Definitions

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Etymologies

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Examples

  • I learnt this from a friend and mentor, Robert Rabbin who I highly recommend as a public speaking coach.

    Speaking About Your Book: 7 Tips For Successful Public Speaking | The Creative Penn 2009

  • Fortunately Eben Bonabben had been instructed, when in Egypt, in the language of birds, by a Jewish Rabbin, who had received it in lineal transmission from Solomon the wise, who had been taught it by the queen of Sheba.

    The Alhambra 2002

  • But there is another Rabbin brought in by another commentator, that supposeth a twofold Goph, and that the souls of the Israelites and of the

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • We meet with a certain Rabbin of this very same name, R. Jacob the son of Zabdi.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • The truth is, this very thing giveth me reason enough to suspect that this bold and wicked interpolation of the word Gerizim for Ebal hath stolen into the Samaritan text since the time that this Rabbin wrote.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • So that although the Rabbin mistakes concerning the creatures that fed Elias, yet perhaps he does not so mistake concerning the place where the brook was.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • It is reckoned for a duty to accompany a dead corpse to the grave, and a Rabbin departing somewhere.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • If I may speak plainly what I think, I should reduce those numberless stories of the Bath Kol which occur everywhere under these two heads; namely, that very many are mere fables, invented for this purpose, that hence the worth of this or that Rabbin or story may be illustrated: the rest are mere magical and diabolical delusions.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • They taught openly, indeed, that a father was to be made no account of in comparison of a Rabbin that taught them the law; but they by no means openly asserted that parents were to be neglected: yet openly enough they did by consequence drawn from this foolish and impious tradition.

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

  • When, therefore, the Rabbin saith, that they have corrupted their law, he doth not so much deny the purity of the text, as reprove the vanity of the interpretation: as if he had said, "You interpret your law falsely, when you do not infer the resurrection from those words which speak it so plainly."

    From the Talmud and Hebraica 1602-1675 1979

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