Concept cluster: History > Judaism (3)
n
Alternative form of av beit din [The vice-president of a Jewish Sanhedrin or rabbinical court (beit din).]
n
(Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Baha'i) A prophet in the Old Testament, Qur'an and Aqdas; a Semitic patriarch who preached monotheism, father of the Jewish patriarch Isaac and the Arab patriarch Ishmael.
n
Alternative spelling of agora [A place for gathering.]
v
(intransitive, rare) To make aliyah, to immigrate to Israel.
n
Alternative form of almemar [(Judaism) Synonym of bima]
n
(rare) Alternative spelling of Ashkenazim
n
Alternative spelling of Ashkenazim
n
Alternative form of av beit din [The vice-president of a Jewish Sanhedrin or rabbinical court (beit din).]
n
Alternative form of av beit din [The vice-president of a Jewish Sanhedrin or rabbinical court (beit din).]
adv
Alternative form of ayen [Back against.]
n
a false deity or idol
n
Alternative spelling of baal korei [(Judaism) The person who reads from the Torah scroll during religious services.]
n
A worshiper of Baal; a member of the pagan religion of Baalism.
n
A worshipper of Baal; a member of the pagan religion of Baalism.
n
A believer in Babism.
n
(rare, Christian, derogatory) A Balaamite person.
n
Alternative form of baleboste [(Judaism) mistress of the house]
n
Alternative form of baleboste [(Judaism) mistress of the house]
n
(Judaism) Important man, bourgeoisie.
n
(Judaism) mistress of the house
n
A person who plays the bayan.
n
Alternative spelling of Baal, showing its original pharyngeal consonant. [(mythology, biblical) A storm and fertility god of the Phoenician and Canaanite pantheons, reckoned as chief of the gods by the 1st millennium BC.]
n
Alternative spelling of bashert [One's predestined soulmate]
n
Alternative spelling of bima [(Judaism) The raised platform in the front of a synagogue where the Torah is read on a podium.]
n
Alternative spelling of Hassidism
n
(Judaism) Alternative form of chaya [A teahouse in Japan.]
n
Alternative spelling of cheder [An elementary school for Jewish children, teaching basic Judaism and Hebrew.]
n
Alternative form of dayan. [A rabbinic judge]
n
Alternative letter-case form of Hashem [A substitute for the Tetragrammaton.]
n
Alternative form of hazzan [(Judaism) A Jewish cantor in a synagogue.]
n
Alternative spelling of illui [(Jewish) A young Talmudic prodigy or genius.]
n
Alternative spelling of illui [(Jewish) A young Talmudic prodigy or genius.]
n
Alternative form of Jahbulon [(Freemasonry) A symbolic or ceremonial name for God associated by some writers with certain Masonic rites or passwords.]
n
Alternative form of Jehovism [Jehovist beliefs or principles generally.]
n
Obsolete form of jinn. [(Muslim demonology) A genie and descendant of the jann, normally invisible to the human eye, but who may also appear in animal or human form, equivalent to demons in Jewish demonology.]
n
The Islamic Paradise.
n
The written form of a word in a Hebrew text, when the form that is traditionally read aloud (k'rei) differs.
n
The local governing body of a former European Jewish community, administering religious, legal and communal affairs.
n
Alternative form of Karaism [A Jewish movement that recognises only the Tanakh as a supreme legal authority, distinct from Rabbinic Judaism.]
n
(Judaism) Alternative form of kere [(Judaism) A reading that in the traditional Jewish mode of reading the Hebrew Bible is substituted for one actually standing in the consonantal text with the consonants of the word or phrase to be read being usually given in the margin and the vowel points if the text is vocalized being inserted in the text.]
n
Alternative form of kiruv [(Judaism) religious outreach work by Orthodox Jews]
n
Alternative form of ketubah [A traditional Jewish marriage contract that outlines the rights and responsibilities of the groom in relation to the bride.]
n
Alternative form of ketubah [A traditional Jewish marriage contract that outlines the rights and responsibilities of the groom in relation to the bride.]
n
Alternative spelling of Hassidism
n
Alternative spelling of cheder [An elementary school for Jewish children, teaching basic Judaism and Hebrew.]
n
(Judaism) Alternative spelling of cohen [A Jewish priest: direct male descendant of the Biblical high priest Aaron, brother of Moses.]
n
Alternative form of laura [(historical, Roman Catholicism) A number of hermitages or cells in the same neighborhood occupied by anchorites who were under the same superior]
n
Zoroastrianism
n
Magianism; Zoroastrianism
adj
(by extension) Referring to a worldview of distinct good and evil.
