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

suspension

noun
The act of hanging up, or of causing to hang by being attached to something above.

suspension

The act of making to depend on any thing for existence or taking place; as the suspension of payment on the performance of a condition.

suspension

The act of delaying; delay; as the suspension of a criminal’s execution; called a respite or reprieve.

suspension

Act of withholding or balancing the judgment; forbearance of determination; as the suspension of opinion, of judgment, of decision or determination. Suspension of judgment often proceeds from doubt of ignorance of facts.

suspension

Temporary cessation; interruption; intermission; as the suspension of labor or of study; the suspension of pain.

suspension

Temporary privation of powers, authority or rights; usually intended as a censure or punishment; as the suspension of an ecclesiastic or minister for some fault. This may be merely a suspension of his office, or it may be both of his office and his income. A military or naval officer’s suspension takes place when he is arrested.

suspension

Prevention or interruption of operation; as the suspension of the habeas corpus act.

suspension

In rhetoric, a keeping of the bearer in doubt and in attentive expectation of what is to follow, or what is to be the inference or conclusion from the arguments’ or observations.

suspension

In Scot’s law, a stay or postponement of execution of a sentence condemnatory, by means of letters of suspension granted on application to the lord ordinary.

suspension

In mechanics, points of suspension, in a balance, are the points in the axis or beam where the weights are applied, or from which they are suspended.

suspension

In music, every sound of a chord to a given base, which is continued to another base, is a suspension. Suspension of arms, in war, a short truce or cessation of operations agreed on by the commanders of the contending parties, as for burying the dead, making proposals for surrender or for peace.