Pronunciation of the English word jews.
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1. | Hitler rose to power not by promising to victimize Jews but by convincing the German people that Jews were victimizing them. | |
2. | Spanish history is replete with official anti-Semitism: the 14th-century massacres of Jews in Seville, Córdoba and elsewhere, incited by a prominent Catholic clergyman; the Spanish Inquisition and forced religious conversions, beginning in the 15th century; and the expulsion of an estimated 70,000 Jews by decree of Ferdinand and Isabella. | |
3. | The Crusades killed and displaced even more Jews from what had by then become known as Palestine, at the same time as Crusaders killed many European Jews. | |
4. | Polish Jews are more closely related to Iraqi Jews than to non-Jewish Poles. | |
5. | The real Jews are the Jews. | |
6. | For every nationality, Yiddish has separate words for Jews and non-Jews. | |
7. | Now, this is John's testimony: Jews of Jerusalem sent priests and Levites to ask him who he was. | |
8. | He has a prejudice against Jews. | |
9. | There can be no people who have gone through as many hardships this century as the Jews. | |
10. | Before the conquest by the Arabians, the majority of the Persians were Zoroastrians, but there were also Jews and Christians. So, who could imagine today that Iranians have Jewish or Christian ancestors? |