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Job 30:3–4

Through want and hard hunger

they mgnaw nthe dry ground by night in owaste and desolation;

they pick saltwort and the leaves of bushes,

and the roots of the broom tree for their food.1

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Job 30:3–4 — The New International Version (NIV)

Haggard from want and hunger,

they roamed the parched land

in desolate wastelands at night.

In the brush they gathered salt herbs,

and their food was the root of the broom bush.

Job 30:3–4 — King James Version (KJV 1900)

For want and famine they were solitary;

Fleeing into the wilderness

In former time desolate and waste.

Who cut up mallows by the bushes,

And juniper roots for their meat.

Job 30:3–4 — New Living Translation (NLT)

They are gaunt from poverty and hunger.

They claw the dry ground in desolate wastelands.

They pluck wild greens from among the bushes

and eat from the roots of broom trees.

Job 30:3–4 — The New King James Version (NKJV)

They are gaunt from want and famine,

Fleeing late to the wilderness, desolate and waste,

Who pluck mallow by the bushes,

And broom tree roots for their food.

Job 30:3–4 — New Century Version (NCV)

They were thin from hunger

and wandered the dry and ruined land at night.

They gathered desert plants among the brush

and ate the root of the broom tree.

Job 30:3–4 — American Standard Version (ASV)

They are gaunt with want and famine;

They gnaw the dry ground, in the gloom of wasteness and desolation.

They pluck salt-wort by the bushes;

And the roots of the broom are their food.

Job 30:3–4 — 1890 Darby Bible (DARBY)

Withered up through want and hunger, they flee into waste places long since desolate and desert: They gather the salt-wort among the bushes, and the roots of the broom for their food.

Job 30:3–4 — GOD’S WORD Translation (GW)

Shriveled up from need and hunger, 

they gnaw at the dry and barren ground during the night. 

They pick saltwort from the underbrush, 

and the roots of the broom plant are their food.

Job 30:3–4 — The Holman Christian Standard Bible (HCSB)

Emaciated from poverty and hunger,

they gnawed the dry land,

the desolate wasteland by night.

They plucked mallow among the shrubs,

and the roots of the broom tree were their food.

Job 30:3–4 — The New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)

Through want and hard hunger

they gnaw the dry and desolate ground,

they pick mallow and the leaves of bushes,

and to warm themselves the roots of broom.

Job 30:3–4 — The Lexham English Bible (LEB)

Through want and through barren hunger

they are gnawing in the dry region in the darkness of desolation and waste.

They are picking salt herbs, the leaves of bushes,

and the roots of broom trees to warm themselves.

Job 30:3–4 — New International Reader’s Version (1998) (NIrV)

They were weak because they were needy and hungry.

They wandered through dry and empty deserts at night.

Among the bushes they gathered salty plants.

They ate the roots of desert trees.

Job 30:3–4 — New American Standard Bible: 1995 Update (NASB95)

“From want and famine they are gaunt

Who gnaw the dry ground by night in waste and desolation,

Who pluck mallow by the bushes,

And whose food is the root of the broom shrub.


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