dybbuk in English

noun
1
(in Jewish folklore) a malevolent wandering spirit that enters and possesses the body of a living person until exorcized.
The Jewish dybbuk is the malevolent spirit of a dead person which enters a living one and controls it.
noun
    dibbuk

Use "dybbuk" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dybbuk" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dybbuk", or refer to the context using the word "dybbuk" in the English Dictionary.

1. Autowinder dybbuk decesso peri to line up upotreba Oenothera biennis L

2. Buffos Wake is raising funds for Dybbuk on Kickstarter! Our new album 'Dybbuk' is a carnival-esque cacophony of high octane, footstomping Klezmer-punk with splashes of big band cabaret.

3. But she sees him suppress what could only be a smirk at her very mention of a dybbuk.

4. Press Quotes “The translation of Joachim Neugroschel, savvily adapted by Tony Kushner, and now further revised by him as A DYBBUK OR BETWEEN TWO WORLDS, all come funnily, furiously, Crotchetily alive.” —John Simon, New York Magazine

5. The translation of Joachim Neugroschel, savvily adapted by Tony Kushner, and now further revised by him as A Dybbuk or Between Two Worlds , all come funnily, furiously, Crotchetily alive." –John Simon, New York Magazine Kushner's contemporary reading has served to burnish the original's mixture of spiritual exhalation and material poverty

6. "The translation of Joachim Neugroschel, savvily adapted by Tony Kushner, and now further revised by him as A DYBBUK OR BETWEEN TWO WORLDS, all come funnily, furiously, Crotchetily alive." John Simon, New York Magazine "Kushner's contemporary reading has served to burnish the original's mixture of spiritual exhalation and material poverty

7. The translation of Joachim Neugroschel, savvily adapted by Tony Kushner, and now further revised by him as A Dybbuk or Between Two Worlds, all come funnily, furiously, Crotchetily alive.” –John Simon, New York Magazine “Kushner’s contemporary reading has served to burnish the original’s mixture of spiritual exhalation and material poverty, abstract symbolism and