Abraham told the Pharaoh that his wife Sarah was his sister, for fear that the Pharaoh would kill him in order to have sex with her (Genesis 12:13), only to be found out and banished from Egypt. Later, for the same reason, he told Abimelech, king of Gerar, that his by now quite elderly wife (Sarah was now over 90 years old and stricken with age) really was his sister.
Just as Abraham tried to pass Sarah off as his sister while visiting Abimelech in Gerar, so did Isaac, his son, try to pass his wife Rebekah off as his sister to the same king, once again for fear that the king would kill him in order to have sex with her. It should be questioned why Abraham and Isaac believed that Egyptians and Gerarites would only attempt to have sex with a woman after killing her husband, and why they would not kill her brother in order to achieve the same ends, but the Book of Genesis describes this as a successful ruse, at least for a while.
Abram told Pharaoh that Sarai, his wife, was his sister in order to protect himself. As a result, Pharaoh took Sarai into his palace. However, God plagued Pharaoh and his household with great plagues because of this deception. Realizing the truth, Pharaoh confronted Abram and sent him out of Egypt with his wife.
Fare thee well
To 'fare well' means simply that everything is going fine. How you 'fare' is your state of well-being - how is it. How do you fare, is just like asking, how are you. Good luck, is the same as 'fare well'. Hope it helps!Answer Farewell (note: one word) is a contraction of "fare thee well" or in other words, "Go well" or hope "you are going/will go well". It has however come to mean "goodbye" through semantic shift.
The mount should fare as well as the wall it is attached to.
Fare Thee Well Love was created on 1990-11-07.
As a verb: I hope you fare well at your first dance class.As a noun:I paid a round trip fare for the trip.My last fare for the day chatted with me until the end of the route.The buffet served only vegetarian fare but it was all delicious.More fun with fare:Since your fare seems so much less than fair, I will see how I fare elsewhere!Fare thee well, fair maiden!The fare to enter the fair seemed to me to be unfair.
Adieu!
When people 'fare well' it means they are doing well. When people say 'farewell' they are saying good bye, have a good journey.
Yes, fare is both a verb and a noun.The verb fare (fares, faring, fared) is to get along, used for saying how well or how badly someone is or was doing. Example sentence:Our candidate did not fare well in the primary.The noun fare (fares) has three different meanings, the cost of a ticket on bus, train, plane or ship; a passenger, and food. Example sentences:There's a ten dollar fare for the ferry.The driver dropped off his last fare and headed for the garage.They serve Asian fare at this restaurant.
Georgina
Fare is a noun. It names a thing, and the plural form is fares.I don't have any bus fare.Fare is also a verb.We did not fare well in the storm.
"How did you fare" is a question asking about how someone has been doing or how they have been feeling. It is often used to inquire about someone's well-being or to check on their status after facing a particular situation.
I'm Assuming, Either what you pay for it Or how well you do at it.