-
versions of the Telisha:
Telisha ketana (תְּלִישָא קְטַנָּה) and
Telisha gedola (תְּלִישָא גְּדוֹלָה), the
latter of
which has a
longer melody. The Telisha...
- (18th of Elul, 140 BC).
Council of
Jamnia Knesset Sanhedrin "Kneset ha-
Gedola ancient Jewish ****embly".
Encyclopaedia Britannica. Maimonides' Introduction...
- mesivta, and undergraduate-level
students learn in a beit
midrash or
yeshiva gedola (Hebrew: ישיבה גדולה, lit. 'large yeshiva' or 'great yeshiva'). In Israel...
-
Yeshiva Gedola and
Mesivta of
Carteret (Hebrew: ישיבה תפארת יהודה אריה) informally, "YGOC", also
called Yeshiva Tiferes Yehuda Aryeh, is a
yeshiva and...
- A
terumah (Hebrew: תְּרוּמָה), the
priestly dues or
heave offering, is a type of
offering in Judaism. The word is
generally used for
offerings to God,...
- hours)
after halachic noontime. This
earliest time is
referred to as
mincha gedola ("large mincha").
According to the
Shulchan Aruch, it is
preferably recited...
-
Yeshiva Gedola of P****aic is an
advanced yeshiva in the P****aic Park
neighborhood of P****aic, New
Jersey catering to post-high-school-age men. Founded...
-
Yeshiva gedolah,
known in the
United States as bais medrash, is a type of yeshiva, a
Jewish educational institution,
which is
aimed at post-secondary students...
- ben yomo. The
symbol of the
Karne para is that of the
Telisha ketana and
gedola together. The melody, likewise, is that of
these two more
common cantillation...
- the
Hebrew Bible. The
pazer is
generally followed by a
Telisha ketana or
gedola; on rare
occasions when it is
followed by
another Pazer. The
Pazer is used...