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  1. Apr 3, 2023 · What does “erev” mean in Hebrew? English most often translates the Hebrew word “erev” as “evening.” But as the Jewish poet, Haim Nachman Bialik, (1873-1934) once said, “Reading the Bible in translation is like kissing your new bride through a veil.”

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  2. Oct 4, 2018 · In Akkadian (a Semitic language that was the language of Assyria and Babylonia), they have an ayin-resh-bet root that means “to enter.” Most modern scholars believe that “erev” is called this because it is the time when the sun has set, and early man viewed it as having entered into its resting location.

  3. Feb 4, 2017 · In Hebrew, "erev" means evening, and can also, just like the English "eve," mean the time just before and leading up to something – for example, the day or the evening before, as in "New Year's Eve."

  4. According to one tradition, the origins of the Hebrew word for ‘evening’ – ‘Erev’ {ערב} – come from the old Hebrew verb ‘Le-Arev’ {לערב} which means ‘to mix’ or ‘to intermingle’ and refers to the special time of the day in which the sunset and light and darkness are ALL present and appear as a ‘mix.’

  5. Jan 30, 2020 · In modern Jewish, and especially Israeli, parlance, ʿerev rav is translated as riffraff or rabble, sometimes even traitors. Describing the late 20 th century actions of Rabbi Uzi Meshulam, Motti Inbari of the University of North Carolina notes that “Meshulam identified the Israeli left with the erev rav , thus demonizing it.”

  6. Mar 16, 2017 · I have seen the speculation that orev for raven derives from it being a bird of the arava/wilderness, or from being a dark bird, from the “evening/dark” meaning of erev. Alternatively, the name may derive from the sound that the bird makes.

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  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Erev_RavErev Rav - Wikipedia

    Erev Rav (Hebrew: עֵרֶב רַב ‘êreḇ raḇ "mixed multitude") was a group that included Egyptians and others who had joined the Tribes of Israel on the Exodus. [1] According to Jewish tradition, they were accepted by Moses as an integral part of the people.

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