- Rosh
Hashanah (Hebrew: רֹאשׁ הַשָּׁנָה, Rōʾš hašŠānā, lit. 'head of the year') is the New Year in Judaism. The
biblical name for this
holiday is Yom Teruah...
- Rosh
Hashanah (Hebrew: רֹאשׁ הַשָּׁנָה) is the name of a text of
Jewish law
originating in the
Mishnah which formed the
basis of
tractates in both the...
-
calendar date on
which a
holiday will fall. Sa****ay,
September 11: Rosh
HaShanah* Monday,
September 20: Yom Kippur* Sa****ay,
September 25: Sukkot* Sa****ay...
-
nonviolence (al-la `unf), and an
explicit Israeli policy of
using "the iron fist" (
ha-yad hazaqah,
barzel Yisrael), which, in the
latter instance,
marked to first...
-
Tractate in this
Order which details the laws of that
respective festival. (e.g. they
would learn Tractate Rosh
Hashanah on the
holiday of Rosh
Hashanah)....
- "Appendix II: Baal
HaMaor's
Interpretation of 20b and its
Relevance to the Dateline" in
Talmud Bavli,
Schottenstein Edition,
Tractate Rosh
HaShanah,
Mesorah Publications...
-
repeats the
Torah (Deuteronomy 1:3). Rosh
HaShanah: also
called New Year of kings. Rosh
HaShanah is also
called Yom
HaZikaron ("Remembrance Day"),
because on...
- Rosh
Hashanah L'Ma'sar
Behemah (Hebrew: ראש השנה למעשר בהמה "New Year for
Tithing Animals") or Rosh
Hashanah LaBehemah (Hebrew: ראש השנה לבהמה "New Year...
- days
between Rosh
HaShanah and Yom
HaKippurim" -
while among Geonim we also find "the ten days from the
beginning of
Tishrei to Yom
HaKippurim," "the first...
- נוֹרָאִים, Yāmīm Nōrāʾīm)
consist of: strictly, the
holidays of Rosh
Hashanah ("Jewish New Year") and Yom
Kippur ("Day of Atonement"); by extension,...