|
Definition of Shalom asch
1. Noun. United States writer (born in Poland) who wrote in Yiddish (1880-1957).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Shalom Asch
Literary usage of Shalom asch
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New York Times Current History (1917)
"To these seductive attempts to exploit the Jewish resentment against Russia,
shalom asch answered sternly: '"The oppressed peoples under the Russian yoke ..."
2. The War for the World by Israel Zangwill (1916)
"To these seductive attempts to exploit the Jewish resentment against Russia,
shalom asch answered sternly: "'The oppressed peoples under the Russian yoke' ..."
3. The History of the Jews by Gotthard Deutsch (1921)
"Of dramatists whose works have occasionally found their way to the German and
English stage there are shalom asch (born 1881) and Jacob Gordin ( 1853-1909). ..."
4. A History of the Jews in Modern Times by Max Raisin (1919)
"New talents steadily made their appearance: Abraham Raisin, poet and sketch-writer;
HD Naumberg, shalom asch, Jonah Rosenfeld, P. Hirschbein among the ..."
5. History of the Jews in Russia and Poland, from the Earliest Times Until the by Simon Dubnow (1920)
"JL Perez found a rival in shalom asch, the portrayer of patriarchal Jewish life
in the provincial towns of Poland (Die ..."
6. The History of the Jews by Gotthard Deutsch (1910)
"Of dramatists whose works have occasionally found their way to the German and
English stage there are shalom asch, and Jacob Gordin (1853-1909), ..."