Judaism is a religion. A Jew is a person that believes in Judaism.
You were correct. Judaism is the religion, a Jew is a person who follows Judaism.
Jew is a word for a Jewish person. Judaism is to Jews as Christianity is to Christians.
The other issue is that Judaism is not a typical religion in that the son of a religious Jew who is himself not religious at all (atheist for example) is still considered a Jew in an ethnic or nationalistic sense. The son of a Christian who is himself not religious at all (atheist for example) would not be considered a Christian in any sense. Other religions which are similar to Judaism in this manner are Druze and Yazidi.
You can be a Dutch and a Jew both. A Hebrew Jew is part of a RACE of humans. A Dutch is a person born in the Netherlands or has been naturalized a Dutch. Dutch is also the name of their language. Most of them are from the white race but there are some Hebrew race Dutch people in the Netherlands. The Hebrew Jews can speak in Hebrew and Yiddish. They can speak in the language of the nation they live or were born in. So a Hebrew Dutch could speak Dutch too.
one is danish and the other isnt
jewish people were hebrew. jew was just their religion
Jews are Jewish and non-Jews are a different religion.
meaning of jew
Typically, there is no difference. "Yehudi" is just the Hebrew and Arabic word for "Jew". However, Yehudi can sometimes also be translated as Judean, referring to people of the ancient Kingdom of Judah who are the forerunners of today's Jews.
Yehudi
Israelite or Hebrew.
Jewels, as a name, has no Hebrew translation. The word for "jewels" is "tahkh-shee-teem", but this is not used as a name in Hebrew.
No, Jethro wasn't a Hebrew or a Jew. He was a Midianite.
All Jews are Hebrews. Jesus was both a Jew and a Hebrew. The term "Jew" referred to the people of Judea, of which Jesus was a member, and was used as early as the fourth century BCE (including in the book of Esther). All Jews were Hebrews (since a Hebrew is any descendant of Eber and Eber is an ancestor of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the ancestors of the Jews), but not all Hebrews were Jews. Jesus was also more strongly aligned with the Pharisees he rejected than any of the other contemporaneous Jewish movements. Although the Pharisees would not become the dominant form of Judaism until the Talmud was published, their views and methods of interpretation were certainly well-developed by Jesus' time.
The word "Jew" is an English word and as such is used in English, just like the word "Synagogue" is English and not Hebrew. In Hebrew conversation, the Hebrew version "Yi-hu-DEE" is used.