Advertisement

Advertisement

Kaplan

[ kap-luhn ]

noun

  1. Mor·de·cai Me·na·hem [mawr, -di-kahy , mey, -n, uh, -hem, m, uh, -, nah, -hem], 1881–1983, U.S. religious leader and educator, born in Lithuania: founder of the Reconstructionist movement in Judaism.


Discover More

Example Sentences

He had been in a seven-year relationship, with his husband Michael Kaplan.

“For her, everything was a celebration,” Tziporah Salamon reflects on Kaplan.

In his biography, Frank, James Kaplan relates that when Sinatra was ill, the producer sat by his hospital bed for hours on end.

Kaplan, the editor and critic, and Lincoln, the writer, are a wonderful combination.

Lunch with Peter Kaplan—a ritual as stylized as Kabuki, minus the face paint.

Kaplan Giraj pressed Halil's hand by way of expressing his gratitude for this mark of confidence.

Even had nothing been preconcerted, Kaplan Giraj's sword must needs have leaped from its sheath at these mortally insulting words.

His hard gray eyes bored into the lab organizer and Kaplan slunk back.

It was designed by Liebenberg and Kaplan of Minneapolis in 1930.

Straight gain for the last quarter, observed Kaplan, the lab organizer.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


KapitzaKapo