nun-you do nothing everything stays the same
shin-put two coins in
gimel- take all of the pile
hay- take half of the pile
________
The above describes the rules of a game played with dreidels but doesn't answer the question.
Dreidels have 4 letters on them but they make up an acronym, not a word. There are two version of the acronym and they are:
In Israel: Neis, Gadol, Haya, Po - A great miracle happened here.
Outside of Israel: Neis, Gadol, Haya, Sham - A great miracle happened there.
It is a four-sided top, used in a Hanukkah game.
There is no such thing as "Hanukkah Day". Hanukkah lasts for 8 days and 8 nights. During Hanukkah parties, held throughout the festival, all types of party games are played. The only traditional game is the dreidel game, which is a gambling game that uses a 4-sided top.
A dreidel is a four-sided top, played with during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.
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.
Many rabbis have tried to find a historical connection between the dreidel and the Hanukkah story. One 19th century rabbi proposed that in Ancient times, Jews played with the dreidel in order to fool the Greeks if they were caught studying Torah, which had been outlawed. The standard explanation is that the letters nun, gimmel, hey, shin, which appear on the dreidel in the Diaspora, stand for nes gadol haya sham--"a great miracle happened there,"while in Israel the dreidel says nun, gimmel, hey, pey, which means "a great miracle happened here."
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.
It's a four-sided top used by Jewish children to play games during Hanukkah.
It is a four-sided top with a Hebrew letter on each of the sides.
A dreidel (Yiddish: דרײדל dreydl, Hebrew: סביבון‎ Sevivon) is a four-sided spinning top, played with during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.Many rabbis have tried to find a historical connection between the dreidel and the Hanukkah story.One 19th century rabbi proposed that in Ancient times, Jews played with the dreidel in order to fool the Greeks if they were caught studying Torah, which had been outlawed.The standard explanation is that the letters nun, gimmel, hey, shin, which appear on the dreidel in the Diaspora, stand for nes gadol haya sham--"a great miracle happened there,"while in Israel the dreidel says nun, gimmel, hey, pey, which means "a great miracle happened here."
Inscriptions on all four sides of a Dreidel are the Hebrew symbols: נ ,ג ,ה, and ש.
four. The dreidle is a square top with a letter on each side. The letters stand for "A Great Miracle Happened There".