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Hanukkah

[ hah-nuh-kuh; khahAshkenazic Hebrew khah-nuh-kuh; Sephardic Hebrew khah-noo-kah ]

noun

  1. a Jewish festival lasting eight days, celebrated from the 25th day of the month of Kislev to the 2nd of Tevet in commemoration of the rededication of the Temple by the Maccabees following their victory over the Syrians under Antiochus IV, characterized chiefly by the lighting of the menorah on each night of the festival.


Hanukkah

/ xanuˈka; ˈhɑːnəkə; -nʊˌkɑː /

noun

  1. the eight-day Jewish festival of lights beginning on the 25th of Kislev and commemorating the rededication of the temple by Judas Maccabaeus in 165 bc Also calledFeast of DedicationFeast of Lights


Hanukkah

  1. A festival in Judaism that occurs each December. Hanukkah commemorates the victory of the Jews (see also Jews ) in the second century b.c. over the Syrians, who had occupied their country, and the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem (see also Jerusalem ) ( hanukkah is Hebrew for “dedication”). Observers of Hanukkah light one candle in a candleholder called a menorah each night for eight nights in memory of a legend that, when the Temple was rededicated, its lamps burned, without enough oil, miraculously for a week.


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Notes

Hanukkah was formerly one of the less important Jewish festivals, but today it is celebrated by Jews in many parts of the world — especially the United States, where it overlaps with the celebration of Christmas .

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Word History and Origins

Origin of Hanukkah1

First recorded in 1890–95, Hanukkah is from the Hebrew word ḥănukkāh literally, “a dedicating”

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Word History and Origins

Origin of Hanukkah1

from Hebrew, literally: a dedication

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Example Sentences

Back in December, and just in time for Hanukkah, J.K. Rowling revealed via Twitter that there were Jewish wizards at Hogwarts.

Deck your halls instead with boughs of holly, shouting “Merry Christmas” (or “Happy Hanukkah”) well into the night.

To celebrate Hanukkah, Sam curated eight of his favorite looks for The Daily Beast.

Hanukkah is the celebration of a Jewish military victory in the second century BCE.

Especially if the holiday shopping season is front-loaded because Hanukkah falls in November rather than December.

The story is immortalized in the second name "Feast of Lights," given to the Hanukkah festival.

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