Nahum 2:4
The chariots shall rage in the streets, they shall justle one against another in the broad ways: they shall seem like torches, they shall run like the lightnings.
Cross-reference
Nahum 3:2 gives the battle's soundtrack — cracks and clatter — to the visual of chariots charging through streets here.
Nahum 3:3 follows the chariot charge with the aftermath — charging cavalry, swords, and piles of dead — completing the scene.
Isaiah 37:24 records the Assyrian king's boast about his chariots — the very pride that leads to the judgment described here.
Isaiah 66:15 shows the LORD coming with chariots like fire — a divine judgment mirroring the human chariots of war here.
Jeremiah 4:13 uses the same whirlwind chariot imagery for Babylon's invasion — reinforcing God's use of nations as judgment.
Ezekiel 26:10 describes chariots entering breached gates with dust and noise — similar street-fighting imagery as here.
Isaiah 5:28 compares chariot wheels to a whirlwind — a direct parallel to the lightning-speed chariots described here.
Joel 2:5 uses the same fire-and-chariot imagery for the Lord's judgment army, intensifying the scene of divine wrath.
Revelation 9:9 compares locust wings to chariots rushing to battle, directly echoing the sound picture here.
In Jeremiah 46:9, the same chariot-racing imagery describes Egypt's army being urged to fight, mirroring the panic of Nineveh's fall.
Jeremiah 47:3 also depicts the noise of chariot hoofs and wheels causing panic, similar to the rushing chariots here.
Ezekiel 23:24 describes Babylon's attack with chariots from the north, paralleling the chariot charge against Nineveh.
Ezekiel 26:7 has Nebuchadnezzar bringing horses and chariots against Tyre, echoing the chariot force seen here.