Rabbinism
Definition of Rabbinism:
part of speech: noun
An expression or phraseology pecullar to the rabbins; also their doctrines or traditions.
Usage examples:
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69. Of that scepticism which followed the refinements of rabbinism there is no trace, either here, or in Susanna, or in Bel and the Dragon.
William Heaford Daubney in "The Three Additions to Daniel, A Study". -
As in Susanna, there is no indication of rabbinism in the legal, religious, or social standpoints of the story.
William Heaford Daubney in "The Three Additions to Daniel, A Study". -
John Nicolayson, the head of the Society's mission, referring to the event, wrote: " It is not a small thing, that the apparently impenetrable phalanx of rabbinism at Jerusalem has thus actually been broken into; and two Jerusalem rabbis been incorporated into the restored Hebrew Christian Church on Mount Zion.
Rev. A. Bernstein, B.D. in "Some Jewish Witnesses For Christ". -
Nor is there any symptom of the later developments of rabbinism not even in their inception.
William Heaford Daubney in "The Three Additions to Daniel, A Study".