English
Etymology
From Middle English Jewesse, from Old French juiesse, juise;[1] equivalent to Jew + -ess.
Noun
Jewess (plural Jewesses)
- (dated or humorous) A female Jew. [14th c.[1]]
- Hypernym: Jew
- Hyponym: giyoret
1920, Winston Churchill, Zionism versus Bolshevism:And the prominent, if not indeed the principal, part in the system of terrorism applied by the Extraordinary Commissions for Combating Counter-Revolution has been taken by Jews, and in some notable cases by Jewesses.
1952, Ivanhoe:To whom did Ivanhoe tip his lance in gallantry today?
To a Jewess named Rebecca, daughter of Isaac, the banker of his tribe.
What could he want of the Jews except money for the ransom?
2009, Touraj Daryaee, Sasanian Persia: The Rise and Fall of an Empire, London: I.B.Tauris, →ISBN, page 78:As for Wahram V (Gur), the Zoroastrian Persians could see him as a legitimate ruler and the Jews would see him as a Jewish king. After all, he was Jewish since his mother was a Jewess.
Derived terms
Translations
female Jew
- Arabic: يَهُودِيَّة (ar) f (yahūdiyya)
- Belarusian: яўрэ́йка f (jaŭréjka), габрэ́йка f (habréjka), жыдо́ўка f (žydóŭka) (historical, now offensive)
- Bulgarian: евре́йка f (evréjka)
- Catalan: jueva (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 猶太人 / 犹太人 (zh) (yóutàirén) (gender-neutral)
- Czech: Židovka (cs) f
- Danish: jødinde c
- Dutch: jodin (nl) f
- Esperanto: judino
- Estonian: juuditar
- Finnish: juutalaisnainen
- French: Juive (fr) f (ethnic), juive (fr) f (religious)
- Georgian: ებრაელი ქალი (ebraeli kali)
- German: Jüdin (de) f
- Greek: Ιουδαία (el) f (Ioudaía)
- Hebrew: יהודיה \ יְהוּדִיָּה f (yehudiyá)
- Hindi: यहूदिनी f (yahūdinī)
- Hungarian: zsidó (hu) (gender-neutral)
- Ido: Judino
- Interlingua: judea
- Italian: giudea f, ebrea (it) f
- Japanese: ユダヤ人 (ja) (ユダヤじん, yudayajin) (gender-neutral)
- Korean: 유대인 (ko) (yudaein) (gender-neutral), 유태인 (ko) (yutaein) (gender-neutral)
- Ladino:
- Latin: djudia f
- Latin: iūdaea f
- Latvian: ebrejs m
- Macedonian: Еврејка f (Evrejka)
- Middle English: Jewesse
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: jødinne (no) m or f
- Nynorsk: jødinne f
- Persian: یهودی (fa) (yahudi) (gender-neutral)
- Polish: Żydówka (pl) f
- Portuguese: judia (pt) f
- Romanian: evreică (ro) f
- Russian: евре́йка (ru) f (jevréjka), жидо́вка (ru) f (židóvka) (historical, now offensive)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Јеврејка f, Жидовка f, Жидкиња f
- Roman: Jevrejka f, Židovka f, Židkinja f
- Slovak: Židovka (sk) f
- Slovene: Jevrejka f, Židinja f, Judinja f
- Spanish: judía (es) f
- Swedish: judinna (sv) c
- Turkish: Musevi (tr) (belief), Yahudi (tr)
- Ukrainian: євре́йка f (jevréjka), жидо́вка f (žydóvka)
- Urdu: یہودنی f (yahūdinī)
- Vietnamese: người Do Thái (vi) (gender-neutral)
- Volapük: jiyudan
- Welsh: Iddewes f
- West Frisian: joadinne f
- Yiddish: ייִדישקע f (yidishke), ייִדיש־קינד f (yidish-kind), בת־ישׂראל f (bas-yisroel), ייִדישע טאָכטער f (yidishe tokhter)
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See also
References