The word 'Rua' means 'street' in Portugese, and doesn't have any special meaning biblicaly, however, the Hebrew word "Ru'ach'('pneuma' in Greek) means 'breath', 'wind', 'vital force' or 'spirit' (Hebrews 2:19)(Exodus 10:13)(Acts 7:55)(2 Corinthians 3:3)....referring to something invisible which can produce visible results.
as far as I'm aware, the name Sandra is not in the Bible. sorry!
There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".There is no record of a queen of Egypt visiting Solomon. You must mean the queen of Sheba who visited him. She is not given a name in the Bible, (at least as far as I know) but is often referred to simply as "Sheba".
I'm nO bible scholar but as far as I have researched NO it is not biblical although I have understanding that it is known as a " proverb" but dosnt necceserally mean it is in the bible book of proverbs. Although it is one of my favorite sayings
No, Not as far as I can tell.
As far as "it" goes
As far as I know, there is no Andrea in the Bible. But there is an Andrew. He was a disciple of Christ.
It depends on what you mean by "reformist." As far as I know it isn't a technical term. If you're talking about "Reformers" and mean folks like Martin Luther and John Calvin, then yes, they spoke of the bible as the word of god. Of course whether they mean by "word of god" exactly what YOU mean, I know not.
As far as I am aware the Bible says nothing about piligimies :)
it means "see far" telescope is a Greek word (ΤΗΛΕΣΚΟΠΙΟ) it comes from uniting 2 words : tele + scope tele (ΤΗΛΕ) = far scope (ΣΚΟΠΙΟ, ΣΚΟΠΕΥΩ) = see (in ancient Greek) But the actual word telescope I don't think is in the Greek Bible.
As far as I know, there is no prohibition in the Bible for animal research.
There are no quotes in the Bible from Simon Zelotes, as far as I can see.
Yes , the affect of the ball does matter of how far it goes.