Clothing-wise, it is simply formal clothes (suits, dresses, etc.) However, a kipah (head-covering) and talit (cloth sort of scarf with fringes on the end) are also worn by most Jews.
Those are seats reserved in an Orthodox Synagogue for Men Only as opposed to Women's Seats which are reserved for Women Only. In an Orthodox Synagogue, the men and women are separated.
A suit and tie for men, and a dress or suit for women. In an Orthodox synagogue, women should wear a dress that covers the elbows and knees.
Not an Orthodox synagogue of course, but a nice pair of slacks is definitely appropriate for a Conservative or Reform synagogue.
1) A synagogue in which the women's section is in a raised balcony. 2) A synagogue in which the men and women are both on the ground floor in separate seating areas.See also:More about Jewish prayers and the synagogue
They pray separately in the synagogue.
Anything modest and dignified.
On chairs. Interesting, but women do the same. Wow, what a thought.
In Orthodox synagogues, men and women are seated separately.
You can tell a Orthodox Synagogue is an Orthodox Synagogue because a Orthodox Synagogue has the seats for men on the floor at the sides and the back, and the womans seats on a balcony up top, and the reading desk and the bimah are in the centre. Other than a Liberal/Reform Synagogue because a Liberal/Reform Synagogue has the men and the women sit together, and the reading desk at the side in-front of the seats for the men and women.
men wear pink and women wear black
Yes, both do. Men mostly wear dreadlocks, but women wear them, too.
what do men,women,and children wear in japan?