Jewish can refer to both a religion and an ethnicity. It can describe individuals who practice Judaism as their religion, as well as those who identify with the cultural and historical aspects of the Jewish people.
Ethnicity refers to a large group of people sharing common traits such as race, language, and religion.
Arnold Stang was Jewish.
Jamie Colby is Jewish.
Judy Blume's religion is Jewish. She was raised in a Jewish household and has written about her Jewish identity in some of her works.
Lorne Greene was Jewish.
No she was not Jewish either by religion or ethnicity.
It's a little of both. The term "Jewish" can refer to either ethnicity or religious belief. There are certainly people who consider themselves to be Jewish in terms of ethnicity, but either agnostic or atheist, and also people who consider themselves to be both Jewish (by descent) and Christian (by religious preference).
Laziness has nothing to do with ethnicity or religion.
Due to the nature of Judaism, it is a way of life more than a religion, a distinct Jewish culture developed. As such, being a Jew is also the individual's ethnicity.
No. The US has not elected any person of the Jewish religion or Jewish ethnicity as President.
"Jewish" is an adjective describing one's ethnicity, religion, etc. You can't really pluralize an adjective.
No, she's not. She's ethnic British with a bit of Polish background. She's Christian. She is not Jewish by ethnicity or religion.
As per Jewish law, as recorded in the Bible, the mother's religion determines the child's religion at birth. If the mother is Jewish then the child is Jewish, irrelevant of who the father is. If the mother is not Jewish then the child isn't Jewish, no matter who the father is. Non-Jews can always convert to Judaism if they really want to. Only a Jewish Beth Din can do conversions. Ethnicity plays no role in Judaism. Jews of all skin color are equal.
In classical Jewish sources such as the Torah, Jews are spoken of as a nation, with Judaism being their national code of living.Today, many speak of Judaism as both a religion and an ethnicity. It's an ethnicity because Jews are descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives: Jews, despite their diversity, are related to each other (as has been shown by DNA analyses of far-flung Jewish communities). And it's a religion, because Judaism is defined in dictionaries as the religion of Moses; the religion of the Torah, which includes people born Jewish as well as non-ethnic Jews who became converts.
Only if you are Jewish. "Jewish" is both a religion and an ethnicity. It's possible to believe in the Jewish religion without being ethnically Jewish and vice versa. The term "non-practicing Jew" is sometimes used for those people who are of Jewish ancestry but are personally either agnostic or atheist. You are considered Jewish if your mother was Jewish. If you're curious to hear what Judaism requires of Jews, there are tons of references available. What you choose to learn, ignore, believe in, and practice, and how you choose to live your life, are completely 100% up to you.
It isn't used in Judaism.
the most religions that were attacked were the Jewish people that was very sad for them and bad.---But it is was the Jews as a 'race' (ethnicity) - not the Jewish religion - that the Nazis tried to eradicate. World War 2 was not a 'religious war' or' war of religion'.