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Born to Kvetch

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75:. William Grimes in his review of the book quotes it: "Judaism is defined by exile, and exile without complaint is tourism". Other flavors of Yiddish associated with the first one noted by Wex is that it is the language of dispute (influence of the tradition of 71:" in the book title means "to complain", "to whine", expressing Wex's idea that Yiddish is the language of complaint, which is rooted in millennia of 59:
is reflected in Yiddish, putting the main focus on Yiddish as a language of opposition (or "language of aggravation, of exile and alienation" as
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is a descriptive activity that conveys disapproval... a 'knole' ("curse"), on the other hand, is a 'kvetch' with a mission".
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commentary) and the language is rich in insults, curses and other unpleasant things. As Wex wittingly notes: "A simple
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The book is about cultural and religious influences in the Yiddish language and how the
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Born to Kvetch: Yiddish Language and Culture in All Its Moods
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Born to Kvetch: Yiddish Language and Culture in All Its Moods
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The book received an honourable mention from the ALA in the
53: 67:, often within hostile cultures. The Yiddish word " 213: 32:. In this book, "Wex is a rare combination of 197:"To Provoke in Yiddish, Try 'How Are You?' " 16:2005 book by Michael Wex devoted to Yiddish 46:and was followed by a Yiddish phrasebook 192: 190: 147: 145: 214: 113:, St. Martin's Press, New York, 2005, 187: 172: 170: 142: 199:, a book review by William Grimes, 13: 167: 100: 36:and scholarly cultural analyst". 14: 253: 123: 1: 93: 237:Books about Jews and Judaism 177:A review by Pamela Rothstein 63:puts it) during their life 7: 10: 258: 182:Union for Reform Judaism 242:2005 non-fiction books 205:, September 28, 2005 154:, a book review by 202:The New York Times 88:Sophie Brody Award 39:The book became a 24:is a 2005 book by 222:Linguistics books 164:, August 26, 2005 249: 206: 194: 185: 174: 165: 149: 140: 127: 121: 104: 257: 256: 252: 251: 250: 248: 247: 246: 227:Yiddish culture 212: 211: 210: 209: 195: 188: 175: 168: 150: 143: 128: 124: 105: 101: 96: 17: 12: 11: 5: 255: 245: 244: 239: 234: 229: 224: 208: 207: 186: 166: 141: 130:Born to Kvetch 122: 98: 97: 95: 92: 42:New York Times 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 254: 243: 240: 238: 235: 233: 230: 228: 225: 223: 220: 219: 217: 204: 203: 198: 193: 191: 184: 183: 178: 173: 171: 163: 162: 157: 153: 148: 146: 139: 138:0-06-113122-9 135: 131: 126: 120: 119:0-312-30741-1 116: 112: 108: 103: 99: 91: 89: 84: 82: 78: 74: 70: 66: 62: 58: 55: 50: 49: 45: 43: 37: 35: 31: 27: 23: 22: 200: 180: 159: 156:Allan Nadler 132:(Audio CD). 129: 125: 106: 102: 85: 80: 73:Jewish exile 61:Allan Nadler 51: 48:Just Say Nu. 47: 41: 38: 34:Jewish comic 20: 19: 18: 161:The Forward 111:Michael Wex 65:in diaspora 28:devoted to 26:Michael Wex 216:Categories 94:References 44:Bestseller 57:worldview 77:Talmudic 232:Yiddish 30:Yiddish 136:  117:  90:2006. 81:kvetch 69:kvetch 54:Jewish 134:ISBN 115:ISBN 218:: 189:^ 179:, 169:^ 158:, 144:^ 109:,

Index

Michael Wex
Yiddish
Jewish comic
New York Times Bestseller
Jewish
worldview
Allan Nadler
in diaspora
kvetch
Jewish exile
Talmudic
Sophie Brody Award
Michael Wex
ISBN
0-312-30741-1
ISBN
0-06-113122-9


"A New Book Examines How Yiddish Became the Language of Aggravation"
Allan Nadler
The Forward


A review by Pamela Rothstein
Union for Reform Judaism


"To Provoke in Yiddish, Try 'How Are You?' "
The New York Times

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