religious teacher: "REB-beh" or "REB-bee"; (almost always male); (from Hebrew)
secular teacher: "LEHR-air" (male) or "LEHR-air-in" (female); (from German)
A male teacher . . . "LEHR-air" A female teacher . . . "LEHR-air-in"
Yiddish = Yiddish (ייִדיש)
Jewish in Yiddish is "Yiddish".
Redstu Yiddish = You speak YiddishIt can also be written "Redst du Yiddish"
Yiddish is spelled as Y-I-D-D-I-S-H.
A male teacher . . . "LEHR-air" A female teacher . . . "LEHR-air-in"
A male teacher . . . "LEHR-air" A female teacher . . . "LEHR-air-in"
Yiddish = Yiddish (ייִדיש)
Jewish in Yiddish is "Yiddish".
Yiddish is spelled as Y-I-D-D-I-S-H.
Redstu Yiddish = You speak YiddishIt can also be written "Redst du Yiddish"
Teacher of the Year - 2014 was released on: USA:2014
There is no equivalent Yiddish name for Robert. But you can spell Robert in Yiddish as ראָבערט
Yiddish is the historical language of the Ashkenazi Jews, combining elements of German with Hebrew and Aramaic. It is primarily spoken by Jewish communities originating from Central and Eastern Europe.
The Yiddish word for disappointed is "Ahntoisht".
It is the Yiddish word for a woman who is not Jewish. It is slang in English, but it is not slang in Yiddish.
In Yiddish = סיערעIn Hebrew = סיארה