


| Location | Text | Standardized Text | Parts of Speech |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Text | A light is like the Moone, which shineth indeede, but by a borrowed brightnesse receiued from the Sunne, which is the fountaine, from whence all that light streames. | A Light is like the Moon, which shines indeed, but by a borrowed brightness received from the Sun, which is the fountain, from whence all that Light streams. | dt n1 vbz av-j dt n1, r-crq vvz av, cc-acp p-acp dt j-vvn n1 vvn p-acp dt n1, r-crq vbz dt n1, p-acp c-crq d cst j n2. |



| Verse & Version | Verse Text | Text | Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note | Cosine Similarity Score | Cross Encoder Score | Okapi BM25 Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wisdom 7.29 (ODRV) | wisdom 7.29: for she is more beautiful then the sunne, and aboue al disposition of the starres, being compared to light she is found the first. | a light is like the moone, which shineth indeede | True | 0.675 | 0.216 | 2.531 |
| 1 Corinthians 15.41 (ODRV) | 1 corinthians 15.41: one glorie of the sunne, another glorie of the moone, and another glorie of the starres. for starre differeth from starre in glorie: | a light is like the moone, which shineth indeede | True | 0.633 | 0.402 | 1.634 |



| Location | Phrase | Citations | Outliers |
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