psalm

listen to the pronunciation of psalm
English - Turkish
ilahi

Tarikatımız ibadetlerinde sadece Zebur'daki ilahileri okumaktadır. - Our denomination practices exclusive psalmody in worship.

mezmurla sena etmek
{i} mezmur

Mezmurlar Yahudi geleneğinden geliyorlar. - Psalms come from the Hebrew tradition.

makam ile okumak
Kitabı Mukaddeste "Mezmurlar" kitabı
zebur

Tarikatımız ibadetlerinde sadece Zebur'daki ilahileri okumaktadır. - Our denomination practices exclusive psalmody in worship.

twenty-third psalm
yirmi üçüncü mezmur
Turkish - Turkish
Hristiyan kiliselerinin bir çeşit solo vokal parçası
English - English
Especially, one of the hymns by David and others, collected into one book of the Old Testament, or a modern metrical version of such a hymn for public worship
A sacred song; a poetical composition for use in the praise or worship of God
To extol in psalms; to sing; as, psalming his praises
{n} a kind of sacred song, a sacred hymn
any sacred song used to praise the Deity one of the 150 lyrical poems and prayers that comprise the Book of Psalms in the Old Testament; said to have been written by David sing or celebrate in psalms; "He psalms the works of God
an extract from the Old Testament book of Psalms, a series of hymns of praise to God
   from the Greek, a song accompanied by musical instruments In the Bible these songs cover a wide variety of style and content; psalms appear in many places, but the principle collection of them is found in the Book of Psalms The Hebrew name for this book is Tehillim, meaning "praises," even though the majority of the psalms are not hymns of praise but spread over many other categories such as laments, prayers of thanksgiving and confidence, wisdom, and psalms of royalty
The Psalms are the 150 songs, poems, and prayers which together form the Book of Psalms in the Bible. He recited a verse of the twenty-third psalm. a song or poem praising God, especially in the Bible (psalmus, from psalmos , from psallein; PSALTER). Sacred song or poem. The term is most widely known from the book of Psalms in the Bible. Its 150 psalms, ranging in subject from songs of joyous faith and thanksgiving to songs of bitter protest and lamentation, rank among the immortal poems of all time. They have had a profound influence on the liturgies of Judaism and Christianity. Their dating and authorship are highly problematic, and the tradition of assigning them to King David is no longer accepted. In the original Hebrew text the book had no name. When the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek (the Septuagint), it was titled Psalterion, referring to a stringed instrument that would accompany such songs
one of the 150 lyrical poems and prayers that comprise the Book of Psalms in the Old Testament; said to have been written by David
{i} sacred song or hymn from the Book of Psalms in the Bible
any sacred song used to praise the Deity
sing or celebrate in psalms; "He psalms the works of God"
psalm
salm
psalm book
book containing psalms
Psalms
A book of the Old Testament of the Bible, and of the Tanakh
Psalms
{i} book of the Bible, one of the books of the Old Testament
Twenty-Third Psalm
the best-known Psalm in the Old Testament of the Bible, which is often sung at funerals. It starts with the words The Lord is my shepherd
psalms
The psalms were the "hymn book" of the Jewish people; we use them in much the same way today, as words of celebration of God's work in our everyday lives It is proper to sing the Psalms and to pray them They are not meant to be "educational" in the same way that many other parts of the Bible are, although we can see how the people thought and what they considered important
psalms
an Old Testament book consisting of a collection of 150 Psalms
psalms
'A sacred song' - in the Anglican tradition these are the biblical Psalms of David The most common are those set in the Book of Common Prayer (BCP), translated by Miles Coverdale, and renowned for their use of the English language
psalms
Plural of psalm
psalms
The psalms are the production of various authors "Only a portion of the Book of Psalms claims David as its author Other inspired poets in successive generations added now one now another contribution to the sacred collection, and thus in the wisdom of Providence it more completely reflects every phase of human emotion and circumstances than it otherwise could " But it is specially to David and his contemporaries that we owe this precious book In the "titles" of the psalms, the genuineness of which there is no sufficient reason to doubt, 73 are ascribed to David Peter and John (Acts 4: 25) ascribe to him also the second psalm, which is one of the 48 that are anonymous About two-thirds of the whole collection have been ascribed to David
psalm

    Turkish pronunciation

    sälm

    Pronunciation

    /ˈsälm/ /ˈsɑːlm/

    Etymology

    [ 'säm, 'sälm, 'som, ' ] (noun.) before 12th century. Old English psealm, later reinforced from Old French psalme (modern French psaume), both from Latin psalmus, from Ancient Greek ψαλμός (psalmos, “a twitching or twanging with the fingers, mostly of musical strings”) (from ψάλλω (psallo, “to touch sharply, to pluck, to pull, to twitch”)), but later in New Testament the meaning of ψαλμός evolved to “a song sung to the harp, a psalm”.
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