NASB
""You shall not muzzle the ox while he is threshing."
— Deuteronomy 25:4, NASB
“Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the corn.”
“Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the grain. ”
“You shall not muzzle the ox when he treads out [the grain].”
“You must not muzzle your ox when it is treading grain.”
“Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out thy corn on the floor.”
“Do not keep the ox from taking the grain when he is crushing it.”
“Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the corn.”
"If there is a dispute between men and they go to court, and the judges decide their case, and they justify the righteous and condemn the wicked,
then it shall be if the wicked man deserves to be beaten, the judge shall then make him lie down and be beaten in his presence with the number of stripes according to his guilt.
"He may beat him forty times but no more, so that he does not beat him with many more stripes than these and your brother is not degraded in your eyes.
"You shall not muzzle the ox while he is threshing.
"When brothers live together and one of them dies and has no son, the wife of the deceased shall not be married outside the family to a strange man. Her husband's brother shall go in to her and take her to himself as wife and perform the duty of a husband's brother to her.
"It shall be that the firstborn whom she bears shall assume the name of his dead brother, so that his name will not be blotted out from Israel.
"But if the man does not desire to take his brother's wife, then his brother's wife shall go up to the gate to the elders and say, 'My husband's brother refuses to establish a name for his brother in Israel; he is not willing to perform the duty of a husband's brother to me.'