Sefer (Hebrew)

Sefer (ספר) in Hebrew means any kind of book or written document (plural ספרים s'farim).[1] It is derived from the same Semitic root as sofer ("scribe"), sifriyah ("library") and safrut ("literature").

The word sefer contains in it the same root as the one used for mispar, which means a number.

Common use

Among Orthodox Jews the word is used for books both of the Tanakh, the Oral Torah (Mishnah and Talmud) or any work of rabbinic literature. Works unrelated to Torah study are rarely called sefer by English-speaking Orthodox Jews. Among Hebrew-speaking Ashkenazi Jews, the differentiation between books related to Torah study and other books is made by referring to the former with traditional Ashkenazi pronunciation (SEY-fur) and to the latter with Modern Hebrew pronunciation (SEF-fer).


gollark: Ħ you. Ħ all of you.
gollark: Plus I could integrate some stuff from the potatOS privacy policy like the thing which randomly swaps words.
gollark: AND formatting!
gollark: You have a browser for Discord anyway.
gollark: It has formatting, though.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.