- not. An
English sentence that uses
either may be
described by some as
Yinglish,
though a
secondary sense of the term
describes the
distinctive way certain...
- High
German imbīz, 'meal'. "To make a big
tzimmes over something" is a
Yinglish expression that
means to make a big fuss,
perhaps because of the slicing...
- Hebrew.
These varieties can be
classified into
several types: Yeshivish,
Yinglish, and Heblish, as well as more
flexible mixtures of
English and
other Jewish...
-
Yiddish is a book
containing a
lexicon of
common words and
phrases of
Yinglish—i.e.,
words originating in the
Yiddish language that had
become known to...
- only used to
refer to women. Both the
forms yenta and
yente are used in
Yinglish (Jewish
varieties of English) to
refer to a
woman who is a
gossip or a...
- later, Gina
Kikoine and Zeus B. Held
reunited one last time to work on
Yinglish,
simply credited to Gina X this time.
Accompanied by J. J.
Jeczalik on...
- (from
Spanish purgar "to purge"); the
Yiddish is
treibern (traibering in
Yinglish). The
process is done by a menakker. From the
Biblical root נקר NQR meaning...
-
Talmudic Palestinian Galilean Judeo-Aragonese
Jewish English Yeshivish Yinglish Heblish Judeo-Gascon Judaeo-Gr**** Judeo-Italian Judaeo-Piedmontese Judeo-Latin...
-
Talmudic Palestinian Galilean Judeo-Aragonese
Jewish English Yeshivish Yinglish Heblish Judeo-Gascon Judaeo-Gr**** Judeo-Italian Judaeo-Piedmontese Judeo-Latin...
-
metropolitan area. Additionally,
ethnic varieties such as
Yeshiva English and "
Yinglish" are
spoken by some
American Orthodox Jews,
Cajun Vernacular English by...