Deliver Us Lyrics: Mud! / Mud - and lift! / Sand - and pull! / Water - and raise up! / With the sting of the whip on my shoulder / With the salt. De-liv'-er (natsal, nathan; rhuomai, paradidomi): Occurs very frequently in the Old Testament and represents various Hebrew terms. The English word is used in two senses, (1) 'to set free,' etc., (2) 'to give up or over.' (1) The word most often translated 'deliver' in the first sense is natsal, meaning originally, perhaps, 'to draw out.'
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deliver
DELIVER, v.t. L. Free, disengaged; to free, to peel.
1. To free; to release, as from restraint; to set at liberty; as, to deliver one from captivity.
2. To rescue, or save.
Deliver me, O my God, from the hand of the wicked. Ps. 71:4.
3. To give, or transfer; to put into anothers hand or power; to commit; to pass from one to another.
Thou shalt deliver Pharoahs cup into his hand. Gen.40:11
So we say, to deliver goods to a carrier; to deliver a letter; to deliver possession of an estate.
Delivery
4. To surrender; to yield; to give up; to resign; as, to deliver a fortress to an enemy. It is often followed by up; as, to deliver up the city; to deliver up stolen goods.
Th exalted mind
All sense of woe delivers to the wind.
5. To disbuden of a child.
6. To utter; to pronounce; to speak; to send forth in words; as, to deliver a sermon, an address, or an oration.
7. To exert in motion.
To deliver to the wind, to cast away; to reject.
To deliver over, to transfer; to give or pass from one to another; as, to deliver over goods to another.
2. To surrender or resign; to put into anothers power; to commit to the discretion of; to abandon to.
Deliver me not over to the will of my enemies. Ps. 27.
To deliver up, to give up; to surrender.
DELIVER, a. Free; nimble.
Food Places That Deliver
delivered
DELIVERED, pp. Freed; released; transferred or transmitted; passed from one to another; committed; yielded; surrendered; rescued; uttered; pronounced.
delivering
DELIVERING, ppr. Releasing; setting free; rescuing; saving; surrendering; giving over; yielding; resigning.
Related topics: Birth, Votingdeliverde‧liv‧er /dɪˈlɪvə $ -ər/S2W2 verb1take something somewhere [intransitive, transitive]TAKE/BRING to take goods, letters, packages etc to a particular place or personThe morning mail has just been delivered.Do you deliver on Saturdays?deliver something to somebodyThey set off to deliver supplies to an isolated village.I’m having some flowers delivered for her birthday.► see thesaurus at take2 →deliver a speech/lecture/address etc3do something you should do [intransitive, transitive]DOPROMISE to do or provide the things you are expected to, because you are responsible for them or they are part of your jobthe costs of delivering adequate nursing carethe failure of some services to deliver the goods (=do what they have promised)The company will deliver on its promises.4baby [transitive]MB to help a woman give birth to her baby, or to give birth to a babyThey rushed her to hospital where doctors delivered her baby.5blow/shock etc [transitive]GIVE to give something such as a blow, shock, or warning to someone or somethingHe delivered a strong warning about the dangers facing the government.6 →deliver a judgment/verdict7person [transitive]GIVE formal to put someone into someone else’s controldeliver somebody to somebodySharett had betrayed him and delivered him to the enemy.8votes [transitive] especially American EnglishPPV to get the votes or support of a particular group of people in an electionHe cannot deliver the Latino vote.9make somebody free of something [transitive]SAVE/RESCUE literary or biblical to help someone escape from something bad or evildeliver somebody from something‘Deliver us from evil, ’ she prayed. —deliverer noun [countable] →deliver something ↔ up![](https://cdn-ak.f.st-hatena.com/images/fotolife/r/ruriatunifoefec/20200910/20200910011327.png)