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  2. List of religious slurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_religious_slurs

    The following is a list of religious slurs or religious insults in the English language that are, or have been, used as insinuations or allegations about adherents or non-believers of a given religion or irreligion, or to refer to them in a derogatory (critical or disrespectful), pejorative (disapproving or contemptuous), or insulting manner.

  3. Goy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goy

    The Latin words gentes/gentilis – which also referred to peoples or nations – began to be used to describe non-Jews in parallel with the evolution of the word goy in Hebrew. Based on the Latin model, the English word "gentile" came to mean non-Jew from the time of the first English-language Bible translations in the 1500s (see Gentile).

  4. Gentile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentile

    The most important of such Hebrew words was goy (גוי ‎, plural, goyim), a term with the broad meaning of "people" or "nation" which was sometimes used to refer to Israelites, but with the plural form goyim tending to be used in the Bible to refer to non-Israelite nations. [8] Other words translated in some contexts to mean "gentile/s" in ...

  5. Religious antisemitism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_antisemitism

    Religious antisemitism is the aversion to or discrimination against Jews as a whole based on religious doctrines of supersession, which expect or demand the disappearance of Judaism and the conversion of Jews to other faiths. [1]

  6. Jew (word) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jew_(word)

    In some languages, derivations of the word "Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jew, e.g., Ebreo in Italian and Spanish, Ebri / Ebrani (Persian: عبری/عبرانی) in Persian and Еврей Yevrey in Russian. [4] (See List of Jewish ethnonyms for a full overview.) The German word Jude is cognate with the Yiddish word for "Jew", Yid. [5]

  7. Mizrahi Jews - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizrahi_Jews

    Today, many identify non-Ashkenazi rite Jews as Sephardi – in modern Hebrew Sfaradim – mixing ancestral origin and religious rite. This broader definition of "Sephardim" as including all, or most, Mizrahi Jews is also common in Jewish religious circles.

  8. Anti-Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Judaism

    Anti-Judaism encapsulates those who oppose the Jewish religion and religious system. The term refers to Christian animosity towards Judaism as a religion. Anti-Judaism historically included attempts to convert Jews to Christianity. In contrast, the term "anti-Semitic" is more modern and secular term, categorizing Jews as a racial or ethnic group.

  9. Antisemitic trope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitic_trope

    A Jewish propaganda machine had promoted the Holocaust myth to extract huge sums of money from Germany and justify the founding of the state of Israel; The Jewish victims died of natural causes or were sentenced to death for criminal reasons; The Allied Powers deliberately inflated the number of Jews killed during the war