Sentence Examples
It's a tiny piece of lawn ringed with a bed of alyssum, purple wandering jew groundcover, aloes, wild garlic and other assorted plants. |
|
Mixed bags including squire and trag, jew also were reported on the closer reefs off Ballina. |
|
If you can get outside there are some tuna, jew and trag about with the odd squire and mackerel which are far and few between. |
|
If a person sees another Jew sinning or following the wrong path, he is required to correct him and attempt to set him right. |
|
The area is marked by many mikvehs, or ritual baths, in which every Jew entering the Temple area had to immerse. |
|
In such a case, it is a great mitzvah for a Jew to donate organs to save another person's life. |
|
It is difficult for us to see any reason why a Jew may not wear his yarmulke in court or a Sikh his turban. |
|
As an orthodox Jew and a doctor in training I completely agree with your statements. |
|
Instead of Wall Street, the son has made the spiritual life as an Orthodox Jew his primary focus. |
|
Just as she unmasks the truth of herself as Jew, she unmasks the truth of herself as woman. |
|
A Jew must be aware that he is not only an individual, but a cell in the body of a nation. |
|
He clearly was neither a law-abiding Jew nor an upstanding member of the local community. |
|
So let us make a fresh start and try to discover what it's like to be a Jew, how Judaism looks from within. |
|
She later played the roles of both a black teenage gang member and a Hasidic Jew. |
|
Each individual Jew is always responsible to make sure their home is Jewishly strong. |
|
It is regarded as a good thing by just about every Jew that there are Talmudic scholars and rabbis. |
|
The gibe could not be further off the mark, for he is in fact a very proud Jew. |
|
By Judaizing the adventure tale, the great beyond is made seemingly accessible to any Jew. |
|
Someone who isn't born a Jew can convert to Judaism, but it is not easy to do so. |
|
Also, after about two years of learning about Judaism I decided to study to become a Jew. |
|
|
Those who were able to find a reasonable place to fish in the salt water found some nice Jew on the North Wall. |
|
As an orthodox Jew, he observes Shabbat, eats kosher, and prays three times a day. |
|
I have thought of myself as a lapsed Jew for these past few years, avoiding religion and religiosity. |
|
She is an American, a Jew and a rising senior at the University of California at Berkeley. |
|
Eliot represents the Jew in Daniel Deronda as a dichotomous figure, adapted from conventional stereotypes circulating in her culture. |
|
In retaliation, a member of the Khazraj tribe paid a Jew to smack the face of the Bedouin. |
|
This idea went so far that Hitler asserted there was an Aryan science and that Albert Einstein was incorrect simply because he was a Jew. |
|
The European and the Ashkenazi Jew samples are pooled and referred to as Caucasian. |
|
The area is marked by many ritual baths, in which every Jew entering the Temple area had to immerse. |
|
Passover is coming and this is a wonderful opportunity to think about a Jew who may be alone, in need of an invitation to join your Seder. |
|
How could I forget his dictate to always be proud to be a Jew, even in circumstances when it might not seem to ones advantage? |
|
It is a classic anti-semitic canard to punish any Jew for the perceived crimes of all of them. |
|
As an Iranian Jew, I am often chastised for trying to explain the bizarre behavior of this paranoid regime. |
|
The hero, an Irishman, who is a version of the wandering Jew, cannot die for 120 years, and goes through many changes of identity in his long, largely villainous, career. |
|
Other house plants to enjoy growing this way include wandering Jew, hoya, English ivy, trailing philodendron, Hawaiian ti, and, of course, lucky bamboo. |
|
Hopefully, we can learn to stop saying that anyone, whether Jew or non-Jew, is worthy of extermination. |
|
Glatt remained an Orthodox Jew but also a true European of the old school. |
|
British officials, some with little or no experience of the Middle East, came to regard themselves as umpires holding the ring between Arab and Jew. |
|
To me, being a Jew carries a low-grade paranoia that is both an overreaction and entirely justified, based on history. |
|
Somehow, finding a Jew to blame makes up sort of deep symmetry that allows people to comfort themselves that they have an answer. |
|
|
Her arrest and detention for uttering the Shema ought to find no sympathy from any Jew. |
