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Program Features
Designed to work under Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows NT, and
Windows XP
Exclusive “Know-no-Hebrew?technology combines translation capabilities with
Biblical software
Step by step on-screen tutorial that allows you to switch between the Tutorial
and the program
Complete Masoretic text of the Hebrew
Bible
Side by side English translation of the Hebrew text in parallel columns
Synchronization of English and Hebrew text can be turned on/off
Lines separating verses can be turned on/off
“Nikud?(Hebrew vowels) can be turned on/off
Includes special True Type Hebrew fonts
Hebrew text can be pasted into your word processor’s document.
Displays and prints Biblical Hebrew and English text
Summary and description of every
Bible book
Summary and description of the Torah portion of the week
Unlimited word and phrase search in the
Bible
Virtual on-screen Hebrew keyboard with automatic transliteration from English
?User-specified colors for highlighting key letters and words in the text.
?User-specified setting for display and printing of G-d in whole or partial
mode
Complete English concordance
Complete Hebrew concordance
Complete concordance of all the Biblical Festivals
Finds all words with prefixes and suffixes to an specified Hebrew root
Calculates the number of times any specified word appears in the
Bible
Instant “go to?book, chapter and verse.
Identifies the number of every letter, word and verse in the text
Instant “go to?to any letter, word or verse according to its number.
Bilingual anagram feature.
Inter-active with the optional companion
bilingual dictionary/thesaurus Super Milon
Bilingual commentaries, verse by verse, of Rashi, the Torah exegete of the
Middle Ages.
Comprehensive User’s Manual
Help Menu includes Contents and Index for quick and immediate consultation
Bilingual databases
Powerful bi-directional dictionary Hebrew to English, English to Hebrew
User expandable bilingual dictionary
Automatic prompting by the program to enter the English translation when
adding a new word
Bilingual Lexicon database
Complete list of all Biblical names with their English equivalents and meaning
List of thousands of first names with their transliteration to Hebrew
Date converter from Hebrew calendar to Gregorian calendar
Date converter from Gregorian calendar to Hebrew calendar
Number converter, ordinal and cardinal, to Hebrew characters
Years database
Copy and paste of Hebrew words from the bilingual databases into the Search
input fields.
Research features
Verses can be retrieved according to seven different methods, including key
words.
Retrieved verses can be saved in a file, and pasted into any document.
Chronology of the
Bible personalities and events.
Description of the Biblical festivals
List of the 613 commandments according to Maimonides, keyed to the Biblical
text.
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Gematria features
Dictionary/concordance according to Gematria values
Seven methods of Gematria calculation
Unique user specified value alocation to letters
Gematria calculator
Search for words according to Gematria values
Search for phrases according to Gematria values
Search for verses according to Gematria values
Letter substitution
Letter analysis
Statistics features
Automatic calculation of expected number of key code occurrences before the
search is executed
Automatic comparison between expected occurrences and actual number found
?Automatic report of Standard Deviation and Odds about the found key
codes
Automatic statistics report generator
Search features
Automatic search of the key code as entered and in reverse order of the
letters
Multi-code initial search, for key code and up to six alternative
codes each time
Cut and paste between the key code and alternative
codes input
fields
Copy and paste of Hebrew words from the bilingual databases into the Search
input fields.
Copy and paste from the Anagram function into the Search input fields.
Automatic and manual specification of the range of text to be searched
Unlimited number of skip intervals (determined only by range of text)
Maximum skip value can be entered manually or automatically calculated by
program.
Automatic correction of maximum skip value if the number specified by the user
is too large
Retrieves key codes
up to a limit of 10000 occurrences
Automatic calculation of the maximum possible number of skips in the specified
range
Automatic calculation of expected number of specified key code occurrences
Automatic display on screen table and printouts of the search results
Clicking any letter of the code on the screen table shows the letter
in-context in the text.
Can import from the optional companion program bilingual dictionary/thesaurus
Super Milon
Sorts found key codes
occurrences by location, skip and
codes
Saves your found code for immediate retrieval.
Includes pre-saved
codes for immediate automatic retrieval
Matrix features
Found key code is shown in a vertical column in red letters inside circles.
The alternative codes
found can be shown horizontally, vertically or diagonally
Codes found are
shown in separate colors ?Codes
found are shown inside different geometrical shapes, such as circles and
squares ?Saves your retrieved matrix for immediate retrieval ?Area inside
matrix can be specified for statistical calculations
Matrix can be printed
Matrix can be saved for later search within search
Areas can be marked in the matrix for statistical calculations of the
codes inside
?Matrix can be reversed from left to right as in a mirror
Matrix can be shown horizontal or vertical
Matrix screen can be saved as an bmp file and pasted in any document ?Grid
lines can be turned on/off
Geometrical shapes can be turned on/off
“Nikud (Hebrew vowels) can be turned on/off
?Includes pre-saved matrixes for immediate automatic retrieval ?Search within
search in the matrix for unlimited number of additional
codes
Additional codes
can be searched horizontally, vertically, diagonally and diagonally “with
steps? Search can be done in the visible matrix or in any specified area of
the retrieved text
Identifies Hebrew words in the matrix and retrieves them with their English
translation
Allows skip split that turns the two-dimensional matrix into a virtual
multi-dimensional matrix Allows changing the parameters of the retrieved
matrix, including range of text and length of line
Proximity feature ranks clustered
codes
Instant “pop-up?of the Hebrew verse and its English translation when clicking
on any letter
Instant identification of any letter in the matrix shows its number and
location in the text.
