It's called a channukiah or Hanukkah-menorah.
pamot (פמוט)
pamot or pamotin.
It is a four-sided top, used in a Hanukkah game.
The word "Happy" is English and the word "Hanukkah" is Hebrew.
On Hannukah, special tops called "dreidels" are made traditionally out of clay. Gelt, the Yiddish word for gold, is the chocolate coins that are used when playing the dreidel game.
Hanukkah (sometimes spelled Chanukah) is the only word for Hanukkah. In English, it is also sometimes called the Festival of Lights.
Hanukkah (חנוכה) means "dedication"
That candle holder is referred to as a "Hanukkah-menorah", or Hannukiyah. The original Menorah was the holder of the oil lights in the Tabernacle in the Wilderness, and had seven branches. The holder for the Chanukah lights ... whether candles or oil ... has places for eight lights, plus an elevated holder for one more that's used to light the other eight.
Hanukkah was founded 2180 years ago. The word "Hanukkah" is taken from Numbers ch.7 (in the original Hebrew). In that context, and in the context of our celebration of Hanukkah also, the word means "dedication" or "initiation" into the service of God.
Hanukkah Gelt is the gold-foil covered chocolate coins used when playing the dreidl game at Hanukkah. "Gelt" is the German and Yiddish word for "gold".
Some compound words that start with "candle" include "candlestick," "candlelight," and "candleholder." These words are formed by combining the word "candle" with another word to create a new term. Each compound word retains the original meaning of "candle" while adding specificity or context through the additional word.
Dedication