Hi Matthew,

May I suggest that in your statement above:

"There are numerous alterations in both the editions, such as aught to ought, clift to cleft, intreat to entreat, lien to lain, utter court to outer court, etc. These are the types of things found in Scrivener, Norton, the NKJV and counterfeit KJBs."

That a better word than "counterfeit" would be "impure". Counterfeit is a charged word, that probably should be either unused or only used specifically for editions like the NKJV and the MKJV and maybe the new Scofield, versions that keep "King James" in the name of the Bible but change the text radically.

Otherwise someone might pounce on your words as if you are accusing versions with minor impurities of being counterfeits.

Simply a suggestion.

Shalom,
Steven