|
Being a Jew in the joint was an adventure, and all in all, I can only thank hashem for his help during my decade in prison. |
|
There may be one or two more somewhere else in Deutschland, but I will forever think of Friedel as the last German Jew. |
|
It was a very personal subject for him, since his maternal grandfather was a Berlin Jew who died in the Majdanek death camp. |
|
Lottie believed, as an Orthodox Jew, that the next thing that happened was divine intervention. |
|
Being a loudmouth, camera-loving, wise-cracking New York Jew who made Chuck Schumer appear debonair was a good start. |
|
Plotz was, by his own estimation, an inattentive Jew, a biblical ignoramus. |
|
The Jew beholds his tormentor dressed in the vestments of his own ancient culture. |
|
The ceremony takes place in the home and is usually performed by a mohel, an observant Jew who may be a rabbi, doctor, or simply one skilled in the technique. |
|
Once, when I spent a semester teaching in America, I had several very worldly students who had never met an observant Jew before. |
|
I noted, however, that it said Jude, the German word for Jew, rather than Jood. |
|
At the back we had some of those steel cupboards where we kept our stock and I put the Jew and the Jewess in there! |
|
He is an Orthodox Jew who teaches Rabbinic Studies in California. |
|
In this common ground, there is no Jew or Greek, circumcised or uncircumcised, male or female because we are joined together as sisters and brothers. |
|
It is less painful to contemplate a Jesus, a Bar Kokhba or any other Jew punished under humane Israelite law than his abandonment to the cruel caprice of uncircumcised Rome. |
|
The frustrating thing is that Jew Boy is very much a book of two parts. |
|
In a religious movement that lacks a centralized authority, it is the unfortunate right of one Orthodox Jew to define out another. |
|
The bushy-haired Russian Jew in the pince-nez was an ardent revolutionary but also a genuine democrat, or so the legend goes. |
|
For the last six years, I have tried to live like a Jew in that I have been to temple every Friday night, have been to Shabbat dinners, and have kept all the holidays. |
|
He built a new ideal Jew, a type that blended the clever Talmudist with the fighting Hebrew speaker. |
|
|
The first Jew to be knighted, he was also a close and trusted friend of Edward IV, as well as of Richard. |
|
Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice, written in the late 16th century, features Shylock, a Venetian Jew. |
|
This story is set during the anti-Jewish pogroms in pre-revolutionary Russia where Rachel, a Jew, dreams of being a writer. |
|
Isabella Rossellini stars as Mrs Kalman, a strict Hasidic Jew who hires young and carefree Chaja as a nanny. |
|
She then applies the image of the hemorrhoidal Jew in The Problemes of Aristotle, in which melancholy men bleed like women. |
|
Here the Christianization of this Jew is complete, as the body itself gives evidence. |
|
Meanwhile he hid a note in a piece of melon and gave it to a young Jew. |
|
Gary Shteyngart is a melancholy Russian, a wandering Jew, an unassimilated American, a Swiftian satirist and a Gogolian taleteller. |
|
Another thing for a Jew to do would be to become a salesman. |
|
There is a statue of Davy at the top of Market Jew Street, near the house in which he was born. |
|
In Judaism, the number of seeds in a pomegranate is said to be the exact number of mitzvah, or spiritual duties required of a devout Jew. |
|
Abraham Cresques was a Majorcan Jew who worked at the service of Pedro IV of Aragon. |
|
They can range from ultra-Orthodox to atheist, yet no Jew would deny the full Jewishness of either. |
|
Interest, with a Jew, never proceeds but upon supposal, at least, of a firm and sufficient bottom. |
|
As a Jew committed to halakhah, I admit I do not understand this calculus. |
|
We presume Jesus of Nazareth, as a practicing Jew, was also committed to the covenants his faith ancestors had entered into with Yahweh. |
|
The new muskel-Juden replaces the weak, cringing land-less Jew. |
|
End now all unkindness. Let us put the Jew to ransom, since the leopard will not change his spots, and a Jew he will continue to be. |
|
A Jew in Jerusalem did not belong to the same society as a Hellenist in Caesarea, only a hundred miles away. |
|
Haman can find no gust in all the sensualities of the Persian Court, because a poor despicable Jew denies his abaisance. |
|
|
Alas, his return trip to Good Jew shul went no better than his first. |
