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mitzvah
English
Etymology
Borrowed from
Hebrew
מצווה
(
mitsvá
,
“
commandment
”
)
.
Noun
mitzvah
(
plural
mitzvahs
or
mitzvoth
)
(
Judaism
)
Any of the 613 commandments of
Jewish
law
1988
September 2, Florence Hamlish Levinsohn, “A Special Connection With God”, in
Chicago Reader
:
She called Penansky regularly to remind her to observe the
mitzvahs
.
(
Judaism
)
An act of
kindness
, a good deed.
2013
,
Thomas Pynchon
,
Bleeding Edge
, Vintage, published 2014, page 17:
‘You heard about them pulling my license. That was indirectly Joel. Who, without meaning to, did me such a
mitzvah
.’
Translations
any of the 613 commandments of Jewish law
Catalan:
mitsvà
f
French:
mitzvah
(fr)
f
German:
Mitzwa
(de)
f
Polish:
micwa
f
an act of kindness
French:
mitzvah
(fr)
f
German:
Mitzwa
(de)
f
Polish:
micwa
f
Turkish:
sevap
(tr)
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