I went on to a yiddish translator and got `man as an answer.Hope this helps.מאן - Mahn
"MOY-zl" or "MOY-zeh-leh"
Jewish in Yiddish is "Yiddish".
In Yiddish, you can say "kesheprsia" to mean my pleasure.
The most likely expression is difficult to write phonetically so you'll understand it, and virtually impossible for an English speaker to reproduce. A Yiddish speaker would most likely refer generically to a smart man as a "KHAW-khawm". The word is Hebrew, and stands for both the adjective "wise" and the noun "wise man".
Mensch
I went on to a yiddish translator and got `man as an answer.Hope this helps.מאן - Mahn
Ikh bin a mentsh
"MOY-zl" or "MOY-zeh-leh"
Jewish in Yiddish is "Yiddish".
Machutin, meaning a man's father-in-law, is a Hebrew word (mechutan), though it's often pronounced a little differently in Yiddish (mechutin). It is spelled מחותן and comes from the Hebrew word חתן which means groom.
The Yiddish word for little girl is "meidele" (מיידעלע).
In Yiddish, you can say "kesheprsia" to mean my pleasure.
The most likely expression is difficult to write phonetically so you'll understand it, and virtually impossible for an English speaker to reproduce. A Yiddish speaker would most likely refer generically to a smart man as a "KHAW-khawm". The word is Hebrew, and stands for both the adjective "wise" and the noun "wise man".
There is no Yiddish word that refers to a circumcised person. You would just say "a Man mit a Milah" (א מאן מיט א מילה), which means "a man with a circumcision"
The Yiddish phrase for "crazy old man" is "meshuggener alte mentsh."
To say "Catholic nun" in Yiddish, you would say "katolisher nonne."