gaon
Edit Pronunciations
| gaon | (gah-OHN) | listen |
Definitions
n. The rabbis of Babylonian yeshivot between the 6th and 11th centuries C.E.
n. An honorary title for rabbis.
n. A genius.
Example Sentences
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"Thus Elijah ben Solomon (1720–97) became known as gaon of Vilna or the Gaon." (source)
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“The geonim judged religious questions. Questions were sent them from all parts of the Diaspora, and they provided the responsa." (NJY)
Languages of Origin
- Textual Hebrew
- Yiddish
- Modern Hebrew
Etymology
TH גאון > MH גאון gaon '(one who is) prideful', Y גאָון goen
- Religious: Jews who are engaged in religious observance and have some Jewish education
- Orthodox: Jews who identify as Orthodox and observe halacha (Jewish law)
- 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).
- Dictionary of Jewish Usage: A Popular Guide to the Use of Jewish Terms, by Sol Steinmetz (Lanham, MD, 2005).
- View More
Who Uses This
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Dictionaries
Alternative Spellings
ga-on, goen, go'on, ga'on, go'oyn, gooyn, goen
Notes
Plural geoynim.
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