Yahudi

English

Etymology

From Arabic يَهُودِيّ (yahūdiyy).

Noun

Yahudi (plural Yahudis or Yahud)

  1. (Islam, rare) A Jew.

Further reading

  • Frantzman, Seth J. (2019-05-14), “BBC slammed for mistranslating 'Yahud' as 'Israeli'”, in The Jerusalem Post

Indonesian

Etymology

From Lua error in Module:utilities at line 142: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value), from Arabic يَهُودِيّ (yahūdiyy).

Proper noun

Yahudi

  1. Hebrews (people)
    Synonym: Ibrani
  2. Jews
  3. Judaism

Further reading

Malay

Etymology

From Arabic يَهُودِيّ (yahūdiyy).

Proper noun

Yahudi (Jawi spelling يهودي)

  1. Hebrews (people)
    Synonym: Ibrani
  2. Jews
  3. Judaism

Further reading

Tausug

Noun

Yahudi

  1. Jew

Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish یاهودی (yahudi), borrowed from Arabic يَهُودِيّ (yahūdiyy).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): (standard) /jɑ.huˈdi/, (colloquial) /jɑːuˈdi/

Noun

Yahudi (definite accusative Yahudiyi, plural Yahudiler)

  1. Jew, adherent of Judaism.
  2. A character in traditional Turkish shadow plays and orta oyunu.

Declension

Lua error: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value)

Synonyms

Derived terms

Adjective

Yahudi

  1. Jewish, relating to Jews, their religion or their culture.

Yakan

Noun

Yahudi

  1. Jew
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