Jude
EnglishEdit
Jude on Wikipedia.Wikipedia |
EtymologyEdit
Short form of Judas, used in an attempt to distinguish the Apostle Judas Thaddaeus from Judas Iscariot [1]. From Old Testament Judah, Hebrew יְהוּדָה, said to mean “praised”.
PronunciationEdit
Proper nounEdit
Jude
- (biblical) The penultimate book of the New Testament of the Bible.
- Synonym: (abbreviation) Jud.
- (biblical) One of the Apostles, also called Thaddaeus.
- A male given name from Hebrew.
- A female given name.
QuotationsEdit
- 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, Jude 1:1:
- Jude, the servant of Jesus Christ, and brother of James, to them that are sanctified by God the Father, and preserved in Jesus Christ, and called.
- 1968 John Lennon and Paul McCartney: Hey Jude (a Beatles song):
- Hey Jude, don't make it bad
- Take a sad song and make it better
Related termsEdit
TranslationsEdit
|
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
- ^ A Dictionary of First Names (OUP)
FrenchEdit
PronunciationEdit
Proper nounEdit
Jude m
GermanEdit
Alternative formsEdit
- Jud', Jud
- Jüde, Jüd (archaic or dialectal, the ü-form still in toponyms like Jüdenstraße)
EtymologyEdit
From Middle High German jude, jüde, from Old High German judo, judeo, from Latin iūdaeus (“Judaean, Jew”), from Ancient Greek Ἰουδαῖος (Ioudaîos), derived from Ῐ̓ούδᾱ (Ioúdā, “Juda”) + -ιος (-ios), the former from Hebrew יְהוּדָה (yəhūḏāh).
PronunciationEdit
NounEdit
Jude m (weak, genitive Juden, plural Juden, feminine Jüdin)
DeclensionEdit
SynonymsEdit
- (Jew by faith): Mensch jüdischen Glaubens
- (Jew by descent): Mensch jüdischer Abstammung, (archaic) Hebräer
Derived termsEdit
- Achteljude
- Deutschjude
- Halbjude
- Judenapfel
- Judenbad
- Judenbart
- Judenbengel
- Judenbusse
- Judenbuße
- Judenchrist
- judendeutsch
- Judenedikt
- Judenemanzipation
- Judenfeind
- Judenfisch
- Judenfrage
- judenfrei
- Judenfresser
- Judenfreund
- Judenfriedhof
- Judengasse
- Judengemeinde
- Judengesetz
- Judengold
- Judenhaß
- Judenhass
- Judenhatz
- Judenhaus
- Judenheit
- Judenhetzen
- Judenhetzer
- Judenhof
- Judenhut
- Judenkirche
- Judenkirsche
- Judenleim
- Judenliebe
- Judenmädchen
- Judenmission
- Judenmord
- Judenpech
- Judenphobie
- Judenpolitik
- Judenproblem
- Judenquote
- Judenrecht
- Judenregal
- judenrein
- Judensau
- Judenschaft
- Judenspanisch
- Judensprache
- Judenstaat
- Judenstadt
- Judenstern
- Judensteuer
- Judenstrafe
- Judenstrick
- Judentransport
- Judentum
- Judenverfolgung
- Judenvernichtung
- Judenvertreibung
- Judenviertel
- jüdisch
- verjuden
- Vierteljude
- Volljude
Further readingEdit
Middle EnglishEdit
Alternative formsEdit
EtymologyEdit
From Latin Iūdaea, from Ancient Greek Ἰουδαία (Ioudaía), from Biblical Hebrew יְהוּדָה (yehudá).
PronunciationEdit
Proper nounEdit
Jude
ReferencesEdit
- “Jūdẹ̄, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
RomanianEdit
EtymologyEdit
From jude.
Proper nounEdit
Jude m (genitive/dative lui Jude)
- a surname