Definitions from Wikipedia (A Walk to Caesarea)
▸ noun: "A Walk to Caesarea" (Halikha LeKeisarya), also commonly known by the opening words "Eli, Eli" ("My God, My God") in the song version, is a poem in Hebrew written in 1942 by Hungarian Jewish WWII resistance fighter Hannah Szenes, which Israeli composer David Zehavi set to music in 1945.
▸ Words similar to A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Usage examples for A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Idioms related to A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Wikipedia articles (New!)
▸ Words that often appear near A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Rhymes of A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Invented words related to A Walk to Caesarea
▸ noun: "A Walk to Caesarea" (Halikha LeKeisarya), also commonly known by the opening words "Eli, Eli" ("My God, My God") in the song version, is a poem in Hebrew written in 1942 by Hungarian Jewish WWII resistance fighter Hannah Szenes, which Israeli composer David Zehavi set to music in 1945.
▸ Words similar to A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Usage examples for A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Idioms related to A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Wikipedia articles (New!)
▸ Words that often appear near A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Rhymes of A Walk to Caesarea
▸ Invented words related to A Walk to Caesarea