|
In 2006, Shimon Ben-Chaim, a 35-year-old Jew, threw a pig's head wrapped in a kaffiyah into the mosque compound, sparking a wave of protests. |
|
Grant Berry proclaims a message of reconnection of Jew and Gentile in his book The Ezekiel Generation. |
|
Oh, barfolicious! Accusing a gay person of heterophobia is like accusing a Jew of Naziphobia. |
|
To this the Jew agreed, and the two went together to the great hall, in which the kadi was administering justice. |
|
But by the help of a learned Jew in Lincoln he found out the true nature of the discovery which had dawned on him. |
|
Cruelty to a Jew is as odious as cruelty to any human being, whether that cruelty be moral in the form of insult, or physical. |
|
His father, who is from Trinidad, is of Portuguese and Italian descent, and his mother is an English Jew. |
|
According to Maimonides, any Jew who rejects even one of these principles would be considered an apostate and a heretic. |
|
As for Mendelssohn's oratorio St Paul, Heine did not want to find fault with its Christianness because its composer was by birth a Jew. |
|
Rabbinical Judaism maintains that a Jew, whether by birth or conversion, is a Jew forever. |
|
Scotland was under the jurisdiction of the Jew Bill, enacted in 1753, but repealed the next year. |
|
Its Law of Return grants the right of citizenship to any Jew who requests it. |
|
Penzance railway station is at the eastern end of Market Jew Street and close to the harbour. |
|
The movement said it will give 2,000 Shekels to any Jew who will be arrested for performing the Talmudic rituals inside the holy yards of al-Aqsa. |
|
It is widely recognized that the attributive use of the noun Jew, in phrases such as Jew lawyer or Jew ethics, is both vulgar and highly offensive. |
|
Some people, however, have become so wary of this construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of Jew as a noun, a practice that carries risks of its own. |
|
The unrent veil was a symbol of darkness and difficulty. To the Jew, it shut out his view of heavenly things, and obstructed his way of approach to them. |
|
To the Orthodox Jew, halakha is a guide, God's Law, governing the structure of daily life from the moment he or she wakes up to the moment he or she goes to sleep. |
|
In February 1914, Cardozo was designated to the New York Court of Appeals under the Amendment of 1899, and was reportedly the first Jew to serve on the Court of Appeals. |
|
|
You can't be a table and a chair. You're either a Jew or a gentile. |
|
Another legend, as recorded in Flores Historiarum is that Joseph is in fact the Wandering Jew, a man cursed by Jesus to walk the Earth until the Second Coming. |
|
In the kibbutz archive, the kibbutznik is the archon, the Arab is the outsider, and the Moroccan Jew Abutbul is an outsider, too, but slightly less so. |
|
In its most basic form, this broad religious definition of a Sephardi refers to any Jew, of any ethnic background, who follows the customs and traditions of Sepharad. |
|
Examples from Classical Literature
That fellow, the cousin Galloway, changes his place of abode like the Wandering Jew. |
|
The alcayde set a watch for them, which was discovered, and the Jew escaped. |
|
Of the details, the only one the Jew actually coupled with a thought was the kaaba. |
|
For that very reason, in spite of his abrupt anti-judaism, we must without doubt regard the Author as a born Jew. |
|
The idea of the transcendence of God is seen to be growing in the mind of the Jew. |
|
Now, there is no unpopularity to-day in lauding a Jew or a Greek or an Irishman. |
|
The family affection of the Jew, his kindness to his kindred, have become proverbial. |
|
The Jew does dare it, and all he asks of his critics is fairness, impartiality, justice. |
|
The serf persecutes the Jew because he is himself persecuted by the nobility. |
|
Now that the Jew blasphemer has gone, let the sacrifice be offered, as is decreed. |
|
The Jew was captured in his own house, dragged forth, and bludgeoned to death. |
|
This may be so, yet imperceptibly the cabala has moulded the mind of the Jew. |
|
A reformed Jew can not be a materialist, though he may strip religion of its symbolisms. |
|
Wandering Jew will also thrive, and the canary creeper grows as well in town as in the country. |
|
As the Jew said this, he passed a bag containing gold into the hands of chakra. |
|
An Orthodox Jew, no matter how poor, must have his fish every Friday evening. |
|
