The Hebrew letters inscribed on a dreidel are a Nun, Gimel, Hey or Chai, and Shin. The letters form an acronym for the Hebrew saying Nes Gadol Hayah Sham, which can be translated to "a great miracle happened there," referring to the miracle which Hanukkah is centered around.
The symbols found on the Jewish Dreidel can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreidel
It is a Jewish gambling toy.
I think you mean dreidel, it is a four sided spinning top.
Only the Jewish people in the Netherlands use the dreidel. It is a Jewish custom.
The menorah and the dreidel.
Dreidel
"S'vivon" is a Hebrew word. It means dreidel, which is a four-sided spinning top that is typically used during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.
There are several different symbols that represent the Kabbalah in the Jewish faith. Some noteworthy ones include the Dreidel, which is the symbol of the Jewish holiday Chanukkah. Another symbol would be the Pomegranate, which were considered sacred by the ancient Israelites.
A Jewish child would like to use a dreidel because it is a game that is part of Jewish tradition.
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you are talking about the 4-sided top used on Hanukkah, it's called a dreidel in Yiddish and a sevivon in Hebrew.Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish", but there are at least 5 other Jewish languages, unrelated to Yiddish, which also mean "Jewish", such as Judezmo and Yahudi.
A dreidel is a four-sided top, played with during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.
If you are speaking of the top played with on Channukah, a dreidel.