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- Minyan - Wikipedia
In Judaism, a minyan (Hebrew: מניין \ מִנְיָן mīnyān, lit (noun) count, number; pl מניינים \ מִנְיָנִים mīnyānīm) is the quorum of ten Jewish adults required for certain religious obligations
- Minyan: The Congregational Quorum - My Jewish Learning
Minyan is the Hebrew word that describes the quorum of ten Jewish adults required for certain religious obligations The word itself comes from the Hebrew root maneh (מנה) meaning to count or to number
- Minyan: The Prayer Quorum - Chabad. org
There are certain prayers or rituals that can only take place in public Jewish law defines this as the presence of 10 males of 13 years or older This is known as a minyan, quorum The quorum is so important, that the prayer service itself can be referred to as a minyan
- MINYAN Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of MINYAN is the quorum required for Jewish communal worship that consists of ten male adults in Orthodox Judaism and usually ten adults of either sex in Conservative and Reform Judaism
- MINYAN - JewishEncyclopedia. com
Literally, "count"; the quorum necessary for public worship The smallest congregation which is permitted to hold public worship is one made up of ten men, boys over thirteen years being for this, as for other religious purposes, counted as men See Bar Miẓwah
- Minyan | Prayer, Torah Study Community | Britannica
minyan, in Judaism, the minimum number of males (10) required to constitute a representative “community of Israel” for liturgical purposes A Jewish boy of 13 may form part of the quorum after his Bar Mitzvah (religious adulthood)
- Minyan | Texts Source Sheets from Torah, Talmud and Sefarias library . . .
A *minyan* is a quorum of ten Jewish adults – in traditional Orthodox communities, ten males, and in more progressive communities, ten people – required to recite specific public prayers and for other religious purposes
- Minyan - Encyclopedia. com
MINYANMINYAN (Heb מִנְיָן; "number"), designation for the quorum of ten male adults, aged 13 years or over, necessary for public synagogue service and certain other religious ceremonies The Talmud (Ber 21b; Meg 23b) derives this number from the term edah ("community"), which in the Scriptures is applied to the ten spies (Num 14:27)
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