halevai
Edit Pronunciations
| halevai | (hah-leh-VYE) | listen |
Definitions
interj. If only; I wish.
v. I wish, I hope.
Example Sentences
-
"'In a few years we'll celebrate at your son's bris.' 'Halevai!'"
-
"Halevai it snowed and I wouldn't have to go to English today." (Weiser)
-
"You're making it sound like just seeing tzitzit automatically makes someone think about the mitzvot. Halevai!" (source)
-
“Next year could be better, halevay.” (NJY)
-
“He has a chance of getting into Harvard. Halevay!” (NJY)
-
“Sick? He’s dying, the poor man—halevay [I hope] I am wrong.” (NJY)
-
“They warned me a hundred times. I should have listened. Halevay.” (NJY)
- View More
Languages of Origin
- Aramaic
- Yiddish
- Modern Hebrew
Etymology
MH הלוואי halevay, Y הלװאַי (h)alevay
- Israel: Diaspora Jews who feel connected to Israel and have spent time there
- Older: Jews who are middle-aged and older
- Ashkenazim: Jews with Ashkenazi heritage
- North America
- Great Britain
- South Africa
- The New Joys of Yiddish, by Leo Rosten and Lawrence Bush (New York, 2003[1968]).
- Yiddish and English: A Century of Yiddish in America, by Sol Steinmetz (Tuscaloosa, 1986).
- The JPS Dictionary of Jewish Words, by Joyce Eisenberg and Ellen Scolnic, (Philadelphia, 2001).
- The Joys of Hebrew, by Lewis Glinert (New York, 1992).
- Frumspeak: The First Dictionary of Yeshivish, by Chaim Weiser (Northvale, 1995).
- Dictionary of Jewish Usage: A Popular Guide to the Use of Jewish Terms, by Sol Steinmetz (Lanham, MD, 2005).
- View More
Who Uses This
Regions
Dictionaries
Alternative Spellings
halivai, alevay, halevay, halvay, halavai, alevai
Edit Something missing from this entry? Inaccurate? Feel free to suggest an edit.