释义 |
ha·la·kah noun or ha·la·chah or ha·la·cha \häˈläḵä, ˌhäläˈḵä, həˈläkə\ (plural ha·la·kahs \-ḵäz, -kəz\ ; or ha·la·koth or ha·la·choth \häˈläˌḵōth, ˌhäläˈḵōth, -ōt, -ōs\) Usage: often capitalized Etymology: Hebrew hălākhāh, literally, way : the body of Jewish oral laws supplementing written law or both oral and written law together or any particular law or custom prescribed by the legal codices |