Sanbuki Codex Is a Hebrew manuscript, now no more extant. Nothing is known of its author, the place where, and the time when it was written. According to Richard Simon (Biblioth. Critic. 1, 367), the name Sanbuki (זנבוקי) is derived from the owner of the MS., a Hungarian family. According to Hottinger (in Bibliothecario Quadripartito, p. 158, ed. Turic.), the name ought to be זנדוקי instead of זנבוקי, which is equivalent to Zadduki, or Sadducee. For other conjectures, see Wolf (Bibl. Hebr. 2, 292, 293; 4, 79) and Tychsen (Tentamen, p. 249, 250). As to the codex itself, some of its readings are given in the margin of some MSS., as in Cod. Kennic. 415; Cod. Kennic. 8 (Bibl. Bodl. Hunting. 69; comp. Brunsius, Ad Kenn. Diss. Genesis p. 345). Besides, this codex is quoted three times by Menachem di Lonzano in his commentary Or Thora, as on Ge 9:14, בּעֲנֲנַי (fol. 2 b, fin. ed. Amstel): הנו אן בשוא לבד ובזנבוקי בשוא בפתה בהללי, i.e. in the Codex Hillel, the nun has only the sh'va (:), but in the Codex Sanbuki the sh'va with the patach; Le 13:20, שָׁפָל (fol. 14 b), שפל בזנבוקי הפ א בפתח , i.e. in the Codex Sanbuki the פ in שפל is written with the patach; Le 26:36, והֵבֵאתַי (fol. 15 b), לאיש געיא בתי ו אבִהללי ובירושלמיים ובזנבוקי בס תס ואשכנז, i.e. in Spanish and German MSS. there is a gaya (i.e. a metheg) under ת, but not so in the Codd. Hillel, Jerusalem, and Sanbuki. See Strack, Prolegomena Critica in Vetus Test. Hebr. (Lips. 1873), p. 22. SEE MANUSCRIPTS, BIBLICAL. (B.P.)
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John McClintock was born October 27, 1814 in Philadelphia to Irish immigrants, John and Martha McClintock. He began as a clerk in his father's store, and then became a bookkeeper in the Methodist Book Concern in New York. Here he converted to Methodism and considered joining the ministry. McClintock entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1832 and graduated with high honors three years later. Subsequently, he was awarded a doctorate of divinity degree from the same institution in 1848.WikipediaRead More