Shows list of the
codes marked in the matrix with their English translation, in their
color and shape.
User-specified colors for highlighting any
letter in the matrix. ?User-specified geometrical shapes for highlighting any
letter in the matrix. ?Zoom-in and zoom-out allows you to increase or decrease
the size of the visible matrix.
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About Gematria
Gematria is a method of exegesis (critical explanation or analysis of a text)
used since the time of the Second Temple to derive insights into the sacred
writings, to obtain interpretations of the text, or to illustrate a secular
matter. The Hebrew language uses its letters to represent numbers. The first
nine letters represent the numbers I to 9 respectively; the next 10 letters
represent the numbers 10, 20... to 90; and the next four represent 100 to 400.
The cipher alphabet makes possible the method known in Hebrew as gematria. The
term gematria is based on the Greek geometria. In talmudic times the rabbis
began to mean by it "calculation" in general. In this sense, they used the
numerical value of the letters of one word or verse to construct a different
word or verse, the numerical value of whose letters equals that of the
original passage, in order to give the original verse an added or a different
meaning. For example, in Genesis 32:5, Jacob sends a message to his brother,
Esau, saying: “I sojourned with Laban? The Hebrew for "I sojourned" is "garti"
, yod is 10, tav is 400, resh is 200, and gimmel is 3, adding up to a total of
613, which is the number of commandments specified in the Torah. In other
words, the rabbis understood that Jacob was saying: “Although I sojourned with
Laban, I kept the 613 commandments? The Book of Revelation in the New
Testament uses Gematria to disguise the name of the emperor Nero by writing
the Greek form of his name in Hebrew characters, which gives it a total
numerical value of 666, (Revelation 13:18). The Keys to the
Bible includes
7 different Gematria methods, plus one additional unique method: User
Specified Values, found only in The Keys to the
Bible. Letter
substitution This encoding method, (substituting one letter for another), was
used by the prophet Jeremiah to hide his references to Babel. For generations
biblical scholars had been baffled by references in the book of Jeremiah to a
city called Sheshach. The city was not mentioned anywhere else in the
Bible nor in
any contemporary document, and yet Jeremiah mentioned it twice, (25:26 and
51:41). Finally, a scholar applied the Letter Substitution decoding method,
and discovered that Sheshach was in fact a code word for another very well
known city, Babel! The decryption process is deceptively simple. The first
letter of the Hebrew alphabet, aleph, is substituted for the last letter, tav;
the second letter, beth, for the one before the last one, shin, and so on.
Sheshach in Hebrew is spelled Sh-Sh-K. Substituting the letters the word
becomes B-B-L which is the Hebrew spelling for Babel. Since the decoding of
Sheshach several more words that have been encoded in the
Bible by the
Letter Substitution method have been uncovered in the Hebrew text, unveiling
hidden meanings that the scholars had no idea were there. The Keys to the
Bible includes
four methods of letter substitution: atbash (aleph for tav), atbach (aleph for
het), previous (beth for aleph), and next (gimmel for beth).
Verse Retrieval
The Keys to the Bible
allows you to retrieve specified verses, either from the Hebrew text or from
the English text, into a separate file which you can export to your word
processor. It includes eight different methods of specifying the verses to be
retrieved: by key words, by range of text, by first letters of sequential
words, by last letters of sequential words, by first letters of sequential
verses, by last letters of sequential verses, by first/last letters of verses,
and by strings of letters.
Biblical Festivals
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The program includes a description of all the biblical festivals, and a
special concordance of all the verses in the
Bible where
they are mentioned.
Chronology
The Keys to the Bible
includes a detailed chronology of all the events in the
Bible, which
will help you to better understand, and place them into their time
perspective.
Gregorian calendar to Hebrew calendar date converter and vice versa The
program includes a feature which converts the Gregorian calendar to the Hebrew
calendar, and vice versa. Plus it gives additional information such as the
Torah portion of the following Saturday. This screen also allows you, by
pressing a button, to go to that Torah portion.
The Torah and the Prophets readings for the week. This feature allows you to
instantly go in the text to the Torah and/or Prophets portion of the week. You
can even choose if the text of the Prophets to be read is according to the
Ashkenazi or Sephardi tradition!
Rashi commentaries of the Torah
Rashi, (acronym for Rabbi Solomon ben Isaac who lived in France in the 11th
century), is the greatest Jewish commentator on the
Bible and the
Talmud. His commentary on the
Bible, and
particularly on the Torah, (which is included in The Keys to the
Bible), has had
the most profound influence on Jewish and Christian biblical scholars. The
bilingual comment is given verse by verse, and it is full of insights.
The 613 commandments of the Torah according to Maimonides The work of the
great Jewish-Spanish philosopher, physician, and codifier of the Middle Ages,
Maimonides, (Rambam in Hebrew), is today studied and honored by people of all
backgrounds and religions. Maimonides analyzed the Torah and found there six
hundred and thirteen commandments, 248 Mandatory, and 365 Prohibitions. The
Keys to the Bible
has arranged these commandments according to subjet. By pressing a button next
to any one of them, the program takes you to the place in the biblical text
where the commandment appears.
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