Jew
Такође погледајте: jew
Језици (1)
Систем
Alternative forms
- Joo (humorous, informal form)
Etymology
From Средњи Енглески Jew, Giu, Giw, Ju, from Стари Француски juiu, Giu, gyu, from Латински iūdaeus (“Judean (i.e. Jew)”), from Антички Грчки Ἰουδαῖος (Ioudaîos), from Хебрејски יְהוּדִי (Yehudi). Дублети of Yehudi. Displaced Стари Енглески Iūdēisċ.
Pronunciation
Noun
Jew (plural Jews)
- An adherent of Judaism.
- Both Jews and Muslims refrain from eating pork.
- Синоним: Judaist
- Антоними: gentile, goy
- Hypernymи: Abrahamist, Judeo-Christian, monotheist
- Hyponymи: halakhist, Orthodox Jew, rabbi
- A member or descendant of the Jewish people.
- Many Jews eat bagels.
- Синоним: Thesaurus:Jew
- Антоними: gentile, goy
- Hypernymи: Hebrew, Israelite
- Hyponymи: Ashkenazi, Jewess, Mizrahi, Romaniote, Sephardi
- Шаблон:RQ:Shakespeare Merchant of Venice
- 1926, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, The Land of Mist[1]:
- The wrongs of a Jew are not lightly forgotten, for the race can both love and hate.
- Lua грешка in Модул:quote at line 2964: Parameter "place" is not used by this template..
- (derogatory) A miserly or greedy person; a cheapskate.
- 2010, Matthew S. Hiley, Hubris Falls, page 111:
- “Jesus, Williams, you're such a Jew,” Jimmy said in an annoyed, high-pitched tone. “Have you ever just paid a check, or do you always make an ass of yourself?”
- (naval, slang) A ship's tailor.
Usage notes
- There is an archaic plural Jewes.
- The Jewish community is often defined as having a common religion, culture, identity, and ethnicity, but individual Jews do not necessarily share all of these; therefore, a person might be a Jew by one standpoint but not by another. Additionally, there are some religious groups that identify themselves as part of Judaism, but that other Jewish groups might not; hence, use of the term Jew often depends on the speaker's opinions. See Who is a Jew?.
- The noun Jew is not colloquially taken to be a slur, and the overwhelming majority of English-speaking Jews use the noun Jew to identify themselves. That said, it has become offensive for historical reasons to use the word Jew attributively, in modifying another noun (as in "Jew lawyer"); the adjective Jewish is preferred for this purpose. Additionally, the derived verbs jew and jew down are considered offensive, as they reflect stereotypes considered offensive.
Coordinate terms
- (religionists) Baha'i, Buddhist, Christian, Confucianist, deist, Druid, Eckist, heathen, Hindu, Jain, Jew, Muslim, pagan, Rastafarian, Raëlian, Shintoist, Sikh, Taoist, Unitarian Universalist, Wiccan, Zoroastrian (Категорија: en:Религија) [edit]
Derived terms
- anti-Jew
- crypto-Jew
- edjewcation
- electric Jew
- jew, Jew (verb)
- Jewcraine
- Jewdar
- Jewdom
- Jewey
- Jewface
- Jewfucker
- Jewhatred
- Jew-hatred
- Jewie
- Jewification
- Jewify
- Jewish
- Jewkraine
- Jewland
- Jewling
- jewlover
- Jew nose
- Jewry
- Jew's frankincense
- Jew's harp
- Jew's harpist
- Jew's house
- Jew's mallow
- Jew's myrtle
- Jew's pitch
- Jewsploitation
- Jewsrael
- jewstone
- Jew's-trump
- Jewtube
- Jew World Order
- Jewy
- Jew York
- pro-Jew
- wandering Jew, Wandering Jew
Descendants
- Sranan Tongo: Dyu
Translations
person of the Jewish faith
|
member or descendant of the Jewish people
|
Proper noun
- A презиме..
Verb
Jew (third-person singular simple present Jews, present participle Jewing, simple past and past participle Jewed)
- (chiefly offensive, transitive) To make (more) Jewish.
- 1991, E. Sicher, The Jewing of Skylock: Wesker's The Merchant” (MLS 21 (1991), 57–69)
- 2010 август 31, William N. West, Renaissance Drama 38, Northwestern University Press, →ISBN, page 111:
- Portia's “Jewing” of Shylock has long been noticed by many critics. For an early example see, for example, the anonymous essay “shylock the Jew-ed,” Temple Bar 45 (1875): 65–70. 45. These words have potentially “commercial” etymologies, […]
- 2014 август 19, Noach Dzmura, Balancing on the Mechitza: Transgender in Jewish Community, North Atlantic Books, →ISBN, page 48:
- Queering the Jew and Jewing the Queer [by] Ri J. Turner. Editor's Note: Interlaced with personal narrative, Ri Turner's essay contributes to an ongoing discussion within Jewish gender studies concerning the relationship between Jewishness and queerness and factors the term genderqueer into both sides of the equation.
- (offensive) To haggle or swindle in order to obtain a better deal from.
- 2009 август 1, Scott Gann, For a Minute, I Lost Myself: The Past and Present of a Schizophrenic, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 455:
- I just feel like you are Jewing me out of my money. I never asked you to give me anything the entire time that you were not working. Your mom told me that you got a lot of money from the insurance that Warren gave you.
- 2013 децембар 13, Frank Meeink, Jody Roy, Autobiography of a Recovering Skinhead: The Frank Meeink Story as Told to Jody M. Roy, Ph.D., Hawthorne Books, →ISBN:
- Then that bastard Keith showed up and did something even worse than Jewing me out of my pay: he blew the living freaking crap out of the one and only stereotype I still had to hold on to. He thanked me for my hard work, […]
- 2020 март 31, Julius Bailey, Racism, Hypocrisy, and Bad Faith: A Moral Challenge to the America I Love, Broadview Press, →ISBN:
- In the neighborhood I grew up in, it was common for haggling over price to include the admonition “stop Jewing me!” Even as children, we would say this. It goes without saying that this was an insensitive term […]
Further reading
- Hanks, Patrick, editor (2003), “Jew”, in Dictionary of American Family Names[3], volume 2, New York City: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 250.
- Шаблон:R:en:Forebears
Anagrams
- jwé (alphagram ejw)
Middle English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Стари Француски juiu, from Латински iūdaeus, from Антички Грчки Ἰουδαῖος (Ioudaîos), from Хебрејски יְהוּדִי (y'hudí); Дублети of Judew.
Pronunciation
Noun
Jew (plural Jewes)
- Jew (member of the Jewish people)
- Jew (adherent of Judaism)
- Israelite (inhabitant of Biblical Israel)
Declension
Related terms
Descendants
References
- “Jeu” in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.