Yid (יִיד)
An Apostate Jew
A Jew that converts to another religion.
A person who is born to a Jewish woman or who halachicly (following Jewish law) converts to Judaism is a Jew.
If a Jew is offering the toast, then after he has said everything else that he wants to say, the actual toast will consist of the word "L'Chayim". The word is Hebrew, not Yiddish, and it means "To Life".
The word you are looking for is gentile.
OpinionIt is neither good nor bad for a Jew to become a Christian; it is simply a matter of personal choice. For it to be considered bad for a Jew to become a Christian, it should also be considered bad for a Christian to become a Jew or, for that matter, a Muslim. There is no reason to consider inter-faith conversions bad.
No. Jesus, while a Jew himself, explicitly taught that his New Gospel did not require one to be a Jew. Thus, to be a follower of Jesus' teaching, one did not have to first be a Jew. In fact, the vast majority of converts to the new Christianity were Gentiles (i.e. non-Jews).
No...
== == The word is Galitzianer, and it refers to a Jew from the south-eastern region of the Eastern-European Yiddish speaking world. It implies that a person speaks Yiddish with a certain dialect, and there are cultural differences as well. The "opposite" is a Litvak, a Jew from the north-eastern areas such as Lithuania. The name originated as the Yiddish term referring to someone from Galicia, part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in modern-day Poland and Ukraine. As opposed to the Litvaks of Belarus, north-eastern Poland and Lithuania, Galitsyaners spoke a separate dialect of Yiddish. Eventually, the term referred to anyone who spoke a similar dialect, broadening the term to mean, basically, "anyone who isn't a Litvak".
nothing im a Jew
Judaism and Christianity