Jewish people can worship anywhere - the belief is that each individual has their own relationship with God, so can pray or worship in any setting.
The Holy Temple in Jerusalem.
Both are places of worship. A Mosque is used for Muslim worship. A Synagogue is used for Jewishworship.
A place of worship means a special building where people gather to pray. A church or synagogue is a place of worship.
The holy books in Judaism are the books of the Hebrew Bible.Places of worship:Jews worship in synagogues.See also:What are the Jewish Holy Books called?More about Jewish worship
In a church, mosque, temple or synagogue. Well you can worship him anywhere, but a place of worship, with other people is often considered better.
Jews can worship almost anywhere. For group prayer, a minimum of ten men (amongst the Orthodox) or ten men and/or women (amongst almost all other groups) is required.
In Iran there are many religions. Each has its own name for its places of worship. e.g. Islamic - mosque Jewish -synagogue Christian - church
A multiple-choice question cannot be answered with 'true' or 'false'. Jewish places of group-worship are called synagogues. Some Reform and Conservative Jews call them temples. But individual prayer can take place in any place the individual chooses, if it's consistent with the mood, decorum, and holiness of prayer. While 'synagogue' is exclusively used to refer to Jewish houses of worship, 'temple' can be used to connote a synagogue or a Shinto, Buddhist, Confucian, or other Asian house of worship (in which a Jew may not pray, on account of the idols present).
Places of worship: synagogues. Leaders: rabbis.
Yes, this is the main place of worship but Jews may pray in other places as well.
Synagogues are places of communal worship, places of study, and places where life cycle events are celebrated.
Orthodox Jewish men go only to Orthodox synagogues. Non-Orthodox Jewish men would be likely to go to non-Orthodox places of worship. In Israel, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, there are prevalent numbers of non-Orthodox or Liberal synagogues. As a result, people in those places who are themselves Liberal can often find a Liberal synagogue in which to worship. Outside of those four countries, it is very rare to find a Liberal synagogue, so Jews of all religiousities (both Liberal and Orthodox) go to Orthodox synagogues for prayer, but will not perform all of the Orthodox Mitzvot when not in synagogue.