Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is a diglot papyrus manuscript of the Gospel of Matthew.
It is a diglot Greek-Coptic manuscript.
It is Greek-Arabic diglot.
The codex is written in Greek and Coptic, but it is not a genuine diglot manuscript.
More than forty Greek-Coptic diglot manuscripts of the New Testament have survived to the present day.
It is a Greek-Arabic diglot manuscript of the New Testament, on paper leaves, dated by a colophon to the year 1265.
It is a diglot Latin - Greek uncial manuscript of the New Testament, palaeographically assigned to the 6th century.
That 1538 Bible was a diglot (dual-language) Bible, in which he compared the Latin Vulgate with his own English translation.
Because it is a diglot, Sangermanensis is also valuable for the study of the Latin bibles, namely the Vetus Latina.
Codex Carolinus is a Gothic-Latin diglot uncial manuscript of the New Testament on parchment, dated to the 6th or 7th century.
Uncial 0301 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), is a Greek-Coptic diglot uncial manuscript of the New Testament.
The first surviving Greek manuscript to contain the pericope is the Latin/Greek diglot Codex Bezae of the late 4th or early 5th century.
Minuscule 621 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), O (von Soden), is a Greek diglot minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment.
Uncial 086 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 35 (Soden), is a Greek - Coptic diglot, uncial codex of the New Testament, dated paleographically to the 6th century.
Codex Sangallensis, designated by Δ or 037 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 76 (von Soden), is a diglot Greek-Latin uncial manuscript of the four Gospels.
Issiaka Diakite-Kaba's Soundjata, Le Leon/Sunjata, The Lion, Denver: Outskirts Press and Paris: Les Editions l'Harmattan, (2010 French-English diglot dramatized version)
Codex Claromontanus, symbolized by D or 06 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), δ 1026 (von Soden), is a Greek-Latin diglot uncial manuscript of the New Testament, written in an uncial hand on vellum.
Codex Augiensis, designated by F or 010 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), α 1029 (von Soden) is a 9th-century diglot uncial manuscript of the Pauline Epistles in double parallel columns of Greek and Latin on the same page.
The text of one "parchment" (parchment 1) was copied from Codex Bezae, an Old Latin/Greek diglot from the 5th century CE contained in the book by Fulcran Grégoire Vigouroux, Dictionnaire De La Bible (1895).