frum

See also: Frum and frum-

English

Etymology

From Yiddish פֿרום (frum, pious). Related to German fromm and Dutch vroom.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fɹʊm/, (Poylish and Ukrainish traditions) /fɹɪm/
  • Rhymes: -ʊm, -ɪm

Adjective

frum (comparative frummer, superlative frummest)

  1. (Judaism) pious, observant; committed to obeying all the laws of Judaism
    • 1979, Clive Sinclair, Hearts of Gold, Penguin, published 1983, page 45:
      I learned all about the role of the kibbutz in Israeli life. Not to mention the role of the Arab, the artist, the woman, the socialist and the frum Jew.

Gothic

Romanization

frum

  1. Romanization of 𐍆𐍂𐌿𐌼

Irish

Pronoun

frum (emphatic frumsa)

  1. Alternative form of faram (along with me, beside me; in addition to me; as good as me)

See also

Further reading

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