English
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English synagoge, from Old French synagoge, from Latin synagōga, from Ancient Greek σῠνᾰγωγή (sŭnăgōgḗ, “assembly, gathering”), from συνάγω (sunágō, “I gather together”), from σῠ́ν (sŭ́n, “with, together”) & ᾰ̓́γω (ắgō, “I lead”). By surface analysis, syn- + -agogue.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈsɪ.nəˌɡɒɡ/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈsɪ.nəˌɡɑɡ/
Noun
synagogue (plural synagogues)
- (countable, Judaism) A place of worship for Jews or Samaritans.
- Synonym: temple
- Hyponyms: mega-synagogue, shul
2013 May 7, “Netanyahu: Jewish people capable of own defense”, in AP News[1], archived from the original on 25 May 2022:On Tuesday, Netanyahu and his wife toured Shanghai’s Ohel Moshe synagogue in the Hongkou district that was home to many of the 18,000 Jews granted refuge in Shanghai from the horrors of Nazi persecution.
- (countable, Judaism) A congregation of Jews or Samaritans for the purpose of worship or religious study.
- (countable, rare, religion) Any assembly of folk.
1698, John Milton, A Complete Collection of the Hiſtorical, Political, and Miſcellaneous Works of John Milton[2], volume I, Amsterdam, page 267:But when they come hither, and ſee a Tympany of Spanioliz’d Biſhops ſwaggering in the fore-top of the State, and meddling to turn and dandle the Royal Ball with unskilful and Pedantick Palms, no marvel though they think it as unſafe to commit Religion and Liberty to their arbitrating as to a Synagogue of Jeſuits.
2024, Şener Aktürk, “Not So Innocent: Clerics, Monarchs, and the Ethnoreligious Cleansing of Western Europe”, in International Security[3], volume 48, number 8, page 106:It is in this period that some Christian authors even refer to the “Synagogue of … Muhammad,” demonstrating the extent to which they perceive non-Christian groups as one and the same.¹¹¹
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Translations
Jewish place of worship
- Afrikaans: sinagoge (af)
- Albanian: sinagogë (sq)
- Arabic: كَنِيس (ar) m (kanīs), بِيعَة (ar) f (bīʕa), صَلَاة f (ṣalāh)
- Judeo-Arabic: כניס m (kanīs), כניסיא f (kanīsiyya), צלא f (ṣla), שנוגׄא f (šnūġa) (Algeria, Morocco)
- Aragonese: please add this translation if you can
- Armenian: սինագոգ (hy) (sinagog), ժողովուրդ (hy) (žoġovurd)
- Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܟܢܘܫܬܐ f (knuštā)
- Asturian: sinagoga (ast) f
- Azerbaijani: sinaqoq, xavra
- Basque: sinagoga
- Belarusian: сінаго́га f (sinahóha)
- Berber:
- Tashelhit: ccnuɣt f, tacnuɣt f
- Bulgarian: синаго́га (bg) f (sinagóga)
- Catalan: sinagoga (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 猶太廟 / 犹太庙 (jau4 taai3 miu6)
- Mandarin: 猶太教堂 / 犹太教堂 (zh) (yóutài jiàotáng), 猶太會堂 / 犹太会堂 (zh) (yóutài huìtáng), 猶太廟 / 犹太庙 (Yóutài miào)
- Czech: synagoga (cs) f
- Danish: synagoge (da) c
- Dutch: synagoge (nl) f
- Esperanto: sinagogo
- Estonian: sünagoog (et)
- Extremaduran: please add this translation if you can
- Faroese: sýnagoga f
- Finnish: synagoga (fi)
- French: synagogue (fr) f
- Friulian: please add this translation if you can
- Galician: sinagoga f
- Georgian: სინაგოგა (sinagoga)
- German: Synagoge (de) f, Schule (de) f (archaic)
- Gothic: 𐍃𐍅𐌽𐌰𐌲𐍉𐌲𐌴 f (swnagōgē)
- Greek: συναγωγή (el) f (synagogí), χάβρα (el) f (chávra) (colloquial)
- Ancient: συναγωγή f (sunagōgḗ)
- Hawaiian Creole: Jewish church
- Hebrew: בֵּית־כְּנֶסֶת (he) m (beit-k'néset)
