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Genesis 34:1 - Revised Standard Version (RSV-CI)

Now Dinah the daughter of Leah, whom she had borne to Jacob, went out to visit the women of the land;

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King James Version (Oxford) 1769

And Dinah the daughter of Leah, which she bare unto Jacob, went out to see the daughters of the land.

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Amplified Bible - Classic Edition

NOW DINAH daughter of Leah, whom she bore to Jacob, went out [unattended] to see the girls of the place.

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American Standard Version (1901)

And Dinah the daughter of Leah, whom she bare unto Jacob, went out to see the daughters of the land.

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Common English Bible

Dinah, the daughter whom Leah had borne to Jacob, went out to meet the women of that country.

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Catholic Public Domain Version

Then Dinah, the daughter of Leah, went out to see the women of that region.

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Douay-Rheims version of The Bible - 1752 version

And Dina the daughter of Lia went out to see the women of that country.

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Genesis 34:1
10 Cross References  

When Esau was forty years old, he took to wife Judith the daughter of Be-eri the Hittite, and Basemath the daughter of Elon the Hittite;


Then Rebekah said to Isaac, “I am weary of my life because of the Hittite women. If Jacob marries one of the Hittite women such as these, one of the women of the land, what good will my life be to me?”


Now Esau saw that Isaac had blessed Jacob and sent him away to Paddan-aram to take a wife from there, and that as he blessed him he charged him, “You shall not marry one of the Canaanite women,”


And Leah said, “Happy am I! For the women will call me happy”; so she called his name Asher.


Afterwards she bore a daughter, and called her name Dinah.


There he erected an altar and called it El-Elohe-Israel.


(these are the sons of Leah, whom she bore to Jacob in Paddan-aram, together with his daughter Dinah; altogether his sons and his daughters numbered thirty-three).


How lightly you gad about, changing your way! You shall be put to shame by Egypt as you were put to shame by Assyria.


Besides that, they learn to be idlers, gadding about from house to house, and not only idlers but gossips and busybodies, saying what they should not.


to be sensible, chaste, domestic, kind, and submissive to their husbands, that the word of God may not be discredited.