Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

green

adjective
Properly, growing, flourishing, as plants; hence, of the color of herbage and plants when growing, a color composed of blue and yellow rays, one of blue and yellow rays, one of the original prismatic colors; verdant.

green

New; fresh; recent; as a green wound. The greenest usurpation.

green

Fresh; flourishing; undecayed; as green old age.

green

Containing its natural juices; not dry; not seasoned; as green wood; green timber.

green

Not roasted; half raw. We say the meat is green, when half-roasted.

green

Unripe; immature; not arrived to perfection; as green fruit. Hence,

green

Immature in age; young; as green in age or judgment.

green

Pale; sickly; wan; of a greenish pale color.

green

noun
The color of growing plants; a color composed of blue and yellow rays, which, mixed in different proportions, exhibit a variety of shades; as apple green, meadow green, leek green

green

A grassy plain or plat; a piece of ground covered with verdant herbage. O’er the smooth enameled green.

green

Fresh leaves or branches of trees or other plants; wreaths; usually in the plural. The fragrant greens I seek, my brows to bind.

green

The leaves and stems of young plants used in cookery or dressed for food in the spring; in the plural.

green

To make green. This is used by Thomson and by Barlow, but is not an elegant word, nor indeed hardly legitimate, in the sense in which these writers use it. “Spring greens the year.” “God greens the groves.” The only legitimate sense of this verb, if used, would be, to dye green, or to change to a green color. A plant growing in a dark room is yellow; let this plant be carried into the open air, and the rays of the sun will green it. This use would correspond with the use of whiten, blacken