It's the word of the day for December 15th.
Today's word is dreidel, spelled D-R-E-I-D-E-L.
Dreidel is a noun.
It's a four-sided toy marked with Hebrew letters and spun like a top in a game of chants.
The game played by children, especially at Hanukkah, is also called dreidel.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Chicago Sun-Times.
The Jewish tradition has always been syncretic,
adapting and responding to the culture around it, he, Rabbi Stephen Philip, said.
Hanukkah is a great example of this, Philip said,
noting that the holiday's traditions, like spinning the dreidel,
eating latkes, or potato pancakes, and munching on jelly-filled donuts,
are customs that were borrowed from neighboring cultures over time.
If your dreidel is spinning beneath the glow of the menorah,
it's probably the Jewish Festival of Lights, known as Hanukkah.
The holiday celebrates the miracle of a small amount of oil enough for one day,
burning for eight days in the Temple of Jerusalem.
And though it's a toy, the dreidel's design is very much an homage.
On each of its four sides is inscribed a Hebrew letter.
Gimel, He, and Shin,
which together stand for Nes Gedol Hayasham, meaning A Great Miracle Happened There.