Yes, that's correct.
The symbols on the dreidl are letters of the Hebrew alphabet, Nun, Gimel, Hay, and Shin, which are the intials of the phrase "Nes Gadol Hayah Shom", or "A great miracle happened there".This refers to the miracle of the Hannukah oil in which one days' worth of oil lasted for eight days.
The letters on the dreidel (Nun, Gimel, Hay, Shin) each stand for a word in Hebrew, writing out "Nes gadol hayah sham," or "A great miracle happened there." In Israel, the final letter (Shin) is replaced with a Pei, and the last word becomes "Po," translating as "A great miracle happened here." The miracle in question, of course, is that the oil in the Temple Menorah lasted for 8 days instead of 1, after the victory of the Maccabee army against the Seleucid king Antiochus.
Hay. The Hebrew letters on the dreidel are the mnemonic for the rules of the game in Yiddish: Nun -- Nicht, you get nothing Gimmel -- Ganz, you get the pot Hay -- Halb, you get half the pot Shin -- Shtel, put in a coin into the pot
The Hebrew letters on the dreidel are the mnemonic for the rules of the game in Yiddish: Nun -- Nicht, you get nothing Gimmel -- Ganz, you get the pot Hay -- Halb, you get half the pot Shin -- Shtel, put in a coin into the pot
Many rabbis have tried to find a historical connection between the dreidel and the Hanukkah story. One 19th century rabbi proposed that in Ancient times, Jews played with the dreidel in order to fool the Greeks if they were caught studying Torah, which had been outlawed. The standard explanation is that the letters nun, gimmel, hey, shin, which appear on the dreidel in the Diaspora, stand for nes gadol haya sham--"a great miracle happened there,"while in Israel the dreidel says nun, gimmel, hey, pey, which means "a great miracle happened here."
A dreidel is used for Hanukkah, the Jewish holiday that lasts eight days and comes in December. Dreidel is actually a game; here's what happens:There are four sides to a dreidel: shin (ש), gimel (ג), nun (נ), and hay (ה).There is gelt in the middle of the table; usually a lot, like 50 or so. Everyone gets a handful (gelt is usually chocolate coins wrapped in tin foil individually wrapped). If you don't have gelt, virtually anything will work: little candies, pennies, etc.Give everyone the same amount of gelt, like 5 or so.You take turns spinning the dreidel like a top. If you land on gimel, you get all the gelt...you win! Normally you keep playing and everyone puts in about three to start a new round. If you get hay, you get half the gelt in the middle. If you get nun, you get NOTHING. If you get shin, you put one gelt in the middle again.Dreidel never really ends...you just keep playing. If you run out, technically you're out, but if you play with little kids it's better to just give them 3 gelt and continue playing.You go around the table in a circle and everyone spins the dreidel one time on their turn.
Shechina is spelled, shin, chaf, yud, nun, hey - שכינה
E-nun-siAt ee nun see eight or ee noun see eight. ?
A dreidel is a four sided top typically played with during Hanukkah, or the Festival of Lights. On each side there is a Hebrew letter, typically a nun (× ), gimel (×’), hei (×”) and a shin (ש). Each letter is part of a word in the phrase Nes Gadol Haya Sham, which means "a great miracle happened there" in reference to the miracle that occurred in Israel at the re-dedication of the Temple in Jerusalem, and the basis of Hanukkah. Most dreidels in Israel have the letter peh (פ) in place of the shin, changing the phrase to Nes Gadol Haya Po, which means "a great miracle happened here." In addition to the acronym, a gambling game is often played with a dreidel in which case each letter represents the outcome of a spin. Nun would get nothing (Yiddish word "nite" meaning nothing), gimel gets the pot ("gant" meaning all), hei gets half ("halb" meaning half) and shin would cause the player to add to the pot ("shteln" meaning put).
First a description of a dreidel :A dreidel is a four-sided spinning top used in a child's gambling game.Each side of the dreidel bears a letter of the Hebrew alphabet: ×? (Nun), ×’(Gimel), ×” (Hei), ש (Shin)Nun stands for nite("nothing"), Hei stands for halb ("half"), Gimel for gants ("all"), and Shin for shteln ("put") except in Israel where the fourth side of most dreidels are inscribed with the letter פ (Pei)Assuming that you know you spin the dreidel and spinner puts in or takes out corners or candy based on the side that is upa) If nun is facing up, the player does nothing.b) If gimmel is facing up, the player gets everything in the pot.c) If hey is facing up, the player gets half of the pieces in the pot. (If there is an odd number, they get half of the total plus one)d) If shin (or peh) is facing up, the player adds a game piece to the pot.Now - where to get a dreidel. Most card and gift shops will sell dreidels around Hannukka. Your odds of finding such a shop with dreidels in stock goes up directly with the proximity of the shop to Jewish neighbourhood. Often the local Jewish cultural center will have a gift boutique with dreidels and candy money.
its NUN-YEZ dont forget the accent on the second n