The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rabbin \Rab"bin\ (r[a^]b"b[i^]n), n. [F.] Same as Rabbi.
Usage examples of "rabbin".
Two other Rabbins went to visit Acha in his sickness, and as they proceeded on their way they agreed to hear what Bath-Kool would pronounce on the fate of their brother.
A general belief prevailed among Christians that the Jewish rabbins were acquainted with the occult sciences, and particularly with the cabalistical art.
A Jewish Rabbin relates the following conversation, as exultingly as if the quibbling evasion on which it turns positively settled the question itself, which in fact it does not approach.
The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, following the example of those Rabbins who, several centuries before his time, began to give mystical interpretations of the Scriptures, infers from this statement that Enoch was borne into heaven without tasting death.
And if it were clearly made out what is remarkably delivered from the Traditions of the Rabbins, that as the Oyle was powered coronally or circularlly upon the head of Kings, so the HighPriest was anointed decussatively or in the form of an X.