[ adj ] of or relating to rabbis or their teachings <adj.pert> rabbinical school
Rabbinic \Rab*bin"ic\ (r[a^]b*b[i^]n"[i^]k), Rabbinical \Rab*bin"ic*al\ (r[a^]b*b[i^]n"[i^]*kal), a. [Cf. F. rabbinique.] Of or pertaining to the rabbins or rabbis, or pertaining to the opinions, learning, or language of the rabbins. ``Comments staler than rabbinic.'' --Lowell.
We will not buy your rabbinical fumes. --Milton.
The three rabbinical judges wrote that "since Mr. Onyeulo refused to undergo a formal conversion they could not recognize him as Jewish."
Far Above Rubies is so ethnocentric that one hesitates to recommend it to anyone without a knowledge of rabbinical law. This is the story of Bruriah, who was both the daughter and the wife of a rabbi.
Givirtz, who died Friday, was a professor of biblical studies at Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles, a rabbinical school for Reform Judaism.
Shapira, who leads Israel's Ashkenazi (European) Jews, on Monday accused the court of interfering with rabbinical autonomy and ordered men on the Yeruhan council not to sit with Mrs. Shakdiel.
"We want to make sure the sanctity of human life is protected," he told the Orthodox rabbinical convention.
A fringe group of zealots called the Temple Mount Faithful wants to rebuild the Jewish Temple, but has been rebuffed by rabbinical rulings, Supreme Court decisions and police firmness.
He was revered as a scholar and was head of the ultra-Orthodox rabbinical court in Jerusalem.
Orphaned at an early age, he was raised by an uncle who was a rabbinical scholar.
After the war, he was appointed head of the rabbinical court in Manchester, England.
Ben Sugar, a retired economics lecturer who has lived in York since the 1930s, says many Jews believe a rabbinical edict forbids them to live here.