Definition of rabbinical in English:
rabbinical
adjective rəˈbɪnɪk(ə)lrəˈbɪnəkəl
attributive Relating to rabbis or to Jewish law or teachings.
Example sentencesExamples
- All of the above must be done before a halachically-valid rabbinical court of three Jewish men who themselves believe in God, accept the divinity of the Torah, and observe the mitzvot.
- The designation of rabbi is given when one receives rabbinical ordination, earned by passing extensive examinations on the Torah and Talmud.
- The Oral Law is the corpus of Jewish law that traces back to the revelation at Mount Sinai and which includes later rabbinical legal decisions, which flesh out and explain the Torah.
- However, where a city has more than one congregation, or more than one rabbinical court, the following of each one is counted as a separate community, and each one may follow different practices.
- This view is that there has always been only one Jewish calendar used by all Jews - the rabbinical lunar calendar.
Derivatives
adverb rəˈbɪnɪkli
In many of the pieces, even one depicting a rabbinically bearded Christ hung brutally against some orangey metal grating, the crucifixion feels like a contemporary event.
Rhymes
clinical, cynical, dominical, finical, Jacobinical, pinnacle
Definition of rabbinical in US English:
rabbinical
adjectiverəˈbɪnəkəlrəˈbinəkəl
attributive Relating to rabbis or to Jewish law or teachings.
Example sentencesExamples
- All of the above must be done before a halachically-valid rabbinical court of three Jewish men who themselves believe in God, accept the divinity of the Torah, and observe the mitzvot.
- This view is that there has always been only one Jewish calendar used by all Jews - the rabbinical lunar calendar.
- The designation of rabbi is given when one receives rabbinical ordination, earned by passing extensive examinations on the Torah and Talmud.
- The Oral Law is the corpus of Jewish law that traces back to the revelation at Mount Sinai and which includes later rabbinical legal decisions, which flesh out and explain the Torah.
- However, where a city has more than one congregation, or more than one rabbinical court, the following of each one is counted as a separate community, and each one may follow different practices.