shtiebel
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Yiddish שטיבל (shtibl, “small room/house, informal synagogue”), diminutive of שטוב (shtub) + ־ל (-l) from Old High German stuba, from Proto-Germanic *stubō.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]shtiebel (plural shtieblach)
- (Judaism) A small, informal synagogue or shul.
- 2004 November 16, Micha Berger, “Kosher Commercial Kitchen”, in soc.culture.jewish.moderated[1] (Usenet):
- My brother's aufruf was last Shabbos as my father's shul, a shteibl he has attended since the early 60s (my beris was there, my bar mitzvah, my own aufruf, one of my sons' beris was there, etc...)
- 2017 October 2, Batsheva Neuer, “Return of the Shtiebel: Why Old-School Synagogues Are Making A Comeback”, in Forward[2]:
- The shtiebel fits that niche. Less structured than the large congregations, shtieblach offer a built-in community where everybody knows your name, but long-term expectations are low.
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