Yiddish的意思和读音

Yiddish

: [ˈjɪdɪʃ] : ['jɪdɪʃ]

adj.;〈

n.

Yiddishn.

1.a Jewish language, originally used in central and eastern Europe, based on a form of German with words from Hebrew and several modern languages

n.1.,

adj.1.2.

n.1.a language spoken mainly by Jewish people who come from Central and Eastern EuropeYiddish is a mixture of Hebrew and an old form of German.

adj.1.relating to the Yiddish language and culture

1.

2.使(Yiddish),(Latino) …

3. yes Yiddish Yoruba ...

4.Yiddish "Esterke" (1940/41) Aaron Zeitlin,Shalo…

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1."Moby-Dick" was written not by Herman Melville but by Herman Melbrooks, who wrote most of it in Yiddish on the boat over from Coney Island.“··

2.The Soviet authorities launched a rival Yiddish-speaking Jewish homeland, Birobidzhan, in a desolate corner of the Russian far east.——

3.Poldek, realistically, knows enough Yiddish to follow a sentence or two.

4.Personally, I answer to the latter question with a quote from linguist Max Weinreich, who wrote a multivolume history of Yiddish.(Yiddish)·(MaxWeinreich)

5.She was four feet ten and spoke an odd combination of Polish, Yiddish, French, and English.

6.The lively Elena Sarashevskaya edits the Yiddish section of the main local newspaper, the Birobidzhan Shtern, though she isn't Jewish.·——《

7.The novel manages to evoke the tradition of Yiddish folklore while maintaining Malamud's training in classic literature and philosophy.

8.Tradesmen and Jews from the countryside would have spoken Yiddish, as they do in the film.

9.To adapt a Yiddish expression about God: If an intelligent designer lived on Earth, people would break his windows.

10.After the second world war, she glimpsed his murderousness: she overheard him ordering the killing of a Yiddish actor.