tzaddik
English
Etymology 1
From Hebrew צַדִּיק (tsadík, “righteous person”). Many pronunciations have come under the influence of Yiddish צדיק (tsadek).
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtsɑː.diːk/, /ˈtsɑː.dək/, /ˈsɑː.dək/
Noun
tzaddik (plural tzaddiks or tzaddikim)
- (Judaism) A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader.
- 1988, Milorad Pavić, translated by Christina Pribićević-Zorić, Dictionary of the Khazars, Vintage, published 1989, page 226:
- For in dreams one thinks with the eyes and the ears; speech has no nouns, just verbs; only in dreams is every person a zaddik, never a murderer….
Translations
a very righteous person
Etymology 2
Noun
tzaddik
- Alternative form of tsade (“Semitic letter”).