Passage
and anything on which <FI>any<Fi> of their carcase falleth is unclean (oven or double pots), it is broken down, unclean they <FI>are<Fi> , yea, unclean they are to you.
and anything on which <FI>any<Fi> of their carcase falleth is unclean (oven or double pots), it is broken down, unclean they <FI>are<Fi> , yea, unclean they are to you.
Leviticus 11:33 and any earthen vessel, into the midst of which <FI>any<Fi> one of them falleth, all that <FI>is<Fi> in its midst is unclean, and it ye do break.
Leviticus 11:34 `Of all the food which is eaten, that on which cometh <FI>such<Fi> water, is unclean, and all drink which is drunk in any <FI>such<Fi> vessel is unclean;
Leviticus 11:35 and anything on which <FI>any<Fi> of their carcase falleth is unclean (oven or double pots), it is broken down, unclean they <FI>are<Fi> , yea, unclean they are to you.
Leviticus 11:36 `Only--a fountain or pit, a collection of water, is clean, but that which is coming against their carcase is unclean;
Leviticus 11:37 and when <FI>any<Fi> of their carcase falleth on any sown seed which is sown--it <FI>is<Fi> clean;
The verse centers on "anything", "carcase", "falleth", "unclean", "oven", "double", "pots", and "broken". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "anything" and "carcase", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 34's "Of all the food which is eaten..." into verse 36's "Only--a fountain or pit a collection of...", so "anything" and "carcase" belong inside that flow. In Leviticus context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "anything" and "carcase" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.