mitzvah
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Definitions
n. A good deed.
n. A Jewish ritual commandment.
Example Sentences
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"What a mitzvah it was for Sarah to help that elderly woman cross the street."
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"Doing a mitzvah without feeling, and only because G-d told you to do it, is NOT AT ALL what we should be striving for." (source)
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"On our kibbutz, we keep all the agricultural mitzvot laid down in the Torah." (Glinert)
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"...and don't forget to call your aunt—it's a big mitzvah." (Glinert)
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Languages of Origin
- Textual Hebrew
Etymology
TH מִצְוָה mitzvah 'commandment' > Y מ(י)צװה mitsve
- Jews: Jews of diverse religious backgrounds and organizational involvements
- Non-Jews: (words that have spread outside of Jewish networks)
- North America
- Great Britain
- South Africa
- Australia / New Zealand
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- 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).
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Dictionaries
Alternative Spellings
mitzva, mitsvah, mitsve, mitsva, mitzve, mitsveh, mitzveh
Notes
plural: 'mitzvos' or 'mitzvot'
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