Definition of Karait. Meaning of Karait. Synonyms of Karait

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Karait. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Karait and, of course, Karait synonyms and on the right images related to the word Karait.

Definition of Karait

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Karaite
Karaite Ka"ra*ite, n. [Heb. q[=a]r[=a] to read.] (Eccl. Hist.) A sect of Jews who adhere closely to the letter of the Scriptures, rejecting the oral law, and allowing the Talmud no binding authority; -- opposed to the Rabbinists.

Meaning of Karait from wikipedia

- Look up Karaite or Karaim in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Karaite or Qaraite may refer to: Karaite Judaism, a Jewish religious movement that rejects...
- father's inheritance. For this reason, Buldeo s****s a snake charmer named Karait who owns Kaa the python, in order to kill Mowgli, pretending to use the...
- young dust-brown snake named Karait threatens to bite the family's child, Teddy. This infuriates Rikki into challenging Karait, unaware the smaller snake...
- The Karai, Qarai, or Qara ("Black") Tartars are a Turkic tribe found in Khorasan, Azerbaijan, Kerman, and Fars. According to Encyclopedia Iranica, the...
- Keraites, alternatively Kerait, or Kereyit, in some earlier texts also as Karait or Karaites. One common theory sees the name as a cognate with the Mongolian...
- name is derived from "chuchunder", a term used for his species in India. Karait (common krait) The Coppersmith (coppersmith barbet) The White Seal Kotick...
- Armenian, Russian, Slovak, Ukrainian and Jewish; and 4 ethnic minoritiesKarait, Lemko, Roma and Tartar. Pisarek, Walery (2009). "The relationship between...
- cubs Hathi * – an Indian elephant Ikki * – a porcupine Kaa * – a python Karait * – a krait Kotick ^ – a white seal Mang * – a bat Mor * – an Indian peafowl...
- "to encircle"—as in a "band". The common name "krait" is from Hindi (करैत karait), which is perhaps ultimately derived from the Sanskrit word (काल kāla)...
- non-Jew who has yet to fully convert to Judaism, and once converted to Karaitism, is no longer called ger. In the Talmud, ger is used in two senses: ger...