1. German, singular for Jew
2. English, a unisex first name.
Notable record of the name Jude are:
The last work of Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure. The book was made into a 1996 movie staring Christopher Eccleston and Kate Winslet.
Jude Law, an actor from England.
Julian Lennon was nicknamed Jude by Sir Paul McCartney when the name Jules became too hard to sing in the hit song Hey Jude. Before, Julian's nickname had only ever been Jules.
Jude is a rare name. It is estimated that only 4900 males with the first name Jude live in the USA, while only 1225 females have the first name Jude.
2. English, a unisex first name.
Notable record of the name Jude are:
The last work of Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure. The book was made into a 1996 movie staring Christopher Eccleston and Kate Winslet.
Jude Law, an actor from England.
Julian Lennon was nicknamed Jude by Sir Paul McCartney when the name Jules became too hard to sing in the hit song Hey Jude. Before, Julian's nickname had only ever been Jules.
Jude is a rare name. It is estimated that only 4900 males with the first name Jude live in the USA, while only 1225 females have the first name Jude.
"Did you know that Sir Paul McCartney changed the lyrics to Hey Jude? It used to be Hey Jules"
"Under nazi rule, Jews were required to wear a yellow star with the word "Jude" on it to display that they were Jewish. Jude is German for Jew."
Dumbass: "Heeeeey Jude! HAHA I bet you've never heard that one before!"
Me: "eat shit, asshole"
"Under nazi rule, Jews were required to wear a yellow star with the word "Jude" on it to display that they were Jewish. Jude is German for Jew."
Dumbass: "Heeeeey Jude! HAHA I bet you've never heard that one before!"
Me: "eat shit, asshole"
by Jude A April 7, 2008
Get the Jude mug.Juden is, of course, German for "Jew". Pie is English for a baked food composed of a pastry shell filled with fruit, meat, cheese, or other ingredients, and usually covered with a pastry crust. Combine the two, and you have Judenpie. A pie like no other, one comprised of the ultimate component in acquired tastes - the jew.
Come here, my little judenpie! or
Would you care to have a taste of this freshly baked judenpie? It has extra golden frosting!
Would you care to have a taste of this freshly baked judenpie? It has extra golden frosting!
by Ariok August 25, 2004
Get the judenpie mug.Talmud Judism is gay.
by LefebvreWasBased March 29, 2022
Get the Talmud Judism mug.German word for jew hunter (more accurately spelled Judenjäger) .
Only those that have triumphed through jew hunting school are allowed to boast such a title. The lifes work of a Judenjäger is to crush penny munching parasites.
Only those that have triumphed through jew hunting school are allowed to boast such a title. The lifes work of a Judenjäger is to crush penny munching parasites.
by BreadDeadRebreadtion July 31, 2019
Get the Judenjager mug.by The Return of Light Joker February 5, 2009
Get the Judas Priest mug.Jude is boy who is a heart breaker. He is extremely easy to love but hard to get and hard to keep, and once you love him you can't stop loving him.
by Lover/hater November 27, 2012
Get the Jude mug.1. Belonging to a set of scriptures used by both Judaism and Christianity as a subset of each faith's Bible, and defining many but not all of each faith's core doctrines.
2. Reflecting an apocryphal shared history and belief system of Judaism and Christianity.
3. (In American public life) Christian.
Definitions 2 and 3 are used almost exclusively by Christian and some secular commentators to refer to a vaguely defined but God-centered set of "fundamental" beliefs or traditions that supposedly underlie both Jewish and Christian faith, particularly in contradistinction to the beliefs of other religions, atheism, and anti-religious political ideologies such as Communism. Specifically, it refers to such "shared" beliefs in their purported role as engendering a set of non-denominational founding principles for American civic and public life. These uses of the term ignore the global and temporal span of both Jewish and Christian history, in most of which the two traditions had little overlap and even less communality, and the doctrinal and theological differences between Judaism and Christianity that are basic to each faith's world view. They also suggest a revision of American history which both underestimates the historical dominance and contribution of the Christian majority and its beliefs, and overestimates the degree to which religious principles are required to derive and justify the moral principles articulated in the founding documents. The term is rarely used by practicing Jews or other religiously well-informed persons.
2. Reflecting an apocryphal shared history and belief system of Judaism and Christianity.
3. (In American public life) Christian.
Definitions 2 and 3 are used almost exclusively by Christian and some secular commentators to refer to a vaguely defined but God-centered set of "fundamental" beliefs or traditions that supposedly underlie both Jewish and Christian faith, particularly in contradistinction to the beliefs of other religions, atheism, and anti-religious political ideologies such as Communism. Specifically, it refers to such "shared" beliefs in their purported role as engendering a set of non-denominational founding principles for American civic and public life. These uses of the term ignore the global and temporal span of both Jewish and Christian history, in most of which the two traditions had little overlap and even less communality, and the doctrinal and theological differences between Judaism and Christianity that are basic to each faith's world view. They also suggest a revision of American history which both underestimates the historical dominance and contribution of the Christian majority and its beliefs, and overestimates the degree to which religious principles are required to derive and justify the moral principles articulated in the founding documents. The term is rarely used by practicing Jews or other religiously well-informed persons.
"A monument of the Ten Commandments belongs on public grounds," said the pastor, "because our nation was founded on Judeo-Christian law." The rabbi demurred, noting that the legal system of the United States derives primarily from English common law, whereas both Talmud and Canon Law are vibrant, distinct legal systems that remain in use outside of civic life.
by NBM March 3, 2005
Get the Judeo-Christian mug.