Shalosh-seudoth
or shalosh seudot, shalosh seudos
[Ashkenazic Hebrew shah-lohsh soo -dohs, -duh s, -luh sh; Sephardic Hebrew shah-lawsh se-oo-dawt] /Ashkenazic Hebrew ˈʃɑ loʊʃ ˈsʊ doʊs, -dəs, -ləʃ; Sephardic Hebrew ʃɑˈlɔʃ sɛ uˈdɔt/
noun, Hebrew.
1.
the last of the three prescribed Sabbath meals, taken after Minhah and before the evening service.
Read Also:
- Shalt
verb, Archaic. 1. 2nd person singular of shall. auxiliary verb, present singular 1st person shall, 2nd shall or (Archaic) shalt, 3rd shall, present plural shall; past singular 1st person should, 2nd should or (Archaic) shouldst or shouldest, 3rd should, past plural should; imperative, infinitive, and participles lacking. 1. plan to, intend to, or expect to: […]
- Shalwar
noun, (used with a plural verb) 1. loose, pajamalike trousers worn by both men and women in India and southeast Asia. noun 1. a pair of loose-fitting trousers tapering to a narrow fit around the ankles, worn in the Indian subcontinent, often with a kameez
- Sham
noun 1. something that is not what it purports to be; a spurious imitation; fraud or hoax. 2. a person who shams; shammer. 3. a cover or the like for giving a thing a different outward appearance: a pillow sham. adjective 4. pretended; counterfeit; feigned: sham attacks; a sham Gothic façade. 5. designed, made, or […]
- Shama
noun 1. a slender long-tailed thrush, Copsychus malabaricus, of southern Asia and introduced into Hawaii, having black plumage with a white rump and tail sides and a chestnut belly.
- Shaman
noun 1. (especially among certain tribal peoples) a person who acts as intermediary between the natural and supernatural worlds, using magic to cure illness, foretell the future, control spiritual forces, etc. noun 1. a priest of shamanism 2. a medicine man of a similar religion, esp among certain tribes of North American Indians