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Etymologies
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Examples
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'Cause I jes 'think evvybody oughta jine if dey wanna do right so'se dey can go to Heben.
Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Georgia Narratives, Part 3 Work Projects Administration
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Him and praisin 'Him often' til He 'cides de time has come for her to go home to Heben.
Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Georgia Narratives, Part 4 Work Projects Administration
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Dat meant if you can't sarve God here below, how is you gwine to git along wid him if you gits to Heben?
Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Georgia Narratives, Part 1 Work Projects Administration
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Not long 'fore she passed on to Heben, she told her husband dat atter she was gone, she wanted him to marry up wid her cousin, Miss Hargrove, so as he would have somebody to help him raise up her chillun, and he done 'zactly what she axed him to.
Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Georgia Narratives, Part 4 Work Projects Administration
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Ye see hit wouldn't do tall fur me ter go walkin 'dem golden streets up dar in Heben wid one o' my years lopped off lake a shoat er a calf dat's been branded.
The Man in Gray Thomas Dixon 1905
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And Ra said unto Horus of Heben, "O Winged Disk, thou great god and lord of heaven, seize thou them ... ...;" and he hurled his lance after them, and he slew them, and worked a great overthrow of them.
Legends of the Gods The Egyptian Texts, edited with Translations 1895
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Before despatching the hippopotamus, Horus leaped on to the back of the monster as a mark of his triumph, and to commemorate this event the priest of Heben, the town wherein these things happened, was called "He who standeth on the back ever after."
Legends of the Gods The Egyptian Texts, edited with Translations 1895
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There he hacked them in pieces, and gave their inward parts to his followers, and their mutilated bodies to the gods and goddesses who were in the Boat of Rā and on the river banks in the town of Heben.
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These are the things which happened in the lands of the city of Heben, in a region which measured three hundred and forty-two measures on the south, and on the north, on the west, and on the east.
Legends of the Gods The Egyptian Texts, edited with Translations 1895
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And he speaks of a "speare of Heben wood," and "a Heben launce."
The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare Henry Nicholson Ellacombe 1868
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