Consequently, two fragments whose lengths match may still represent different sequences.
The "ethical" fragments preserved in Stobaeus' Florilegium may represent "some philosophical book."
The later reported fragments represent medium-sized animals.
Dr. Biran said that the fragment perhaps represented only one-third of the stele, which he estimated to have been at least three feet high.
An inscription implies that this tarnished fragment of memory or a dream represents ambition unfulfilled.
As the fragment represents the remains of a single wing of Archaeopteryx, the popular name of this fossil is "chicken wing".
According to Schofield the fragment rather represents the eclecticism of the early papyri before the crystallizing of the textual families had taken place.
The fragments quoted by Photius represent practically all that is left of Ephraim's writings.
The remaining fragments thus represent our library of junction fragments, or "jumping library".
(Some concern remains over whether these fragments faithfully represent the original Hebrew text or are instead a later translation back into Hebrew.)