Hallelujah

Hallelujah (/ˌhælˈljə/ HAL-ə-LOO-yə) is a transliteration of the Hebrew word הַלְּלוּיָהּ (Modern halleluya, Tiberian halləlûyāh), which is composed of two elements: הַלְּלוּ (second-person imperative masculine plural form of the Hebrew verb hallal: an exhortation to "praise" addressed to several people) and יָהּ (the names of God Jah or Yah).

Most well-known English versions of the Hebrew Bible translate the Hebrew "Hallelujah" (as at Psalm 150:1) as two Hebrew words, generally rendered as "Praise (ye)" and "the LORD", but the second word is given as "Yah" in the Lexham English Bible and Young's Literal Translation, "Jah" in the New World Translation, "Jehovah" in the American Standard Version, and "Hashem" in the Orthodox Jewish Bible. Instead of a translation, the transliteration "Hallelujah" is used by JPS Tanakh, International Standard Version, Darby Translation, God's Word Translation, Holman Christian Standard Bible, and The Message, with the spelling "Halleluyah" appearing in the Complete Jewish Bible. The Greek-influenced form "Alleluia" appears in Wycliffe's Bible, the Knox Version and the New Jerusalem Bible.

Mutter

Mutter may refer to:

  • Mutter (software), an X window manager and Wayland compositor developed for the GNOME 3.0 desktop environment
  • Mutter (Rammstein album) (2001)
  • "Mutter" (song), a song by Rammstein
  • Mutter (surname)
  • The Mother (play) or Die Mutter, a play by Bertolt Brecht
  • Mutters, a municipality near Innsbruck, Austria
  • See also

  • Mütter Museum, a medical museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Mutterstadt, a municipality in Germany
  • All pages beginning with "Mutter"
  • All pages with titles containing Mutter
  • Eric (disambiguation)

    Eric (or also Éric, Erik, Erick, Eirik, Eirík, Eiríkr, Erich etc.) is a common proper name.

    Eric may also refer to:

    In fiction

  • Eric, or, Little by Little, a novel
  • Eric (novel), a Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett
  • Erik (The Phantom of the Opera), the titular character in Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel The Phantom of the Opera
  • Other

  • Eric, California, in Kern County
  • Eric Python IDE, integrated development environment for the Python programming language
  • Education Resources Information Center, branch of the U.S. Department of Education
  • Erik (album), an album by Erik Rubin
  • Tropical Storm Erick (disambiguation), any of several Atlantic tropical cyclones.
  • SS Erich, a West German cargo ship
  • Erich, Uttar Pradesh, a town and a nagar panchayat in Jhansi district, Uttar Pradesh, India
  • Eric, Duke of Södermanland (1282–1318), Swedish prince
  • European Research Infrastructure Consortium, legal form designed to facilitate the establishment and operation of research infrastructures of European interest under ESFRI
  • List of The Chronicles of Amber characters

    The Chronicles of Amber is a fantasy series written by Roger Zelazny chiefly in ten books published from 1970 to 1991. It features a great variety of characters from the realm of "our" universe as well as myriad parallel universes. All universes spiral out on a continuum, which are more closely related to one end, Amber (and its history and functions), or slides on a scale closer and closer to Amber's opposite, the Courts of Chaos, at the other.

    Amberites

    Characters from Amber are referred to as Amberites.

    The royal family

    Much information about the royal family is compiled only in the authorized companion book Roger Zelazny's Visual Guide to Castle Amber. Some personal colors and offspring are identified only there.

  • Dworkin Barimen, mad sorcerer, author of the Pattern and father of Oberon. The surname Barimen is an anagram of "in Amber" and may or may not have been intended as the name of a House of Chaos; it also reminds suspiciously of "Shambarimen", the maker of a major artifact in Philip Jose Farmer's World of Tiers series and is likely a voluntary tip of the hat to him.
  • Culdee Fell Railway

    The Culdee Fell Railway (CFR) is a fictional narrow gauge rack and pinion railway appearing in the book Mountain Engines written by the Rev. W. Awdry. The stories are based on incidents in the history of the Snowdon Mountain Railway.

    Awdry visited the Snowdon Mountain Railway (SMR) with his friend, the Rev. Teddy Boston, in early 1963. That summer he wrote a 2-part article about it in his series "Remarkable Railways", for the Church of England Newspaper. The Director of the SMR at the time, A.O.E. Davis, suggested that Awdry might like to include a similar railway on Sodor. Fortunately, a suitable mountain was already marked on the first published maps of Sodor, the 2046 ft-high Culdee Fell.

    In the book, the Culdee Fell Railway runs from Kirk Machan, where it meets the standard gauge line from Killdane to Peel Godred, to the summit of Culdee Fell. Devil's Back is a high exposed ridge which the railway runs along, corresponding to Clogwyn of the real Snowdon Mountain Railway.

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