释义 |
Definition of Hebraic in English: Hebraicadjective hɪˈbreɪɪkhiˈbreɪɪk Of Hebrew or the Hebrews. 希伯来语的;希伯来人的 a student of Hebraic religious literature 希伯来宗教文献研究者。 Example sentencesExamples - In the case of Yiddish, the grammar is mainly Germanic, but the vocabulary and certain other features of the language draw on Hebraic, Romance, and Slavic sources as well.
- Whilst Judaism refuses to acknowledge any power that might work contrary to a single, perfect God's plan, there is nevertheless a tradition of evil spirits in Hebraic culture.
- In her work there is a strong logic related to meanings, where texts are taken from languages as diverse as Russian, Arabic, Korean and Japanese, but are often reflections of Hebraic script.
- While still young, he moved to Odessa, where he received an ‘enlightened’ modern education and was part of the vibrant Zionist and Hebraic intellectual culture then centered in that city.
- The Hebraic worldview - or what I have termed in other I writings biblical myth - shapes the way we understand and live our lives in at least three important ways.
- In this respect, they embody the ideal that Matthew Arnold posited as a mix of Hebraic law and Hellenic light.
- That is a side of Christian thinking not unlike the ancient Hebraic prohibition against any art in competition with God's creation.
- The author should be commended for having contributed immeasurably to understanding the ancient relationships of other peoples, religions and the Hebraic culture.
- The concept of the fixity and inflexibility of worldly ‘things’ was as foreign to Hebraic thought as it is endemic to our own.
- They also disturb the structured symmetrical balance of Hebraic paired reasoning in the concluding argument.
- Her concrete and unwavering declarations provide a foil for her husband's quavering and uncertain struggle to integrate both Hellenic and Hebraic parts of his identity.
- Their talks trace Babylonian cultural history, and its Hebraic counterpart.
- They, too, now need a better American balance between ethnic roots and civic forums, between Hebraic covenants and Enlightenment freedoms.
- This so-called ‘Christian’ articulation of presence, like that of the complementary Jewish tradition, emerges out of a Hebraic perception in which one does not think about God, but thinks with God.
- You're thankfully left free to wonder just what, if anything, this Scottish experiment in Hebraic modality means.
- The Hebraic people, ancient and abandoned, had always looked for refuge, had never found anything but desolate deserts.
- Milton showers his poem with thousands of allusions to Hebraic, medieval, and renaissance culture, and his syntax may strike a modern reader as twisted.
- The beginnings of Islam were founded on the ability to synthesize Greek, Byzantine, Persian and Hebraic knowledge bases and to work them into something new.
- At the end, David lives one last day with Monica and she bakes him a cake on which there are seven candles (a very significant Hebraic number).
- Instead, he attempted to transform the Zionist movement by articulating what he saw as its unique historic mission: the realization of a Hebraic humanism.
Derivativesadverb In 1997 she took part in an Israel-In-Depth study tour, and was also involved in a class to equip people to teach Hebraically. Example sentencesExamples - That is why they built a school system that teaches Hebrew as a spoken language and graduates of the school are Hebraically fluent.
- They explore the Jewish origins of the Scriptures & teach how to study this Hebraically!
- Dates on the Hebrew calendar are recognized Hebraically.
- We have to prepare Jewish professionals who can address the full range of our Reform constituency - those who are highly committed as well as less committed; those who are Hebraically knowledgeable as well as those who know little; those who are more traditional in their practice as well as those who are less so.
- Let me digress once more, for the sake of those dear readers who may be Hebraically challenged.
- It's the most important subject for one reason: it's here that students learn to think Hebraically.
- To be truly biblical is to think and act Hebraically, as Jesus did during his incarnation.
- He's perceived as a demon, and we see him so Hebraically.
- They are unable to study the Bible Hebraically.
- Just a little sidetrack, since it is biblical and Hebraically patriarchal, wouldn't the home be a good start to practice some of the lost truths and celebrate some of the feasts of God within the communal life of family?
- In the process, we also learn how to think Hebraically.
OriginVia Christian Latin from late Greek Hebraikos, from Hebraios (see Hebrew). Rhymesalcaic, algebraic, Aramaic, archaic, choleraic, Cyrenaic, deltaic, formulaic, Judaic, Mishnaic, Mithraic, mosaic, Pharisaic, prosaic, Ptolemaic, Romaic, spondaic, stanzaic, trochaic Definition of Hebraic in US English: Hebraicadjectivehiˈbreɪɪkhēˈbrāik Of Hebrew or the Hebrews. 希伯来语的;希伯来人的 a student of Hebraic religious literature 希伯来宗教文献研究者。 Example sentencesExamples - The Hebraic people, ancient and abandoned, had always looked for refuge, had never found anything but desolate deserts.
- You're thankfully left free to wonder just what, if anything, this Scottish experiment in Hebraic modality means.
- The concept of the fixity and inflexibility of worldly ‘things’ was as foreign to Hebraic thought as it is endemic to our own.
- At the end, David lives one last day with Monica and she bakes him a cake on which there are seven candles (a very significant Hebraic number).
- While still young, he moved to Odessa, where he received an ‘enlightened’ modern education and was part of the vibrant Zionist and Hebraic intellectual culture then centered in that city.
- Their talks trace Babylonian cultural history, and its Hebraic counterpart.
- The author should be commended for having contributed immeasurably to understanding the ancient relationships of other peoples, religions and the Hebraic culture.
- Milton showers his poem with thousands of allusions to Hebraic, medieval, and renaissance culture, and his syntax may strike a modern reader as twisted.
- This so-called ‘Christian’ articulation of presence, like that of the complementary Jewish tradition, emerges out of a Hebraic perception in which one does not think about God, but thinks with God.
- The Hebraic worldview - or what I have termed in other I writings biblical myth - shapes the way we understand and live our lives in at least three important ways.
- They, too, now need a better American balance between ethnic roots and civic forums, between Hebraic covenants and Enlightenment freedoms.
- In the case of Yiddish, the grammar is mainly Germanic, but the vocabulary and certain other features of the language draw on Hebraic, Romance, and Slavic sources as well.
- Her concrete and unwavering declarations provide a foil for her husband's quavering and uncertain struggle to integrate both Hellenic and Hebraic parts of his identity.
- They also disturb the structured symmetrical balance of Hebraic paired reasoning in the concluding argument.
- Whilst Judaism refuses to acknowledge any power that might work contrary to a single, perfect God's plan, there is nevertheless a tradition of evil spirits in Hebraic culture.
- In this respect, they embody the ideal that Matthew Arnold posited as a mix of Hebraic law and Hellenic light.
- In her work there is a strong logic related to meanings, where texts are taken from languages as diverse as Russian, Arabic, Korean and Japanese, but are often reflections of Hebraic script.
- The beginnings of Islam were founded on the ability to synthesize Greek, Byzantine, Persian and Hebraic knowledge bases and to work them into something new.
- That is a side of Christian thinking not unlike the ancient Hebraic prohibition against any art in competition with God's creation.
- Instead, he attempted to transform the Zionist movement by articulating what he saw as its unique historic mission: the realization of a Hebraic humanism.
OriginVia Christian Latin from late Greek Hebraikos, from Hebraios (see Hebrew). |