-
creative mecca for Jews at the time. He is
known chiefly for his book Me'or
Enayim (English,
Light of the Eyes) in
which he used
critical methods to test the...
-
Modern Hebrew, the pseudo-dual as
plural of "eyes" עין / עינים ʿạyin /
ʿēnạyim "eye / eyes" as well as "hands", "legs" and
several other words are retained...
- as עין / עינים ʿạyin /
ʿēnạyim "eye / eyes", used even in a
sentence like "The
spider has
eight eyes." Thus
words like
ʿēnạyim only
appear to be dual...
-
criticisms of
Abraham ben
David (RABaD;
printed with
Abraham Meldola's Shiv'ah '
Enayim Leghorn, 1745;
under the
title Machaseh u-Magen, Venice, 1808) H****agot...
- text. Wolf Heidenheim, 1818, Frankfurt-am-Main This
edition (called Me'or
Enayim)
included the Five
Books of Moses, Haftarot, and Megillot. It had many differences...
-
decree to be
distributed among all Jews,
ordering that Dei Rossi's "Me'or '
Enayim" be burned. But, Karo
dying before it was
ready for him to sign, the decree...
- read and
analyzed mostly by
Christian authors.
Azariah dei Rossi's Me'or
Enayim: Imre
Binah (1575), one of the
first Jewish commentaries on Philo, describes...
- appeared. Isserles' student,
Yehoshua Falk
HaKohen published Sefer Me'irath
Enayim (on
Choshen Mishpat,
abbreviated as Sema)
several decades after the main...
-
easily translatable to
other languages, for
example בארבע עיניים be'arba
enayim,
literally 'with four eyes,'
means face to face
without the
presence of...
-
translation of the
Gospel of
Matthew from
Syriac (1703). He also
wrote Me'irat '
Enayim (The
Enlightenment of the Eyes), (1704) a
Christian Cabala commentary on...