צדיק

Hebrew

Etymology 1

Root
צ־ד־ק (ts-d-q)
6 terms

Cognate with Arabic صِدِّيق (ṣiddīq).

Pronunciation

Noun

צַדִּיק • (tsadíkm (plural indefinite צַדִּיקִים, feminine counterpart צַדֶּקֶת)

  1. (Judaism) tzaddik (a very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader)
    • Tanach, Proverbs 25:26:
      מַעְיָן נִרְפָּשׂ וּמָקוֹר מָשְׁחָת צַדִּיק מָט לִפְנֵי רָשָׁע׃
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
  2. (Judaism, by extension) A title for a Hassidic rabbi: Tzadik

Adjective

צַדִּיק • (tsadík) (feminine צַדִּיקָה, masculine plural צַדִּיקִים, feminine plural צַדִּיקוֹת)

  1. saintly, pious
  2. righteous
  3. (Biblical Hebrew) just, moral

Etymology 2

From צד״י (tsádi), corrupted via series contamination from a fast recitation of the alphabet sequence (i.e., "tsadi, qoph" → "tsadiq, qoph"), influenced by צַדִּיק (righteous person).

Noun

צַדִּיק • (tsadíkf (plural indefinite צַדִּיקִין)

  1. (informal) tsade (צ), the 18th letter of the Hebrew alphabet
    Alternative form: צַדִּי״ק

Ladino

Etymology

From Hebrew צדיק.

Noun

צדיק m (Latin spelling sadik, plural צדיקים)

  1. righteous person, tzaddik

Yiddish

Etymology

From Hebrew צַדִּיק (tsadík, righteous person). The letter sense is from an alteration of Hebrew צָדִי.

Noun

צדיק • (tsadekm, plural צדיקים (tsadikem), feminine צדקת (tsadeykes)

  1. (Judaism) A saintly or righteous person: tzadik.
  2. (Judaism) A title for a Hassidic rabbi: Tzadik.
  3. tsade (eighteenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet)

Derived terms