heter

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Hebrew הֶתֵּר (hetér, permission).

Noun

heter (plural heterim)

  1. (Judaism) Special permission from a rabbi to break a commandment.
    • 1995 February 3, YOSEF KAZEN, “Petitions, Acceptance, and Moshiach”, in soc.culture.jewish[1] (Usenet):
      What comes to mind is the famous issue on ZIM SHIPPING - an Israeli company owned by Jews and they tried to get a heter for running their ships on Shabbos.

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -eːtər

Adjective

heter

  1. comparative degree of heet

Adjective

heter

  1. (archaic) inflection of heet:
    1. feminine genitive singular
    2. genitive plural

Anagrams

Norwegian Bokmål

Verb

heter

  1. present tense of hete (to heat)

Old Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse heitr, from Proto-Germanic *haitaz.

Adjective

hēter

  1. hot

Declension

Declension of hēter (strong)
singular masculine feminine neuter
nominative hēter hēt hēt(t)
accusative hētan hēta hēt(t)
dative hētum
hētom
hētri
hētre
hētu
hēto
genitive hēts hētrar hēts
plural masculine feminine neuter
nominative hētir
hēter
hētar hēt
accusative hēta hētar hēt
dative hētum
hētom
hētum
hētom
hētum
hētom
genitive hētra
hēta
hētra
hēta
hētra
hēta
Declension of hēter (weak)
singular masculine feminine neuter
nominative hēti
hēte
hēta hēta
accusative hēta hētu
hēto
hēta
dative hēta hētu
hēto
hēta
genitive hēta hētu
hēto
hēta
plural masculine feminine neuter
nominative hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
accusative hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
dative hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
genitive hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto
hētu
hēto

Descendants

  • Swedish: het

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈxɛ.tɛr/
  • Rhymes: -ɛtɛr
  • Syllabification: he‧ter

Noun

heter f

  1. genitive plural of hetera

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)

Verb

heter

  1. present indicative of heta