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Commentaries:
Barnes' Notes
A wide house - literally, "a house of companionship," i. e., a house shared with her. The flat roof of an Eastern house was often used for retirement by day, or in summer for sleep by night. The corner of such a roof was exposed to all changes of weather, and the point of the proverb lies in the thought that all winds and storms which a man might meet with there are more endurable than the tempest within.
Other Barnes' Notes entries containing Proverbs 21:9:
Proverbs 25:24
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