Hayworth
[hey-wurth] /ˈheɪ wɜrθ/
noun
1.
Rita (Margarita Carmen Cansino) 1918–87, U.S. dancer and actress.
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whom God beholds, an officer of Ben-hadad II., king of Syria, who ultimately came to the throne, according to the word of the Lord to Elijah (1 Kings 19:15), after he had put the king to death (2 Kings 8:15). His interview with Elisha is mentioned in 2 Kings 8. The Assyrians soon after his […]
- Hazan
[Sephardic Hebrew khah-zahn; Ashkenazic Hebrew khah-zuh n] /Sephardic Hebrew xɑˈzɑn; Ashkenazic Hebrew ˈxɑ zən/ noun, plural hazanim [Sephardic Hebrew khah-zah-neem; Ashkenazic Hebrew khah-zaw-nim] /Sephardic Hebrew xɑ zɑˈnim; Ashkenazic Hebrew xɑˈzɔ nɪm/ (Show IPA). English, hazans. Hebrew. 1. a cantor of a synagogue. /xaˈzan; English ˈhɑːzən/ noun 1. variant spellings of chazan
- Hazanim
[Sephardic Hebrew khah-zahn; Ashkenazic Hebrew khah-zuh n] /Sephardic Hebrew xɑˈzɑn; Ashkenazic Hebrew ˈxɑ zən/ noun, plural hazanim [Sephardic Hebrew khah-zah-neem; Ashkenazic Hebrew khah-zaw-nim] /Sephardic Hebrew xɑ zɑˈnim; Ashkenazic Hebrew xɑˈzɔ nɪm/ (Show IPA). English, hazans. Hebrew. 1. a cantor of a synagogue. /xaˈzan; English ˈhɑːzən/ noun 1. variant spellings of chazan
- Hazara
[huh-zahr-uh] /həˈzɑr ə/ noun, plural Hazara, Hazaras. 1. an Iranian ethnolinguistic group in central Afghanistan, N Pakistan, and Iran, most of whom are Muslims.
- Hazar-addar
village of Addar, a place in the southern boundary of Palestine (Num. 34:4), in the desert to the west of Kadesh-barnea. It is called Adar in Josh. 15:3.