רֵידַה

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Judeo-Italian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Inherited from Classical Latin hērēs, hērēdem (heir; heiress), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰeh₁ro- (derelict; an abandoned or forsaken person), derived from the root *ǵʰeh₁- (to come; to reach; to go; to walk). Compare Italian reda (heiress; (by extension) descendant).

Noun[edit]

רֵידַה (redah /reda/) f

  1. lineage
    Synonym: סְקֵילַאטַה (səqelaʾṭah /⁠schelatta⁠/)
    • 16th century [750–450 BCE], “לוּ לִיבֵירוֹ דֵי יִרְמִיַהוּ [Lu libero de Jirmiau, The Book of Jeremiah]”, in נְבִיאִים [Neviim, Prophets]‎[1] (manuscript), translation of נְבִיאִים [Nəvīʾīm, Prophets] (in Biblical Hebrew), chapter 7, verse 15, page 2, text lines 5–6:
      אֵי יִיטַארַאייוֹ ווּאִי דַא דֵינַאנְצִי דֵי מִי קוּמֵי יִיטַאיִי לִי פְֿרַאטִי ווּסְטֵירִי טוּטַה לַה רֵידַה דֵי אֶפְֿרַיִם׃ (Judeo-Roman)
      ʾe yiṭaʾraʾyyo vuʾi daʾ denaʾnəṣi de mi qume yiṭaʾyi li p̄əraṭi vusəṭeri ṭuṭah la redah de ʾEp̄ərayim.
      /E jittarajjo vui da denanzi de mi cume jittaji li frati vusteri, tutta la reda de Efrajim./
      And I will throw you away from before me, as I threw away your brothers, [and] all the lineage of Ephraim.