Ezekiel 19:13
And now she is planted in the wilderness, in a dry and thirsty ground.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 19:10 describes the vine planted by abundant water; verse 13 contrasts this with a dry land — a direct reversal within the same allegory.
Ezekiel 20:35 echoes this wilderness exile motif—God brings Israel into the wilderness for judgment, just as the vine is planted in dry ground.
Deuteronomy 28:48 describes serving enemies in thirst and lack — the same condition of exile depicted here as a dry and thirsty land.
Psalm 68:6 says the rebellious dwell in a dry land — matching the image here of the vine in a dry land as judgment.
Jeremiah 52:27-31 records the actual deportation of Judah to Babylon, fulfilling the exile imagery of the vine replanted in wilderness.
Hosea 2:3 threatens to make Israel a dry land and kill with thirst — the same judgment imagery as the vine in wilderness.