01Kor1 19:2 | | | of the church fathers from | Syriac | to Armenian |
02Agat3 22:4 | | | groups with one group learning | Syriac | and the other, Greek |
03Buz3 13:8 | | | extent familiar with Greek or | Syriac | education partially understood that faith |
05Parp2 10:0 | | | affairs of Armenia’s kings in | Syriac | or Greek, as well as |
05Parp2 10:6 | | | from Scripture were conducted in | Syriac | in the monasteries and churches |
05Parp2 10:21 | | | freed from the torments of | Syriac | as if escaping from darkness |
05Parp2 11:1 | | | the difficult, useless and arrogant | Syriac | language. As a result, the |
06Khor1 9:12 | | | Nisibis in both Greek and | Syriac | |
06Khor2 38:12 | | | native tongue of its inhabitants, | Syriac, | the other for Greek. They |
06Khor2 66:5 | | | and translated the whole into | Syriac. | It was also later turned |
06Khor3 54:3 | | | the Greek script and not | Syriac | |
06Khor3 54:8 | | | Great engaged in translating from | Syriac, | there being no Greek books |
06Khor3 54:9 | | | in their part but only | Syriac | |
08Ghev1 14:74 | | | fourth the Chaldaean, fifth the | Syriac, | sixth that of the Ethiopians |
09Draskh1 40:6 | | | venerable secretaries, a man of | Syriac | origin and a Christian by |