Abraham-Isaac-Jacob

Abraham-Isaac-Jacob
rytinis agurklenis statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Agurklinių šeimos dekoratyvinis augalas (Trachystemon orientalis), paplitęs Turkijoje, Kaukaze ir Bulgarijoje. atitikmenys: lot. Trachystemon orientalis angl. Abraham-Isaac-Jacob; eastern borage vok. Rauhling šaltinis Valstybinės lietuvių kalbos komisijos 2012 m. gruodžio 20 d. protokolinis nutarimas Nr. PN-5 „Dėl rekomendacijos „Dėl dekoratyvinių augalų lietuviškų pavadinimų (A–B)“

Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas). 2015.

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  • Abraham-Isaac-Jacob — Taxobox name = Abraham Isaac Jacob image width = 250px regnum = Plantae divisio = Magnoliophyta classis = Magnoliopsida familia = Boraginaceae genus = Trachystemon species = T. orientalis binomial = Trachystemon orientalis binomial authority = (L …   Wikipedia

  • ROSENFELD, ABRAHAM ISAAC JACOB — (1914–1980s?), rabbi and ḥazzan. Rosenfeld was born in Jerusalem and studied at the Yeshivah Etz Ḥayyim and Merkaz ha Rav there. He served as both rabbi and ḥazzan to the Finchley Synagogue in London (1941–70) and was appointed honorary president …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ABRAHAM BAR JACOB — (c. 1669–1730), convert to Judaism who worked as a copper engraver in Amsterdam. Born in Germany, Abraham b. Jacob had been a Christian pastor in the Rhineland before converting to Judaism. He was particularly celebrated for his collaboration in… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Abraham ben Jacob Cansino — was a seventeenth century Spanish Jewish poet. He is the author of Aguddat Ezob (A Bunch of Hyssop), a collection of poems and rhetorical compositions, in three parts, praised very highly by Isaac Cansino and David Abu al Khair. Abraham Cansino… …   Wikipedia

  • Abraham Isaac Ascher — Adolf Asher (eigentlich Abraham Isaac Ascher; * 23. August 1800 in Cammin in Pommern; † 1. September 1853 in Venedig) war ein deutscher Buchhändler, Antiquar, Verleger und Bibliograph. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben und Werk 2 Schriften …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • JACOB — Nom du patriarche qui, dans la tradition biblique définitivement sertie (l’unité religieuse et l’unité politique s’étant de concert façonnées, les douze tribus vénèrent ce personnage comme leur père commun), est présenté comme l’ancêtre éponyme… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • ASHKENAZI, ABRAHAM BEN JACOB — (1811–1880), Sephardi chief rabbi of Ereẓ Israel. Ashkenazi was born in Larissa, in Greece, but c. 1820 his family settled in Jerusalem where he studied under Samuel Arvaẓ, and was successively appointed a dayyan in the bet din of Benjamin… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • BLUM, AMRAM BEN ISAAC JACOB — (1834–1907), Hungarian rabbi. He served as rabbi of the important communities of Samson, Almas, Mád, Huszt, and Berettyoujfalu, where he died. He studied under his father, who was head of the bet din in Nagykaroly, and later in the seminaries of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • MOTAL, ABRAHAM BEN JACOB — (1568–1658), rabbi and dayyan of Salonika. Motal was born in Salonika, where he studied under Samuel Ḥayyun and Solomon ha Kohen, whose works he transcribed. He served first as head of the yeshivah of the Old Lisbon community of the city, and on… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Abraham — /ay breuh ham , heuhm/, n. 1. the first of the great Biblical patriarchs, father of Isaac, and traditional founder of the ancient Hebrew nation: considered by Muslims an ancestor of the Arab peoples through his son Ishmael. 2. a male given name:… …   Universalium

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