- eret
- , -mo (G). An oar; a rower
Dictionary of word roots and combining forms . Donald J. Borror. 2013.
Dictionary of word roots and combining forms . Donald J. Borror. 2013.
eret — èret m DEFINICIJA sport u rukometu, način šutiranja pri kojem se bacanje lopte izvodi otklonom tijela u stranu, suprotno od ruke kojom se baca (ob. pri udarcima s krila) ETIMOLOGIJA grč. eréthizein: kretati, micati … Hrvatski jezični portal
eret — di·eret·ic; … English syllables
Eret, Mississippi — Infobox Settlement name = Eret, Mississippi settlement type = Unincorporated community nickname = motto = imagesize = image caption = image pushpin pushpin label position = none pushpin map caption = Location of Eret in Mississippi pushpin… … Wikipedia
eret — … Useful english dictionary
AẒERET — (Heb. עֲצֶרֶת), word used in the Bible to convey a general assembly (Amos 5:21) or a concluding celebration (II Chron. 7:9). In the Torah, aẓeret refers to the final (seventh) day of passover (Deut. 16:8) and to the concluding celebration which… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Ubytování Eret Pernink — (Пернинк,Чехия) Категория отеля: Адрес: Jáchymovská 411, Пернинк, 36236, Чех … Каталог отелей
SIMḤAT TORAH — (Heb. שִׂמְחַת תּוֹרָה; lit. rejoicing of the Torah ), the last day of the holy days begun by sukkot . In the Diaspora Simḥat Torah falls on the 23rd of Tishri, the second day of Shemini Aẓeret, the festival which concludes Sukkot. In Israel, it… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SUKKOT — (Heb. סֻכּוֹת; booths or tabernacles ), the festival, beginning on the 15th day of Tishre, which commemorates the sukkot in which the Children of Israel dwelt in the wilderness after the Exodus. The festival lasts for seven days, of which the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
HAKKAFOT — (Heb. הַקָּפוֹת), term used to designate ceremonial processional circuits both in the synagogue and outside it, on various occasions. Such circuits are mentioned in the Bible. There were, for instance, seven circuits around Jericho (once a day… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
RAIN, PRAYER FOR — (Heb. תְּפִלַּת גֶּשֶׁם, Tefillat Geshem (Ashkenazi); תִּקּוּן הַגֶּשֶׁם, Tikkun ha Geshem (Sephardi), prayers offered on various occasions, in which God is acknowledged as the power causing rain and the change of seasons, and which contain… … Encyclopedia of Judaism