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Etymologies
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Examples
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"Shul" is the Yiddish name used for both school and synagogue, derived from the German word for school.
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A devout Jew who wears a yarmulke all places but in the ring, refuses to fight on the Sabbath and attends Shul daily, he was profiled everywhere from Sports Illustrated to the Washington Post to New York Magazine to Jewish Week.
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A devout Jew who wears a yarmulke all places but in the ring, refuses to fight on the Sabbath and attends Shul daily, he was profiled everywhere from Sports Illustrated to the Washington Post to New York Magazine to Jewish Week.
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Shul on Saturday mornings; the nationally televised game of the week on Saturday afternoons.
Archive 2010-02-01 2010
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Her keenest impression of the trip occurred during a visit to the Alt-Neu Shul in Prague, the oldest synagogue in Europe, where she observed women congregants physically locked away from services.
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Shul on Saturday mornings; the nationally televised game of the week on Saturday afternoons.
Carried to Orthodoxy 2010
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Her keenest impression of the trip occurred during a visit to the Alt-Neu Shul in Prague, the oldest synagogue in Europe, where she observed women congregants physically locked away from services.
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She attended Hebrew school on Berry Street, and the family attended the Hanover Street Shul.
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She attended Hebrew school on Berry Street, and the family attended the Hanover Street Shul.
Personal Information for Esther Hillman Jewish Women's Archive 2010
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In “‘Shul with a Pool’: The Synagogue Center in American Jewish Life, 1875 – 1925.”
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