01Kor1 25:1 | | | blessed colleague, by this I | mean | Mashtots, seared with yearning, was |
02Agat1 5:48 | | | ’ what could this insult | mean | to them who have no |
02Agat1 20:32 | | | asked: “Which martyrs do you | mean | |
03Buz4 8:17 | | | and thought, what could it | mean? | And so the people sent |
06Khor1 4:2 | | | with each other - Berossus I | mean, | and Polyhistor and Abydenus - over |
06Khor2 64:6 | | | some from our region - I | mean | the ancient neighbors of the |
06Khor2 65:9 | | | the northern peoples united, I | mean | the Khazars and Basilk’, and |
06Khor2 81:3 | | | nations of the north, I | mean | the land of the Chinese |
06Khor3 57:19 | | | and he gave them no | mean | welcome, even informing the emperor |
06Khor3 62:8 | | | from the new Plato, I | mean | from the teacher of whom |
07Seb1 12:6 | | | understand what that statement might | mean, | because he was a young |
08Ghev1 14:31 | | | the sanctuary, we do not | mean | to say that they produced |
08Ghev1 14:66 | | | This is what I | mean: | According to your own people |
10Tovma1 10:5 | | | of Macedon inscribed with no | mean | eulogies in the books that |
10Tovma3 13:1 | | | glorious, and victorious champion, I | mean | Gurgēn, member of a family |
11Asogh1 2:1 | | | in three (different) periods, I | mean ( | families): Haykazunik, Arshakunik and Bagaratunik |