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Mar 24, 2008
This week's themeWords from Yiddish This week's words schnorrer megillah schnook meshuga schlump Got a website? Free content for your site Words, quotations & more A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargA language is the soul of its people. This is nowhere illustrated more profoundly than in the Yiddish language, the language of Jews of eastern and central Europe and their descendants. A tongue full of wit and charm, Yiddish embodies deep appreciation of human behavior in all its colorful manifestations. The word Yiddish comes from German Judisch meaning Jewish. But it is not the same as Hebrew, even though it is written in Hebrew script. Here's what Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer had to say about the language in his 1978 Nobel Prize acceptance speech:
There is a quiet humor in Yiddish and a gratitude for every day of life, every crumb of success, each encounter of love. The Yiddish mentality is not haughty. It does not take victory for granted. It does not demand and command but it muddles through, sneaks by, smuggles itself amidst the powers of destruction, knowing somewhere that God's plan for Creation is still at the very beginning ... In a figurative way, Yiddish is the wise and humble language of us all, the idiom of frightened and hopeful Humanity.
schnorrer(SHNOR-uhr)noun: One who habitually takes advantage of others' generosity, often through an air of entitlement. From Yiddish, from German schnurren (to purr, hum, or whir), from the sound of a beggar's musical instrument.
"Wilberforce opens his dining room to every schnorrer who appears at
the door." See more usage examples of schnorrer in Vocabulary.com's dictionary.
X-BonusWhat is wanted is not the will to believe, but the will to find out, which is the exact opposite. -Bertrand Russell, philosopher, mathematician, author, Nobel laureate (1872-1970) |
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