Go out in battle against the Romans.
Ancient Hebrew tribe or group of people who were zealous, that is fanatical or uncompromising.
There is no Hebrew word for zealot. Modern Hebrew uses the word fanát (×¤× ×˜) which comes from the English word "fanatic."
Which Zealots do you have in mind?
Zealots
The Zealots called for the violent overthrow of Roman rule.
It depends on how you spell "avah" in Hebrew: אבה = to want (poetic way of saying want) אבהּ = her father עבה = to thicken עבהּ = her cloud אווה = lust
ANSWERThe Zealots (in Hebrew kanai'im) fought against Roman rule. Their history is told by Josephus Flavius, a Jew who originally fought against the Romans, and then turned traitor. His writings helped archaeologists in their excavation of Masada --where the Zealots held out against the Romans for three years.
The Zealots didn't attack the Romans. The Romans were going to attack but all the Zealots killed themselves. Over 960 children, men and woman died. Now, that's a different story. They believe the Romans attacked, or were going to attack, because the Zealots would, in a way, pull pranks on the Romans. The Romans got tired of living over 1,000 feet below the Zealots because it also gave the Zealots a advantage at numerous things.Hoped this helped!:)
Sometimes
There were none. The Zealots rebelled against Rome during the reign of Nero.
There is no such thing as greek hebrew. If you just want the Hebrew word for purpose, it's kavanah (×›×•×•× ×”)
The Zealots (see the Talmud, Gittin 56a).