Aún no tenemos significados para "covetous man".
1So the ways of every covetous man destroy the souls of the possessors.
2The covetous man is not a worshiper of the true God.
3A just king setteth up the land: a covetous man shall destroy it.
4What though he was no extortioner, he might yet be a covetous man.
5The covetous man is ever in want; set a certain limit to your wishes.
6He is known throughout Yorkshire as a dangerous, covetous man.'
7First, let him be a covetous man; let his heart be poisoned with covetousness.
8The king, therefore, should never take a covetous man for his minister or officer.
9I am sure in a certain comedy a covetous man is brought in speaking thus:-
10What though he was no extortioner, he might yet be a covetous man; Luke xvi.
11But nothing is more wicked than the covetous man.
12Now the covetous man must part with his goods, and the gall of asps must stick behind.
13I am no covetous man, he knows.
14The misery of the covetous man.
15The covetous man feareth not God.
16Squire Leech was a covetous man.
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Covetous man a través del tiempo
Covetous man por variante geográfica