a term used among Jews for the Hebrew Bible; the Old Testament.
Jewish acronym for the Hebrew Scriptures, derived from Torah (or Pentatech), Neviim (prophets), and Ketuvim (writings).
The Hebrew Scriptures. Tanakh is an acronym derived from the three major divisions of Torah (the Penteteuch), Nevi'im (the Prophets), and Ketuvim (the Writings, comprising Psalms through Chronicles).
An acronym for the Hebrew Scriptures, made up of the names of the three parts. Torah (Pentateuch or Law), Nevi'im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings) -- thus TNK pronounced TaNaKh.
An acronym (T-N-K) for the Hebrew Bible, from the names of its three major divisions: Torah (The Five Books of Moses), Nevi'im (Prophets), and Kethuvim (Writings).
The acronym for the Hebrew Bible. Torah, Nevi'im (prophets), Ketuvim (writings).
The Old Testament in its entirety, Torah, Prophets, Writings.
The Jewish Scriptures. Also called the Hebrew Bible (even though a little bit of it is in Aramaic, not Hebrew.) Christians have called it the "Old Testament," because they believe they have a "New Testament," but those who are sensitive to the negating implications of the phrase "Old Testament" are learning not to use it when talking to us. The word "Tanakh" is a Hebrew acronym for its three major divisions: Torah, Nevi'im (= prophets), and Ketuvim (= writings).
Hebrew Scriptures consisting of the writings of: Torah, Neveyim, and Kotavim
(Hebrew TNK, acronym for "Torah," "Nevi'im" and "Ketuvim"). The Jewish Bible. See Jewish Texts: Tanakh.
(ta nakh) The Jewish scriptures.
The Old Testament. Acronym of Torah ( Law ), Nevi'im (Phophets), and Ketuvim (Writings).
the Jewish scriptures which consist of three divisions--the Torah and the Prophets and the Writings
The Hebrew Scriptures or Old Testament. An acronym from the first letters of the three parts of the Hebrew Scriptures. Torah, Nevi'im (Prophets) and K'tuvim (Writings). Jesus refers to this order in Luke 24:44. The Hebrew/Jewish Bible is arranged differently than the Christian Old Testament.
(tah-NAKH) a Hebrew acronym for the three sections that make up the Jewish Bible (T=Torah, N=Nevi’im – prophetic texts, K=Ketuvim – various writings)
The Jewish Scriptures, which are exactly the same canon as the Protestant "Old Testament". The Hebrew term is an acronym derived from the Hebrew words Torah, Nebi'im and Ketubim; i.e., The Law, The Prophets and the Writings (poetry and wisdom literature)
An acronym formed from the three divisions of the Hebrew bible: Torah, Nevi'im and Ketuvim.
The Jewish Bible, a.k.a. the Jewish Scriptures. The word Tanakh is derived from the letters of the names of its three components: Torah (a.k.a. Pentateuch), the Books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronony; the Nevi'im (a.k.a. Prophets); and the Ketuvim (Writings).
(tuhn-AHKH) Acronym of Torah, Nevi'im and Ketuvim. Written Torah; what non-Jews call the Old Testament.
the Hebrew scriptural canon; the word is derived from the three consonants T, N and K, standing for Torah (law or instruction), Nevi'im (prophets), and Khetuvim (writings).
Tanakh (also Tanach, or , or Tenak, is an acronym that identifies the Hebrew Bible.