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Examples

  • Ulinover also planned to publish an additional book of poetry entitled Shabes (Shabbat), but her plans never came to fruition.

    Yiddish: Women's Poetry. 2009

  • He began forming a secret "sacred society" he named "Oyneg Shabes" literally, "Joy of the Sabbath," as members often met on Saturday.

    The Warsaw Ghetto, Vietnam-era war crimes and bombing Wall Street in the Sunday book reviews Mary L. Dudziak 2009

  • A Shabes-Goy Pit-Parrot for Saturday Cyclocross Races!

    BSNYC Friday Fun Quiz! BikeSnobNYC 2008

  • Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Ulinover began new cycles of poems, like “Shabes” (Sabbath), part of which was published by Ezra Korman in his anthology Yidishe dikhterins (Yiddish women poets, Chicago 1928), “Inem shtetele der boben” (In grandmother’s shtetl) or “A grus fun der alter heym” (Greetings from the old home).

    Miryam Ulinover. 2009

  • Despite this book’s success, none of her announced books (Khumesh-grusn, Shabes, In tate-mame-land, Dem zeydns oytser, Khelemyade) appeared in print.

    Miryam Ulinover. 2009

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