Psalms 19:10
More pleasunt are they then golde, yee then moch fyne golde: sweter then hony & the hony combe.
More pleasunt are they then golde, yee then moch fyne golde: sweter then hony & the hony combe.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
103 O how swete are thy wordes vnto my throte? Yee more the hony vnto my mouth.
11 These thy seruaunt kepeth, & for kepinge of them there is greate rewarde.
127 For I loue thy comaundemetes aboue golde and precious stone.
13 My sonne, thou eatest hony & ye swete hony cobe, because it is good & swete in thy mouth.
10 Receaue my doctryne therfore and not syluer, & knowlege more then fyne golde.
11 For wysdome is more worth then precious stones, yee all the thinges that thou cast desyre, are not to be compared vnto it.
24 Fayre wordes are an hony combe, a refreshinge of ye mynde, & health of ye bones.
14 for the gettinge of it is better then eny marchaundise of syluer, & the profit of it is better then golde.
15 Wy?dome is more worth the precious stones, & all ye thinges yt thou canst desyre, are not to be compared vnto her.
16 To haue wy?dome in possession is better then golde, and to get vnderstondynge, is more worth then syluer.
9 The feare of the LORDE is cleane, & endureth for euer: the iudgmentes of the LORDE are true and rigtuous alltogether.
18 Riches & honoure are wt me, yee excellent goodes & rightuousnes.
19 My frute is better the golde & precious stone, & myne encrease more worth then fyne syluer.
72 The lawe of thy mouth is dearer vnto me, the thousandes of golde & syluer.
18 for it is a pleasaunt thinge yf thou kepe it in thine herte, and practise it in thy mouth:
7 He that is full, abhorreth an hony combe: but vnto him that is hogrie, euery sower thinge is swete.
15 A mouth of vnderstodinge is more worth then golde, many precious stones, and costly Iewels.
16 Yf thou findest hony, eate so moch as is sufficiet for ye: lest thou be ouer full, & perbreake it out againe.
6 so wil I take it, as though he had poured oyle vpo my heade: it shal not hurte my heade, yee I wil praye yet for their wickednesse.
1 A good name is more worth then greate riches, and louynge fauor is better then syluer and golde.
3 For the lippes of an harlot are a droppinge hony combe, and hir throte is softer then oyle.
2 O that thy mouth wolde geue me a kysse, for yi brestes are more pleasaunt then wyne,
17 stollen waters are swete, & the bred that is preuely eaten, hath a good taist.
12 I haue not forsaken the comaundemet of his lippes, but loke what he charged me with his mouth, that haue I shutt vp in my herte.
10 The feare of the LORDE is the begynnynge of wy?dome, a good vnderstondinge haue all they that do therafter: the prayse of it endureth for euer.
140 Thy worde is tried to the vttermost, & thy seruaunte loueth it.
16 His throte is swete, yee he is alltogether louely. Soch one is my loue (o ye doughters of Ierusalem) soch one is my loue.
16 Better is a litle with the feare of the LORDE then greate treasure, for they are not without sorowe.
10 O how fayre and louely are thy brestes, my sister, my spouse? Thy brestes are more pleasaunt then wyne, and the smell of thy oyntmentes passeth all spices.
11 Thy lippes (o my spouse) droppe as the hony combe, yee mylck and hony is vnder thy tonge, and the smell of thy garmentes is like the smell of frankynsense.
6 The wordes of the LORDE are pure wordes: eue as ye syluer, which from earth is tried and purified vij. tymes in the fyre.
22 For they are life vnto all those that finde the, and health vnto all their bodies.
19 When a desyre is brought to passe, it delyteth the soule: but fooles abhorre him that eschueth euell.
14 I haue as greate delite in the waye of thy testimonies, as in all maner of riches.
10 There wil I turne me vnto my loue, and he shal turne him vnto me.
6 O how fayre and louely art thou (my derlynge) in pleasures?
4 yf thou sekest after her as after money, and dyggest for her as for treasure:
23 The feare of the LORDE preserueth the life, yee it geueth pleteousnes, without the visitacio of any plage.
10 The feare of the LORDE is the begynnynge of wysdome, & the knowlege of holy thinges is vnderstondinge.
19 Louynge is the hynde, and frendly is the Roo: let her brestes alwaye satisfie the, and holde the euer content with hir loue.
10 For one daye in thy courte is better then a thousande:
21 Who so hath a wyse vnderstondinge, is called to councell: but he yt can speake fayre, getteth more riches.
17 How deare are yi coucels vnto me o God? O how greate is the summe of them?
13 His chekes are like a garden bedd, where in the Apotecaryes plate all maner of swete thinges: His lippes droppe as the floures of the most pryncipall Myrre,
10 Yf wy?dome entre in to thine herte, and yi soule delyte in knowlege:
12 I will make a man dearer the fyne golde, and a man to be more worth, the a golden wedge of Ophir.
2 Like the dewe of Hermon, which fell vpon the hill of Sion.
17 Hir wayes are pleasaunt wayes, and all hir pathes are peaceable.
129 Thy testimonies are wonderfull, therfore doth my soule kepe them.