- Hindi: आराधनालय (ārādhnālay), सिनेगग (sinegag)
- Hungarian: zsinagóga (hu)
- Icelandic: samkunduhús n, sýnagóga f
- Ido: sinagogo (io)
- Indonesian: sinagoge (id)
- Irish: sionagóg f
- Italian: sinagoga (it) f
- Japanese: シナゴーグ (ja) (shinagōgu)
- Judeo-Tat: нумаз (numaz), нимаз (nimaz)
- Kazakh: синагога (sinagoga)
- Khmer: វិហារជ្វីហ្វ (vihiə cviif)
- Korean: 시나고그 (sinagogeu)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: کەنیشت (kenîşt)
- Northern Kurdish: kinîşte (ku), sînagog (ku), hewra (ku)
- Kyrgyz: синагога (ky) (sinagoga)
- Ladin: please add this translation if you can
- Ladino:
- Hebrew: קהל m (kal), אסנוגה f (esnoga)
- Roman: kal m, esnoga f, sinagoga f
- Latin: proseucha f
- Latvian: sinagoga f
- Ligurian: scinagöga f
- Lishana Deni: כנשתא (knəšta)
- Lithuanian: sinagoga f
- Lombard: sinagoga (lmo) f
- Macedonian: синаго́га (mk) f (sinagóga), а́вра f (ávra)
- Malay: sinagog (Malaysia, Singapore), sinagoge (Riau & Sumatra), kanisah, saumaah, biah (obsolete)
- Maltese: sinagoga f
- Mongolian:, синагог (sinagog)
- Mongolian: жүүдийн сүм (žüüdiin süm)
- Norman: synnagogue f
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: synagoge (no) m
- Nynorsk: synagoge m or f
- Old Armenian: ժողովուրդ (žołovurd)
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Cyrillic: сѵнагога f (sünagoga)
- Papiamentu: please add this translation if you can
- Persian:
- Dari: کَلِیسَا (kalīsā), کُنِشْت (kuništ), کَنِیسَه (kanīsa)
- Iranian Persian: کَنیسِه (kanise)
- Piedmontese: sinagòga f
- Plautdietsch: Judenschool f
- Polish: synagoga (pl) f, bożnica (pl) f
- Portuguese: sinagoga (pt) f, esnoga (pt) f (archaic)
- Romagnol: please add this translation if you can
- Romanian: sinagogă (ro) f
- Russian: синаго́га (ru) f (sinagóga)
- Scottish Gaelic: sionagog f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: синаго́га f
- Roman: sinagóga (sh) f
- Slovak: synagóga (sk) f
- Slovene: sinagoga (sl) f
- Spanish: sinagoga (es) f
- Swahili: sinagogi
- Swedish: synagoga (sv) c
- Tagalog: sinagoga
- Tajik: каниса (kanisa), куништ (kuništ), синагога (sinagoga)
- Tatar: синагога (sinağoğa)
- Thai: สุเหร่ายิว (sù-rào yiu)
- Turkish: sinagog (tr), havra (tr)
- Turkmen: sinagoga
- Ukrainian: синаго́га f (synahóha)
- Urdu: کَنِیسَہ m (kanīsa), کُنِشْت m (kuniśt)
- Uzbek: sinagoga (uz)
- Vietnamese: giáo đường Do thái
- Volapük: sünagog (vo), (older term) sinagöp
- Welsh: synagog m
- West Frisian: synagoge c
- Yiddish: שול (shul), סינאַגאָגע (sinagoge)
|
French
Etymology
Inherited from Middle French synagogue, Old French synagoge, borrowed from Latin synagōga, from Ancient Greek σῠνᾰγωγή (sŭnăgōgḗ, “assembly, gathering”), from συνάγω (sunágō, “I gather together”), from σῠ́ν (sŭ́n, “with, together”) & ᾰ̓́γω (ắgō, “I lead”).
Pronunciation
Noun
synagogue f (plural synagogues)
- (countable, Judaism) synagogue (a place of worship for Jews or Samaritans)
Le samedi je vais à la synagogue où mes parents ont grandi.- On Saturday I go to the synagogue where my parents grew up.
Further reading
Middle French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French synagoge, from Latin synagōga, from Ancient Greek σῠνᾰγωγή (sŭnăgōgḗ, “assembly, gathering”), from συνάγω (sunágō, “I gather together”), from σῠ́ν (sŭ́n, “with, together”) & ᾰ̓́γω (ắgō, “I lead”).
Noun
synagogue f (plural synagogues)
- (countable, Judaism) synagogue (a place of worship for Jews or Samaritans)
References
- synagogue on Dictionnaire du Moyen Français (1330–1500) (in French)