Tefillah (prayer).
The form of Jewish worship is prayer.
Communal Jewish worship services center on a prayer called the Amidah, or standing prayer, consisting of 19 benedictions, each with a preliminary paragraph to focus the mind don the substance of that benediction. Morning and evening services also include the Shema, a page or two (depending on the prayerbook) of biblical text starting the the proclamation "Hear oh Israel, the Lord your God, the Lord is One!" Whether Orthodox or Reform (or any of several other varieties), Jewish worship is conducted from a fixed liturgy that is read from a prayerbook, the Siddur. The central prayers of the service are framed by a preliminary service that is quite long in the morning service and much shorter in the afternoon service, plus a concluding section. Traditional worship, as in the Catholic and Anglican traditions, involves cantoral leadership with congregational responses. Depending on the congregation, there may be long segments of the service where congregation members go at their own speeds independently, before coming together for something resembling call-and-response communal worship.
They are Jewish and they're called Jews.
Worship in Judaism is every day, three times a day.
There are no churches in Judaism.
Jews worship God in the temples and synagogues.
We worship God, who created the universe.
Place of worship for the Jewish faith.
Islam, Judaism
Synagogue
A synagogue is a place of worship for followers of the Jewish faith. It is used for prayer, study, and community gatherings.
"Judaism" is not something that is itself venerated. Jews worship God and do so by the rites and rituals prescribed by Judaism. Jews pray at Synagogues.
There is no such concept in Judaism called a "year of worship"
The is no such thing as a "judaism".