释义 |
Definition of Jewishness in English: Jewishnessnounˈdʒuːɪʃnəsˈdʒuɪʃnəs mass nounThe quality of being Jewish or of having characteristics regarded as typically Jewish. the influence of his Jewishness on his work Example sentencesExamples - Europe will force the American Jews to focus on their Jewishness, an aspect of themselves many have unsuccessfully sought to sublimate in America.
- The essay on her seems most to be about how tenuous and unsatisfactory her connections to Jewishness really are.
- Rather than dissociating himself from his "Semitic ancestors" through distanced and impersonal narrative, he inscribes his Jewishness in fiction.
- For him, the attainment of wealth effaces the reality of "Jewishness."
- His Jewishness, which he does not attempt to conceal, seems to stand in the way.
- The patterns within the genre of Jewish children's literature lead us to wonder about contemporary American Jewishness.
- The jeweler's simultaneous affirmation and repudiation of Jewishness collapses the binary into the same.
- He could more freely ponder the viability of the universalist ideal and the persistence of Jewishness in his new context.
- There can be no straightforward account of attitudes toward Jewishness in the work of Virginia Woolf.
- Her Jewishness is a natural part of her character, affecting how she sees things, even how she tells her story.
Definition of Jewishness in US English: Jewishnessnounˈdʒuɪʃnəsˈjo͞oiSHnəs The quality of being Jewish or of having characteristics regarded as typically Jewish. the influence of his Jewishness on his work Example sentencesExamples - The patterns within the genre of Jewish children's literature lead us to wonder about contemporary American Jewishness.
- The jeweler's simultaneous affirmation and repudiation of Jewishness collapses the binary into the same.
- Her Jewishness is a natural part of her character, affecting how she sees things, even how she tells her story.
- Europe will force the American Jews to focus on their Jewishness, an aspect of themselves many have unsuccessfully sought to sublimate in America.
- There can be no straightforward account of attitudes toward Jewishness in the work of Virginia Woolf.
- Rather than dissociating himself from his "Semitic ancestors" through distanced and impersonal narrative, he inscribes his Jewishness in fiction.
- He could more freely ponder the viability of the universalist ideal and the persistence of Jewishness in his new context.
- His Jewishness, which he does not attempt to conceal, seems to stand in the way.
- For him, the attainment of wealth effaces the reality of "Jewishness."
- The essay on her seems most to be about how tenuous and unsatisfactory her connections to Jewishness really are.
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