- the day
before Yom Kippur. The
Hebrew common greeting on Rosh
Hashanah is
Shanah Tovah (Hebrew: שנה טובה;
pronounced [ˈʃona ˈtɔ͡ɪva] in many Ashke****c communities...
-
Shanah Tova (Hebrew: שנה טובה) is a
Hebrew children's song
written by
Levin Kipnis and
composed by
Nahum Nardi. It was
first published in 1923 in Berlin...
-
speaks of the four judgement-days of the
pilgrim festivals and Rosh ha-
Shanah (1:2); of the six
months in
which the
messengers of the
Sanhedrin announce...
- the
Aramaic equivalent of the
Hebrew root
shanah (שנה),
which also is the root word of Mishnah. The verb
shanah means "to
repeat [what one was taught]"...
- "BaShana HaBa'a" (Hebrew: בשנה הבאה, "Next Year") is a 1970
Israeli song with
music by
Nurit Hirsch and
lyrics by Ehud Manor. The song was
first performed...
- L'Shana Haba'ah B'Yerushalayim (Hebrew: לְשָׁנָה הַבָּאָה בִּירוּשָלָיִם), lit. "Next year in Jerusalem", is a
phrase that is
often sung at the end of...
- rule is
known in
Hebrew as "lo adu rosh" (לא אד״ו ראש), i.e., "Rosh [ha-
Shanah,
first day of the year] is not Sunday, Wednesday, or Friday" (as the Hebrew...
- 800
stories and 600 poems.
Kipnis also
wrote songs in Hebrew,
including Shanah Tova. He also
wrote children's
books in Yiddish,
publishing a collection...
- on the 15th day of the
Hebrew month of Shevat. It is also
called Rosh Ha
Shanah La'Ilanot (ראש השנה לאילנות),
literally "New Year of the Trees". In contemporary...
- This page is
subject to the
extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Palestinian stone-throwing
refers to a
Palestinian practice...