balebos
English
    
WOTD – 23 September 2015
    Alternative forms
    
- balabos, balaboss, baleboss
Etymology
    
Borrowed from Yiddish בעל־הבית (balebos), from Hebrew בַּעַל הַבַּיִת (bá'al habáyit, “master of the house”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /bɑːləˈbʌs/, /bɑːləˈbɒs/, /bɑːləˈbɔs/
Noun
    
balebos (plural balebatim)
- (Judaism) Master of the house, head of the household, host.
- (Judaism) House owner, homeowner.
- (Judaism, by extension) Boss, person in charge (of anything).
- (Judaism) Important man, bourgeoisie.
-  2008, Joseph Margoshes, “Reb Vovtshi's Kloyz”, in A World Apart: A Memoir of Jewish Life in Nineteenth Century Galicia, →ISBN, page 51:- An annual custom that lasted for many years involved a celebration of the eight days of Chanukah for all of the balebatim. Every evening was hosted by a different balebos and there was a lavish feast.
 
 
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- (Judaism) Layman, congregant, non-clergy.
-  1996, Jonathan Boyarin, “My Trip to Israel, Continued”, in Palestine and Jewish History: Criticism at the Borders of Ethnography, →ISBN, page 153:- The rabbi, whom I met and then overheard at a kiddush after shul, was going over his sermon with some of the balebatim, […] .
 
 
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