Lexicographical Neighbors of Hadarim
Literary usage of Hadarim
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. American Jewish Year Book by American Jewish Committee, Jewish Publication Society of America (1914)
"Nor is any reference made to the hadarim or the private teachers, of whom there
must have been a considerable number even then. ..."
2. Memoirs of David Blaustein: Educator and Communal Worker by Miriam Umstadter Blaustein (1913)
"The Melam- dim or teachers in the hadarim were graded according to their ability,
and the school year consisted of two terms from the first Sabbath after ..."
3. Encyclopaedia Britannica, a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"The people, known as Hadrami (plural hadarim), belong generally lo the south
Arabian stock, claiming descent from Ya'rab bin ..."
4. The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Testaments: The Text Carefully by Adam Clarke (1837)
"Two MSS. have D'lin hadarim, without the 1 vau, which is hardly distinguishable
from the reading of the Septuagint. The Divine protection that attended ..."
5. The Haskalah Movement in Russia by Jacob Salmon Raisin (1914)
"... they began to send their children to the Jewish hadarim, and adopted once more
Jewish ways and customs. Several hundred Jewish university students, ..."
6. Human Rights Watch World Report 1997 by Human Rights Watch (Organization), Human Rights Watch Staff (1996)
"... thus allowing the weekly to reappear, and that the government could not shut
down the independent hadarim Welfare Association merely because it had ..."