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he Leviathan and The Behemot Dinosaur Dialect or Diety
The Leviathan and The Behemot: Dinosaur, Dialect, or Diety From the Romans to the Greek to the Kush to the Egyptians, folklore has been handed down from generation to generation. In most cases this folklore transcends any one religion and carries over into the next. Much like the Romans adopting and perverting Greek folklore, so too has most every religion known to exist. Likewise, from most mythology come stories of great, monstrous beasts, like the
will be revealed and we all shall rejoice. Bibliography Bible, Job 40:15-24, 41:1-34. The New Oxford Annotated Bible With The Apocrypha. Revised standard version. Oxford University Press, Inc.. 1977. -Jewish Heritage Online Magazine. http://www.jewishheritage.com/topics/ fantasy/creatures_leviathan.html. -Lycos, http://lycoskids.infoplease.com/ce5/CE041334.html. -Scott, Mike, "What Do The Scriptures Say?" http://www.scripturessay Com/q72.html. -Smith, William, "Behemoth.", "Leviathan." Smith's Bible Dictionary. Revised edition. Nashville: Holman Bible Publishers.