n
(religion) A syncretic, dualistic religion that combined elements of Zoroastrian, Christian, and Gnostic thought, founded by the Iranian prophet Mani in 3rd century AD.
n
Alternative form of Manichaean [A follower of Manichaeism.]
n
Mani (founder of Manichaeism)
n
Alternative form of Manichaean [A follower of Manichaeism.]
n
Alternative form of Manichaeism [(religion) A syncretic, dualistic religion that combined elements of Zoroastrian, Christian, and Gnostic thought, founded by the Iranian prophet Mani in 3rd century AD.]
n
Alternative form of Manichaeism [(religion) A syncretic, dualistic religion that combined elements of Zoroastrian, Christian, and Gnostic thought, founded by the Iranian prophet Mani in 3rd century AD.]
n
Alternative spelling of Masorah [The collection of marginal notes on the text of the Hebrew Scriptures, composed by rabbis of the school of Tiberias, in the 8th-9th centuries CE.]
n
Alternative form of Masorete [One of the writers of the Masorah.]
n
A vertical bar placed under a syllable in Biblical Hebrew to mark stress.
n
Alternative form of meteg [A vertical bar placed under a syllable in Biblical Hebrew to mark stress.]
n
A plaque attached to a wall to indicate the direction of the Temple in Jerusalem, which a Jew should face while praying.
n
The practice of visiting or attending a mosque.
n
(very rare, nonstandard) A member of the Israeli espionage agency Mossad
n
Alternative spelling of niddah [(Judaism) Someone whom Halacha considers menstruant.]
n
Alternative form of obiism [Belief in, or the practice of, the obeah superstitions and rites.]
n
red heifer
n
(derogatory, historical) A wealthy landowner who controls a shtetl.
n
Alternative form of Peret [(Egyptology) One of the three seasons of Ancient Egypt; Emergence.]
n
(historical) A theocratic organizational structure in ancient Israelite society; congregation, assembly.
n
Alternative form of Karaism [A Jewish movement that recognises only the Tanakh as a supreme legal authority, distinct from Rabbinic Judaism.]
n
(Judaism) Alternative form of ruach [(Judaism) One of the cabalistic aspects of the soul, related to emotion and morality.]
n
Alternative spelling of shadchen [(Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker]
n
Alternative spelling of shtetl [A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe.]
n
Alternative form of shul (“Ashkenazic synagogue”) [(Judaism) An Ashkenazic synagogue.]
n
Alternative form of segolate [(Hebrew linguistics) A word of this form.]
n
Alternative form of shadchen [(Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker]
n
Alternative form of shegetz [(sometimes derogatory) A gentile, a non-Jewish male.]
n
Alternative spelling of shaitan [(Islam) A demon; a devil.]
n
(Judaism) A wig worn by married orthodox Jewish women.
n
Alternative form of shiksa [(Judaism, often derogatory) A non-Jewish girl, especially one who is attractive and young.]
n
Alternative spelling of shidduch [(Judaism) A system of matchmaking in which Jewish singles are introduced to each other.]
n
Alternative form of shiksa [(Judaism, often derogatory) A non-Jewish girl, especially one who is attractive and young.]
n
Alternative form of shegetz [(sometimes derogatory) A gentile, a non-Jewish male.]
n
Alternative form of shophet [(historical) A judge: an ad hoc leader in ancient Israel.]
n
Alternative form of shtetl [A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe.]
n
A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe.
n
Alternative form of shtetl [A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe.]
n
Alternative form of shul (“Ashkenazic synagogue”) [(Judaism) An Ashkenazic synagogue.]
n
Alternative spelling of synagogue [A place of worship for Jews or Samaritans.]
n
A decoration drawn over some Hebrew letters in Jewish scrolls.
n
(archaic) A fictitious deity with a violent temperament who featured in medieval mystery plays, represented as being worshiped by Muslims
n
Alternative spelling of tzaddik [(Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.]
n
Alternative spelling of tzaddik [(Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.]
n
Alternative spelling of tzaddik [(Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.]
n
Alternative spelling of tsaddik
n
Alternative form of vakass [An Armenian priest's vestment resembling the amice.]
n
Alternative form of Sabianism [the worship of the sun, moon and stars]
n
Alternative form of tzaddik [(Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.]
n
Alternative spelling of tzaddik [(Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.]
n
(informal) A zemidjan.
n
Alternative form of ZT"L

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