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Oct 7, 2024

[Answer] 1. My Jewish grandmother loved to sing, and often mixed popular songs with Yiddish words. She loved to sing "no one knows the tsuris I've seen". What is tsuris?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "1. My Jewish grandmother loved to sing, and often mixed popular songs with Yiddish words. She loved to sing "no one knows the tsuris I've seen". What is tsuris? "



...1. Small amounts of dirt 2. A sweet stew with fruit 3. Serious troubles 4. Small objects With my apologies to the classic spiritual song recorded by Louis Armstrong and Marion Anderson amongst others, but "tsuris" is the Yiddish word for serious troubles derived from the Hebrew word "tsarot". "Tzimmes" is a delicious sweet stew of fruit (raisins, prunes, apricots usually) and root vegetables (sweet potatoes and carrots), while knickknacks and small objects are called "tchotchkes" and derive from the Slavic languages such as the Russian word for trinket "tsatski". "Schmutz" is the Yiddish word for a small amount of dirt and can often be heard when your Jewish grandmother spits into a tissue and says "come here boychick (little boy) let me wipe the schmutz off your face".




Step 2 : Answer to the question "1. My Jewish grandmother loved to sing, and often mixed popular songs with Yiddish words. She loved to sing "no one knows the tsuris I've seen". What is tsuris? "



Serious troubles:


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