All this must have seemed the veriest irony when addressed to an outcast Jew. |
|
Being an Orthodox Jew, he naturally wore a long, black levitical coat which concealed his swinging woollen fringes. |
|
Compared with him as a cosmopolite, the Wandering Jew would have seemed a mere hermit. |
|
And any disguise you may think of, that too I could procure from a costumier, a Jew I know. |
|
|
In others he denounces it as rank Judaism, the Jew having at that time become for him the whipping boy for all modern humanity. |
|
But rather to his annoyance he learned that it had been sent to Laura by the old Galician Jew in the shop around the corner. |
|
Weisbach gives us the best description of the Sephardim Jew as to-day found at Constantinople. |
|
Say, Myrtle, on the dead, he spends money just like a young Jew trying to be white! |
|
Because the man who did it, is a wicked brute who by accident is a Jew, and might just as well have been a goy. |
|
And then Wagner turns towards the plastic art, and examines the position of the Jew under that art aspect. |
|
If Congress should declare the first day of the week holy, it would not convince the Jew nor the Sabbatarian. |
|
Some say his father was an Englishman, some say a Jew, and some say his mother was a Gipsy. |
|
Barabas the Jew, and Faustus the conjurer, are offsprings of a mind which at least delighted to dally with interdicted subjects. |
|
A Jew, when he drags his dying limbs to the valley of Jehoshaphat, he can believe. |
|
I'm sure my god-father must have been the Wandering Jew, or a king's messenger. |
|
By this time everybody in the car was staring at the Jew and the dudish fellow beside whom Solomon had taken a seat. |
|
The dress of the dwarfish Jew was not, however, favourable to this expedient. |
|
The words are not the words of a Midianite at all, but such as a Jew would be more apt to utter. |
|
The Jew was exhausted, hardly breathing, but that did not prevent the feldsher from cupping him twelve times. |
|
The Jew, often acquiring wealth in commerce, might become valuable property of some feudatory lord. |
|
Gamaliel, the Jew, would lend her as much as she would require on this gem. |
|
I thought he must have been as weary of his journeyings as the Wandering Jew. |
|
The volume begins, logically, with two essays that locate Levi geographically and culturally as a twentieth-century Turinese Jew. |
|
Any Jew that deviated from the Levitical law was stoned to death and so on. |
|
|
Ellen, who is a Jew, is brave, when the soldiers come into Annemarie's bedroom where she was sleeping and she pretends that she is Lise. |
|
I remember when my mammy sold pictures of him in Fort Smith for a Jew. |
|
Half Christendom worships a Jewess, and the other half a Jew. |
|
There is no class of liar so abysmal as the East-end criminal Jew. |
|
He lives cheaply, crowds, and underbids even the Jew in the sweatshop. |
|
The Jew is converted, and understands all I have told him, very nearly, if not altogether, as well as myself. |
|
And were all this otherwise, wouldst thou have us show a worse conscience than an unbeliever, a Hebrew Jew? |
|
She has been drinking,' thought the Jew, cooly, 'or perhaps she is only miserable. |
|
Even baptism did not manumit him unless the owner were a Moor or a Jew. |
|
Especially, you cannot make a man of business out of a genius, any more than money out of a Jew, or the best nutmegs out of pine-knots. |
|
He now began to call himself Matthias, and claimed to be a Jew. |
|
The Jew might not uncover the body in the face of the temple. |
|
Yet, Ssskind von Trimberg was at once a Jew and a minnesinger. |
|
He had been born a Mohammedan, but secretly she brought him up as a Jew. |
|
Even this day's pageant had not proceeded without the consent of the despised Jew, who furnished the means. |
|
That's something like the thing that happened to the Wandering Jew. |
|
Why had he pitched upon his perpetual, strange note of the Wandering Jew? |
|
A man with a thousand friends is worse off than the Wandering Jew. |
|
Egad, its like the Wandering Jew, and the what do you call 'em, vit. |
|
Like the people who found the elixir of life, or the Wandering Jew? |
|
|
All these regulations, of course, seem privileges to the Orthodox Jew. |
|
He had the head of an agnostic and the heart of an Orthodox Jew. |
|
You were a Jew when we found you insensible on the road near Poltava. |
|
The undertaker was a little fat Jew with curly black hair, long and greasy, in black, with a large diamond ring on a podgy finger. |
|
