- shnayder
- shnayder(s)(m.) tailor
Yiddish-English dictionary (in roman letters). 2013.
Yiddish-English dictionary (in roman letters). 2013.
Yankev Shternberg — (in English language texts occasionally referred to as Jacob Sternberg; yi. יעקבֿ שטערנבערג; ru. Яков Моисеевич Штернберг) (1890, Lipcani, Bessarabia 1973, Moscow, USSR) was a Yiddish theater director, teacher of theater, playwright, avant garde… … Wikipedia
Bucharest Yiddish Studio Theater — The Bucharest Yiddish Studio Theater (Yiddish: Bukareshter Idishe Teater Studie , BITS ) was a short lived, highly experimental Yiddish theater founded in Bucharest, Romania in 1930, under the leadership of Jacob Sternberg.Their first production … Wikipedia
Kyrgyzstan at the 2000 Summer Olympics — Infobox Olympics Kyrgyzstan games=2000 Summer competitors=48 (35 men and 13 women) sports=9 flagbearer=Raatbek Sanatbayev officials= gold=0 silver=0 bronze=1 total=1 rank=70Kyrgyzstan competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia.… … Wikipedia
Statistical semantics — is the study of how the statistical patterns of human word usage can be used to figure out what people mean, at least to a level sufficient for information access (Furnas, 2006). How can we figure out what words mean, simply by looking at… … Wikipedia
YIDDISH (LANGUE, LITTÉRATURE ET THÉÂTRE) — Le yiddish est la principale langue utilisée au cours du dernier millénaire par les Juifs ashkénazes, c’est à dire les groupes juifs établis en Allemagne et en France depuis le temps de Charlemagne, en Bohême, en Pologne, en Lituanie, en Ukraine … Encyclopédie Universelle
MANGER, ITZIK — (1901–1969), Yiddish poet, dramatist, novelist. Born in Czernowitz, his first poem was published in 1921 in the Romanian Yiddish journal Kultur, and his first book of poems was Shtern Oyfn Dakh ( Stars on the Roof, 1929), where he combined… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SHALOM ALEICHEM — (Sholem Aleykhem; narrative persona and subsequent pseudonym of Sholem Rabinovitsh (Rabinovitz); 1859–1916), Yiddish prose writer and humorist born on February 18, 1859 (old style; March 2, new style), in Pereyaslav (today: Pereyaslav… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
TAILORING — The Hebrew word for tailor, חַיָּט, first appears in mishnaic and midrashic literature. Tailors are mentioned more frequently in the Talmud (Shab. 1:3, 11b; BK 10:10), and Jewish tailors were to be found in Muslim countries at this period, but… … Encyclopedia of Judaism