her, and come not nye ye dores of hir house.
6vnto the carpenters, and buylders, & masons, and to them yt bie timber & fre stone for the repairinge of the house:
23Then goeth man forth to his worke, and to till his londe vntill the euenynge.
24Buylde cities now therfore for youre children, and shepefoldes and stalles for youre shepe and catell, and do as ye haue spoken.
21Therfore recocile the vnto God, & be content, so shal all thinges prospere wt the right well.
23Diliget labor bryngeth riches, but where many vayne wordes are, truly there is scarcenesse.
9It is better to dwell in a corner vnder ye house toppe, then with a braulinge woman in a wyde house.
9to prepare me moch tymber: for the house that I wyl buylde, shalbe greate & maruelous goodly.
8get you vp to the mountayne, fetch wod, & buylde vp the house: that it maye be acceptable vnto me, and that I maye shewe myne honoure, saieth the LORDE.
11but shalt stonde without: and he, to who thou lendest, shal brynge out his pledge vnto the.
33Yee slepe on still a litle, slobre a litle, folde thine hodes together yet a litle:
24Whosoeuer therfore heareth of me these sayinges, and doeth the same, I wyll lycke hym vnto a wyse man, which buylt hys house vpon a rocke:
8yet in the sommer she prouideth hir meate, & gathereth hir foode together i ye haruest.