- beard.
Women invariably cover their hair –
usually with a snood, or a
mitpachat (Hebrew for "kerchief") – and
often wear sandals;
their skirts are longer...
-
Ritual purity in
Judaism Leviticus 15:19-30, 18:19, 20:18
Yaakov Emden,
Mitpachat Sefarim 4:174 "Niddah". sefaria.org.
Retrieved November 4, 2019. v t e...
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Shalom האשה ... שלום Ha'ishah
Batra האשה בתרא | Ha'ishah
Shehalekhah Balah Vetzaratah האשה שהלכה בעלה וצרתה
Jacob Emden,
Mitpachat Sefarim 4:174 v t e...
- (United States)
Jewish women refer to
their head ties as a
tichel or
mitpachat. In Nigeria, Gele is are
Nigerian Yoruba style of
headdresses which are...
-
husband or
close family members. Such
covering (known as the
tichel or
mitpachat) is
common practice among Orthodox Jewish women.
During the time of Moses...
-
works published in the Hit'abbekut of one of his pupils. Altona, 1762.
Mitpachat Sefarim, in two parts: the
first part
showing that part of the
Zohar is...
-
kippot for the
temporary use of
visitors who have not
brought one. A
mitpachat, or
tichel in Yiddish, is a
headscarf worn by some
religious Jewish women...
-
wrapped around the head.
Biblical references include: Hebrew: מטפחת
mitpachat (Ruth 3:15; marg., "sheet" or "apron;" R.V., "mantle"). In
Isaiah 3:22...
- com". "Zohar, Ki
Teitzei 1:4". www.sefaria.org.
Retrieved 2024-08-12. "
Mitpachat Sefarim 4". www.sefaria.org.
Retrieved 2024-08-12. סיני (in Hebrew). Vol...