1. Star or shield of David (non-religious)
2. The Menorah (religious)
3. The Kipah (religious - HaShem is always above us)
4. The Tallit (prayer shawl worn when reading from the Sefer Torah (scroll))
5. The Chai (the Hebrew word for 'life')
6. The Mezuzah (a scroll containing sections from the Torah that is affixed to doorways)
7. The Shofar (rams horn that is blown during Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur)
There is no such thing as a Jewish baptism.
Jewish star is my guess.
Symbols do not destinguish Orthodox Jews from other kinds of Jews. Orthodox Jews are distinctive in that they adhere to the idea of the of the binding nature of Jewish law.
The symbols found on the Jewish Dreidel can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreidel
Judaism and Catholicism are distinct religions and do not have any symbols that overlap in terms of both aspect and interpretation.
All Jewish holidays have symbols because Jews use them to remind themselves of the reasons for various aspects of the holiday.
Well in math an expression is a finite combination of symbols that is well-formed according to rules that depend on the context. Symbols can designate numbers (constance), variables, operations, functions, and other mathematical symbols, as well as punctuation, symbols of grouping, and other syntactic symbols. The use of expressions can range from the simple: 3 + 5 it is as easy as 1 2 3 but as you get older your math expressions will get harder.
The Lulav (לולב) The Shofar (שופר)
Star of David, Menorah, Mezuzah, the two Stone Tablets.
O:) i'll also show some other symbols... 3:) -devil :|] -robot (^^^) - shark <(") -penguin :putnam: -umm a head?
Either the star of david for the nation of Israel or the Menorah as a religious symbol.
Naomi Sarlin has written: 'Jewish communities of the East' -- subject(s): Ethnic relations, Jews, Outlines, syllabi 'Jewish symbols'