Difference between Dominical and Hebrew

What is the difference between Dominical and Hebrew?

Dominical as an adjective is pertaining to the day of of the lord (i.e., jesus): sunday. while Hebrew as an adjective is of or pertaining to the hebrew people or language.

Dominical

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Pertaining to the day of of the Lord (i.e., Jesus): Sunday. Pertaining to the dominical letter, an ancient system for determining Sundays (and especially Easter Sunday) in any given year.

Hebrew

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Of or pertaining to the Hebrew people or language.

Part of speech: noun

Definition: A member or descendant of a Semitic people claiming descent from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.A descendant of the biblical Patriarch Eber.

Part of speech: proper noun

Definition: The Semitic language spoken by the Hebrew people.

Example sentence: My dad was raised Orthodox in Atlanta. He speaks Hebrew. He speaks Yiddish. He married a Jewish woman who is not Orthodox, so I was brought up by two different kinds of Jews.

We hope you now know whether to use Dominical or Hebrew in your sentence.

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