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Haggada

American  
[huh-gah-duh, hah-gah-dah, hah-gaw-duh] / həˈgɑ də, hɑ gɑˈdɑ, hɑˈgɔ də /

noun

Haggadoth, plural Haggadot, plural Haggados, plural Haggadas plural
  1. Haggadah.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

And while we’re waiting, the Haggada has a message for us: Complain if you must.

From Washington Post • Apr. 14, 2022

Of course you do, because the Haggada, the book we read for the holiday, instructs us to.

From Washington Post • Apr. 14, 2022

If you read the Haggada closely, you see that freedom is not simply, or even, joyous liberation.

From Washington Post • Apr. 14, 2022

When it’s time for the Seders, use that technology to connect as you read the Haggada and sing around your separate tables as one, coming together to create a new definition of the Seder table.

From Washington Post • Mar. 30, 2020

The starting-point of the Haggada usually is some memory of the great past.

From Jewish Literature and Other Essays by Karpeles, Gustav

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