n
A member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates
adj
Of or pertaining to the Ancient Near East.
n
A believer in the fringe theory that the English people are descended from the Israelites who were carried into captivity by the Assyrians in ancient times.
adj
Of or relating to the god Baal.
adj
Pertaining to Babylon, or made there.
adj
(rare) Of or pertaining to Balaam (a Biblical figure).
n
A Berber nationalist; a proponent of Berberism.
adj
Of or pertaining to this sect or its followers; Canaanitic.
adj
Alternative spelling of Chaldean [Of or pertaining to Chaldea specifically, or ancient Babylonia in general.]
n
A member of the Chaldean Catholic Church.
n
Synonym of Biblical Hebrew
n
(loosely) Any Christian of Egyptian descent.
n
A script, invented in Utah, conceived of as a radical reform and replacement of the Latin script, intended for writing English phonetically. Example: the word seven in Deseret is 𐑅𐐯𐑂𐐮𐑌.
n
A member of this community.
n
A native or resident of East Jerusalem.
adj
(historical) Of, pertaining to, or from the ancient kingdom of Ebla.
n
The belief that there was a single original human language dating from the Garden of Eden until the Tower of Babel, which is of Semitic origin (especially Hebrew).
n
A Canaanite Semitic language spoken by the Edomites in southwestern Jordan in the first millennium BCE, extinct from the 6th century BCE.
n
(historical) A member of an ancient Jewish-Christian sect, possibly related to the Ebionites, in Sassanid southern Mesopotamia.
n
(zoology) Any member of the Hamites.
adj
Having partial Hamitic ancestry through interbreeding.
adj
Of or relating to Hammurabi (died c. 1750 BC), sixth Amorite king of Babylon, associated with one of the first written codes of law in recorded history.
adj
Relating to or being descendants of Hashim.
adj
Of or relating to the patriotic Jewish family to which the Maccabees belonged; Maccabean.
n
(humorous) The Jewish dialect of English.
adj
Of, or relating to the Hebrew people, language or culture.
adv
After the manner of the Hebrews or their language.
n
An idiom characteristic of the Hebrew language.
n
A characteristic trait of the Hebrew language. By extension it is sometimes applied to the Jewish people or their faith, national ideology, or culture.
n
A scholar who specializes in the study of the Hebrew language.
adj
Pertaining to, or resembling, the Hebrew language or idiom.
adj
Of or pertaining to Hebrew culture.
adj
Of or pertaining to the Hebrew people or language.
n
The spirit or quality of the Hebrew people.
n
(archaic) A Jewish or Hebrew woman.
n
A word or phrase characteristic of Hebrew.
adj
Pertaining to the Hebrew people, language, or culture.
n
An informal hybrid language combining elements of Hebrew and English.
n
A native or inhabitant of the Palestinian city of Hebron.
n
(historical) Egypt's policy, after the 1973 war, of encouraging the private sector and stimulating foreign investment.
adj
Between the two geographical areas, or between the two political factions, of Palestine.
adj
(archaic) Pertaining to, or resembling, an Ishmaelite or the Ishmaelites.
adj
Of, from, or pertaining to Israel, the Israeli people.
adj
Of or pertaining to the northern part of Ancient Israel, its people, or their language.
adj
Of or pertaining to the ancient nation(s) of Israel or the inhabitants thereof.
n
A person that loves Israel.
adj
Of or pertaining to Issachar, or to the tribe of Issachar
n
the modern Hebrew language
adj
Of or pertaining to the janizaries or their government.
n
(rare) A Jerichoan: a native or inhabitant of Jericho.
n
(informal, proscribed) The Yiddish or Hebrew language.
n
The interrelated socio-ethnolects of the English language used by the Jews of Anglophonic countries, typically peppered with religious or cultural influences from Hebrew, Yiddish, and other Jewish languages (though usually not to the same extent as Yeshivish, which is essentially English but with extensive use of Aramaic, Hebrew and Yiddish terminology related to halacha (Jewish law) and Gemara learning).
n
(slang, humorous, offensive, derogatory) The nation of Ukraine.
n
Alternative form of Judeo-Aramaic [A group of Hebrew-influenced Aramaic and Neo-Aramaic languages.]
n
An inhabitant of the ancient kingdom of Judah.
n
Obsolete form of Judeo-Aramaic. [A group of Hebrew-influenced Aramaic and Neo-Aramaic languages.]
adj
Of or relating to the ancient Jutes.
n
A supporter of Kahanism.
adj
Archaic spelling of Manichaean. [Of or relating to Manichaeism.]
n
A Palestinian state with borders that are smaller than the 1967 lines.
adj
Of, or pertaining to a mini-Palestine
n
The Hebrew language as used from the second to the tenth century in the Common Era, descended from Biblical Hebrew.
adj
Of or pertaining to Nazareth or its people.
adj
Of or pertaining to a Nazarite or Nazarites.
n
The modern Hebrew language.
n
A scholar specializing in Palestinian studies and anthropology.
n
Archaic spelling of Palestinian. [An inhabitant of Palestine or an Arab descending from that area.]
n
(historical) A non-Semitic person from ancient Philistia, a region in the southwest Levant in the Middle East.
adj
Existing before the establishment of the State of Palestine, Mandatory Palestine or medieval or classical Levantine provinces of the same name.
n
Someone who favors Semitism.
adj
Pertaining to the Radhanites.
n
A Rhodian Jew, or a Sephardi Jew from Rhodes.
adj
Alternative form of Sabaean [Of or pertaining to Sabaean culture.]
adj
Obsolete spelling of Sadducean [Of, like, or pertaining to the Sadducees.]
n
A member of a modern people that speak a Semitic language.
n
The Semitic languages in general.
n
(countable) A word or phrase (construction or idiom) typical of or influenced by Hebrew or Aramaic. (Compare Hebraism.)
n
someone who studies the history, languages and cultures of the Semitic peoples
n
The academic field dedicated to the studies of Semitic languages and literatures and the history of the Semitic-speaking peoples.
n
a Jew of Iberian ancestry, whose native language was Ladino
n
(now rare) The team of translators who produced the Septuagint.
n
A native or inhabitant of Sodom.
n
(Biblical studies) An abbreviation for 7th century Syriac manuscripts of the Bible also known as Harclensis or Harklean version, translated by Thomas of Harqel.
n
(Biblical studies) An abbreviation for an early Syriac translation of the Bible also known as Peshitta.
n
A sociolect of English, incorporating Yiddish, Hebrew, and other languages, spoken by many Orthodox Jews and associated with the culture of yeshiva.
n
A West Germanic, or more specifically High German, language that developed from Middle High German dialects, with an admixture of vocabulary from multiple source languages including Hebrew-Aramaic, Romance, Slavic, English, etc., and mostly written in Hebrew characters which is used mainly among Ashkenazic Jews from central and eastern Europe.
adj
Of or relating to the efforts of the Yiddishists.
adv
Alternative form of Zionwards [Towards Zion.]
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