Haggadic
[huh-gah-duh; Sephardic Hebrew hah-gah-dah; Ashkenazic Hebrew hah-gaw-duh] /həˈgɑ də; Sephardic Hebrew hɑ gɑˈdɑ; Ashkenazic Hebrew hɑˈgɔ də/
noun, plural Sephardic Hebrew, Haggadoth, Haggadot
[hah-gah-dawt] /hɑ gɑˈdɔt/ (Show IPA). Ashkenazic Hebrew, Haggados
[hah-gaw-dohs] /hɑˈgɔ doʊs/ (Show IPA). English, Haggadas.
1.
a book containing the liturgy for the Seder service on the Jewish festival of Passover.
2.
.
/həˈɡɑːdə; Hebrew haɡaˈdaː; -ɡɔˈdɔ/
noun (Judaism) (pl) -dahs, -das, -doth (Hebrew) (-ˈdoːt)
1.
2.
another word for Aggadah
n.
1856, from Rabbinical Hebrew haggadhah, literally “tale,” verbal noun from higgidh “to make clear, narrate, expound.”
Read Also:
- Haggadist
[huh-gah-dist] /həˈgɑ dɪst/ noun 1. one of the writers of the Aggadah. 2. a person who is versed in the Aggadah. /həˈɡɑːdɪst/ noun (Judaism) 1. a writer of Aggadoth 2. an expert in or a student of haggadic literature
- Haggai
[hag-ee-ahy, hag-ahy] /ˈhæg iˌaɪ, ˈhæg aɪ/ noun 1. a Minor Prophet of the 6th century b.c. 2. a book of the Bible bearing his name. Abbreviation: Hag. /ˈhæɡeɪˌaɪ/ noun (Old Testament) 1. a Hebrew prophet, whose oracles are usually dated between August and December of 520 bc 2. the book in which these oracles are […]
- Haggard
[hag-erd] /ˈhæg ərd/ adjective 1. having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops. 2. wild; wild-looking: haggard eyes. 3. Falconry. (especially of a hawk caught after it has attained adult plumage) untamed. noun 4. Falconry. a wild or untamed hawk caught […]
- Haggardness
[hag-erd] /ˈhæg ərd/ adjective 1. having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops. 2. wild; wild-looking: haggard eyes. 3. Falconry. (especially of a hawk caught after it has attained adult plumage) untamed. noun 4. Falconry. a wild or untamed hawk caught […]
- Hagged
[hagd, hag-id] /hægd, ˈhæg ɪd/ adjective, British Dialect. 1. . 2. (defs 1, 2). adj. c.1700, from hag, by influence of haggard. Originally “bewitched,” also “lean, gaunt,” as bewitched persons and animals were believed to become.