In prefigurement of the Wandering Jew, each day he moved on. |
|
There are always struggles in a man's soul between the outer, corporeal, egoistic part, called Gentile, and the inner part, called Jew. |
|
Was he your companion, the man with a hurt arm who looked like a Jew? |
|
From that moment on, no Jew dared to question the authority of Moses. |
|
Up under the wooden ceiling there were little half-windows with white curtains, and pots of geraniums and wandering Jew in the deep sills. |
|
As an anonymous time-travelling planet hopper he fits the stereotype of the eternal wandering Jew, doomed never to return to his homeland. |
|
Bloomberg Discovers America, the Depression-era adventures of a wandering Jew in the Deep South. |
|
Has Nina your leave to betroth herself to the Jew, Trendellsohn? |
|
He went to the monastery school as a Jew, in caftan and curls. |
|
A hideous Jew, in the most amazing waistcoat I ever beheld in my life, was standing at the entrance, smoking a vile cigar. |
|
So to supply his friend's need Antonio decides to borrow the money, and soon a Jew named Shylock is found who is willing to lend it. |
|
Certainly not,' replied the Jew, reciprocating the grin with which Charley put the question. |
|
Thus urged, the Jew began to ascend the steep and narrow steps which led up to the gallery. |
|
Then he took up a pen and wrote his name at the foot of the assignment which the Jew had prepared. |
|
And you are a demagogue, and a demigod, and a Jew, and a Mephisto! |
|
They were not sure whether she were most Saracen, gipsy, or Jew. |
|
|
But Indians have one peculiarity that will baffle even the shrewdest Jew. |
|
Five years later David Salomons, a Jew, was admitted to the shrievalty. |
|
Besides, there is a dash of Shylock in every Jew that ever breathed. |
|
There was a little Hungarian Jew, an ardent follower of Matisse. |
|
Is it the Immaculate Conception that the Jew can not accept? |
|
All these things profit me nothing while I see Mordecai the Jew sitting in the gate. |
|
He should have tried mustachios and a pair of military trousers, my dear,' said the Jew. |
|
There, Damian, spurn this Jew from the gate shoot him dead if he oppose or turn again. |
|
This, as the Jew had told him, seemed very simple to the janissary. |
|
I'll teach a set of lawyers to come playing the Jew to my young men. |
|
This was the first time he omitted to call them the Jew and Jewess. |
|
My-Boots understood, and again set to abusing the old Jew Colombe. |
|
It is impossible to describe the extremity of terror which seized upon the Jew at this information, and seemed at once to overpower his whole faculties. |
|
Baron Rothschild's private secretary, a largenosed Jew in tight boots, affably beamed upon the world, as if his master's name crowned him with a golden halo. |
|
For some reason or other, the house was crowded that night, and the fat Jew manager who met them at the door was beaming from ear to ear with an oily tremulous smile. |
|
If Heaven bore with the whole nation of stiff-necked unbelievers for more years than a layman can number, we may endure the presence of one Jew for a few hours. |
|
I can bear the reproaches of a loser, even when that loser is a Jew. |
|
The Jew then looked at the glowing furnace, over which he was presently to be stretched, and seeing no chance of his tormentor's relenting, his resolution gave way. |
|
He then started up, and after repeating his matins, and adjusting his dress, he left it, and entered that of Isaac the Jew, lifting the latch as gently as he could. |
|
The old Jew stood grinning at the doorway of the dusty greenroom, making elaborate speeches about us both, while we stood looking at each other like children. |
|
|
If he hasn't peached, and is committed, there's no fear till he comes out again,' said Mr.He has not peached so far,' said the Jew as he pursued his occupation. |
|
Still further, the Jew told them that if they would sell it to him, as it would make a magnificent pendant for earrings, he would give five hundred pistoles for it. |
|
He called upon his chamberlain as he gave the signal for retiring from the lists, and commanded him instantly to gallop to Ashby, and seek out Isaac the Jew. |
|
The infidel Jew it was merit with heaven to deal with him as I did, else wherefore are men canonized who dip their hands in the blood of Saracens? |
|
My house is a decayed house, and the Jew squats an the window sill the owner, Spavined in some estaminet of Antwerp, Blistered in Brussels, patched and peeled in London. |
|
|