The candelabrum is called a menorah. See Exodus ch.25.
Jewish houses of worship are called synagogues.
Jewish houses of worship are called synagogues.
Two answers. The menorah was the candelabrum in the Tabernacle and the Temple (Exodus ch.25); and today, the candles lit in Hanukkah are placed in what we call a menorah (or a Hanukkiah).
The God worship by the Rastas, Jewish and Christians differ in their names. The Rastas worship a singular God whom they call 'JAH', the Jewish also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHWEH' and the Roman Catholic Christians also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHVE'. Nevertheless, all of them worship a singular God but with a different names.
Both are places of worship. A Mosque is used for Muslim worship. A Synagogue is used for Jewishworship.
No. Only a man can perform the call to worship.
There is no specific place required for worship in Judaism. In truth, for group prayer, any place where 10 or more adult Jewish males (Jewish males and females are counted in most non-Orthodox groups) are gathered will do. Any quiet place is suitable for individual prayer. Structures that are built specifically for worship are most commonly called synagogues in English. Some Reform groups will call their synagogues Temples though.
Tagalog translation of call to worship: tinawag para manamapalataya
The Jewish people call it as a shofar.
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).
It depends on what language they speak. There is no difference in what Jewish people call their parents and what non-Jewish people call their parents.
Yes. Some Jewish congregations call their houses of worship a "temple". Others call them a "synagogue" or a "schule" and there are other words and phrases as well. Whatever the house of worship is called, however, it has the same basic functions: a place of worship, a community meeting place, and a place of study. In fact "shule" (or shul) is the German/Yiddish word for school. But technically a group of 10 adult Jews (used to be Jewish men only, some liberalized to include women, and in need some others will just take 10 adults -- and adult can mean anyone over bar/bat mitzvah age) constitute a "minyan" (or quorum) for a "formal" prayer service.