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Jewish folklore spirit
Answer for the clue "Jewish folklore spirit ", 6 letters:
dybbuk
Alternative clues for the word dybbuk
Word definitions for dybbuk in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. (Jewish folklore) a demon that enters the body of a living person and controls that body's behavior [syn: dibbuk ] [also: dybbukkim (pl)]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A Dybbuk is a malicious possessing spirit in Kabbalah and European Jewish folklore. The Dybbuk box is a wine cabinet said to contain such a spirit. Dybbuk may also refer to: Dybbuk (Dungeons & Dragons) , a role-playing game monster The Dybbuk (play) , a ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"malevolent spirit of a dead person possessing the body of a living one," 1903, from Jewish folklore, from Hebrew dibbuk , from dabak "to cling, cleave to."
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. A malicious possessing spirit, believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person. n. A malicious possessing spirit, believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
dybbuk \dyb"buk\ (d[i^]b"b[u^]k; Hebrew d[=e]*b[=oo]k"), n.; pl. dybbuks ; Hebr. dybbukim (d[=e]`b[=oo]k*[=e]m"). (Jewish folklore) the wandering soul of a dead person, or a demon, that enters the body of a living person and controls that body's behavior. ...
Usage examples of dybbuk.
One was of a seraphic disposition, although embedded in the essence of a dybbuk, which made him very unhappy, whereas the other was of the darkest diabolical nature, and enjoyed every evil fantasy inspired in him by the God of the Depths.
The evil dybbuk exclaimed that this was his chance to infiltrate a Messiah at the time of conception, and he gloated over the notion.
A Messiah governed from the core of his soul by a perfectly malevolent dybbuk, that would be a fascinating novelty.
Cases of joint and simultaneous impregnation have never been recorded by science, but that does not necessarily make them impossible, especially when the human process is wilfully monitored by a dybbuk, let alone two.
Wing was writing a letter and Dybbuk was reading what looked like a two-hundred-year-old book as thick as a cinder block and just as dusty.
After nearly twenty years we move as one, but Dybbuk has to do all the navigating.
I jerked back, and some heavy object flattened the suit right between Dybbuk and me.
I assumed that the dog had caught sight of the dybbuk or was interested in Kierkegaard.
Still, interspersed between its superstitions and amulets, demons and dybbuks, Hasidism provided broad cosmic perspectives for the wretched ghetto dweller, and endowed him with a sanctity that reached deeply beyond his ragged parochialism and penetrated his soul.