olive tree in English

tree which produces olives

Use "olive tree" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "olive tree" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "olive tree", or refer to the context using the word "olive tree" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Rugged Olive Tree

2. As when an olive tree is beaten,+

3. So they said to the olive tree, ‘Rule over us.’

4. • What was illustrated by the olive tree in Romans chapter 11?

5. This old olive tree is surrounded by slips of young branches

6. * The Gentiles are a likeness of a wild olive tree, Jacob 5.

7. Bible writers often used the olive tree in a figurative sense.

8. David desired to be like “a luxuriant olive tree in God’s house.”

9. Athena’s symbols were the olive tree (representing peace) and the owl (representing wisdom).

10. In Romans chapter 11, the apostle Paul speaks of a symbolic olive tree.

11. Jehovah is like the root and Jesus like the trunk of this symbolic olive tree.

12. The tobacco industry and olive tree cultivation became the main income sources of the city.

13. Borgo di Sugame Olive Oil is made from several varieties of olive tree: Frantoio, Leccino, Moraiolo.

14. Cretan Hunting Knife, Stainless Steel Blade, Handle made of Olive Tree Wood 26 cm (No 2) GreekLine

15. Why did Paul express grief, and what did he illustrate by means of a cultivated olive tree?

16. Then, even the days of an olive tree will seem like a mere 24-hour day.

17. The olive tree is unusual in that new shoots constantly sprout from the base of its trunk.

18. (Genesis 22:18; Galatians 3:29) Paul likened these Jewish disciples to branches of a symbolic olive tree.

19. 11:21) This cultivated olive tree represents the fulfillment of God’s purpose with regard to the Abrahamic covenant.

20. What is represented by (a) the olive tree, (b) its root, (c) its trunk, and (d) its branches?

21. How do the illustrations of the barren fig tree and the grafted olive tree highlight God’s kindness and severity?

22. Even if a prolonged drought severely withers an old olive tree, the shriveled stump can come back to life.

23. For example, an olive tree produces fruit for hundreds of years and may live up to a thousand years.

24. (b) Who were pictured by the lopped-off branches and by the grafted-in shoots from a wild olive tree?

25. For a farmer, grafting a wild olive branch onto a garden olive tree would be unthinkable and “contrary to nature.”

26. Nephi taught that those who join the Church are as if they were grafted “into the true olive-tree” (1 Nephi 15:16).

27. 10 The illustration of the olive tree contains yet another general lesson that can apply to anointed Christians and to the “other sheep.”

28. With the abating of the floodwaters, an olive tree that had been submerged would again be on dry ground and could put forth leaves.

29. Evidently the grain was threshed and the fruit of the vine and of the olive tree was converted into wine and oil before the tithing.

30. When thou beatest thine olive-tree, thou shalt not go over the boughs again: it shall be for the sojourner, for the fatherless, and for the widow.

31. In addition, the grafting of wild olive branches into the tame olive tree represents the conversion of Gentiles who become part of the Lord’s covenant people through baptism.

32. He was saying that the failure of the natural Jews to accept the Messiah would not thwart God’s purpose to have a spiritual ‘olive tree’ full of productive branches.

33. Branching (12 Occurrences) Psalms 52:8 But I am like a Branching olive-tree in the house of God; I have put my faith in his mercy for ever and ever

34. The Olive Tree BibleReader for Windows has over 20 English Bible translations and more than 1,300 resources for PC that allow you to study your Bible on your home computer

35. We can be “like a luxuriant olive tree in God’s house” —close to Jehovah and productive in his service— by obeying him and by willingly accepting his discipline. —Hebrews 12:5, 6.

36. To become a luxuriant olive tree in God’s house, we must obey Jehovah and be willing to accept the discipline by which he “prunes” us so that we can bear more Christian fruitage.

37. (Isaiah 17:3-6) Israel will become like a field at harvesttime with very little grain or like an olive tree from which most of the olives have been shaken from the branches.

38. But from this day onward I will bless you.” English Standard Version Is the seed yet in the barn? Indeed, the vine, the fig tree, the pomegranate, and the olive tree have yielded nothing

39. The contents are, in mg per 100 g, about 150 for olive oil, 4 for olive-tree leaves, 2 for alfalfa, 0.1 for the leaves of elder, acanthus, lettuce, and leaves and roots of carrots.

40. 10 And it came to pass that the servant of the Lord of the vineyard did according to the word of the Lord of the vineyard, and grafted in the branches of the awild olive tree.

41. I have lived to see the time foreseen by the prophet Zenos in the allegory of the olive tree, when the righteous from all nations of the earth would become partakers of the covenant of God with Israel.16

42. 21 But what practical lessons can be drawn from the illustration of the grafted olive tree, both for the symbolic branches (anointed Christians) and others who may now bless themselves by means of the seed produced by the Abrahamic covenant tree?

43. 34 And the servant said unto his master: Behold, because thou didst graft in the branches of the wild olive tree they have nourished the roots, that they are alive and they have not perished; wherefore thou beholdest that they are yet good.

44. 9 Take thou the branches of the wild olive tree, and graft them in, in the astead thereof; and these which I have plucked off I will cast into the fire and burn them, that they may not cumber the ground of my vineyard.

45. 4 And it came to pass that the master of the vineyard went forth, and he saw that his olive tree began to decay; and he said: I will aprune it, and dig about it, and nourish it, that perhaps it may shoot forth young and tender branches, and it perish not.

46. It also helps us understand much more emphatically that vivid moment in the Book of Mormon allegory of the olive tree, when after digging and dunging, watering and weeding, trimming, pruning, transplanting, and grafting, the great Lord of the vineyard throws down his spade and his pruning shears and weeps, crying out to any who would listen, “What could I have done more for my vineyard?”

47. Habakkuk had an exemplary attitude, for he said: “Although the fig tree itself may not blossom, and there may be no yield on the vines; the work of the olive tree may actually turn out a failure, and the terraces themselves may actually produce no food; the flock may actually be severed from the pen, and there may be no herd in the enclosures; yet, as for me, I will exult in Jehovah himself; I will be joyful in the God of my salvation.”