Ger
"Ger" in a Sentence (8 examples)
The Jewish term for a convert is "ger," meaning "stranger" or "foreigner" in Hebrew.
A convert to Judaism is called a "ger" or "gioret," meaning a "foreigner" who joins the Jewish people.
"I'm a ger." "What's a ger?" "A convert to Judaism."
Ziri gave Rima some tips on how to ger rid of ivy.
Daniel has been thinking about how to ger Amanda back.
Tom is a ger, a convert to Judaism.
The new bek's great-grandfather had passed every night of his life under the sky, on the back of a pony or in the felt walls of a ger, and Buljan retained the ancestral contempt for cities and city dwellers.
In weather conditions that hit -20 degrees or lower, people in the poorer areas of the city have no access to running water, no access to bathroom facilities, often living in little “yurts” or “gers” on dirt roads.
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.