Usted buscó: noah (Inglés - Tagalo)

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Inglés

noah

Tagalo

noe

Última actualización: 2015-05-21
Frecuencia de uso: 27
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Referencia: Wikipedia

Inglés

noah is a picture of solitary goodness

Tagalo

si noe ay larawan ng nag-iisa na kabutihan

Última actualización: 2021-06-01
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

Inglés

god was pleased with noah and god remembered his covenant

Tagalo

natuwa ang diyos kay noe at naalala ng diyos ang kanyang pakikipagtipan

Última actualización: 2021-06-03
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

Inglés

god planned that noah would have to build the new world

Tagalo

plano ng diyos na kailangang itayo ni noe ang bagong mundo

Última actualización: 2021-06-02
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

Inglés

it is true that noah was once a man who did not have children.

Tagalo

minsan totoo noh yung mga hindi mo kadugo sila pa yung hindi mo kamag anak.

Última actualización: 2023-05-28
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

Inglés

god saw the evidence of the spirit of the lord jesus christ in noah

Tagalo

nakita ng diyos ang katibayan ng espiritu ng panginoong jesucristo kay noe

Última actualización: 2021-06-02
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

Inglés

catastrophism was the theory that the earth had largely been shaped by sudden, short-lived, violent events, possibly worldwide in scope.[1] this was in contrast to uniformitarianism (sometimes described as gradualism), in which slow incremental changes, such as erosion, created all the earth's geological features. uniformitarianism held that the present was the key to the past, and that all geological processes (such as erosion) throughout the past were like those that can be observed now. since the early disputes, a more inclusive and integrated view of geologic events has developed, in which the scientific consensus accepts that there were some catastrophic events in the geologic past, but these were explicable as extreme examples of natural processes which can occur. catastrophism held that geological epochs had ended with violent and sudden natural catastrophes such as great floods and the rapid formation of major mountain chains. plants and animals living in the parts of the world where such events occurred were made extinct, being replaced abruptly by the new forms whose fossils defined the geological strata. some catastrophists attempted to relate at least one such change to the biblical account of noah's flood. the concept was first popularised by the early 19th-century french scientist georges cuvier, who proposed that new life forms had moved in from other areas after local floods, and avoided religious or metaphysical speculation in his scientific writings.[2][3]

Tagalo

teorya ng sakuna

Última actualización: 2019-03-05
Frecuencia de uso: 1
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Referencia: Anónimo

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