English
Etymology
Borrowed from German Judenstern.
Noun
Judenstern (plural Judensterns)
- (countable, historical) A yellow badge forced upon ordinary Jews (and many legally ‘Jewish’ people) in Western Axis states. [20th c.]
- Synonym: yellow star
1970, Barend van Dyk Van Niekerk, The African Image (Négritude) in the Work of Léopold Sédar Senghor[1], Balkema (A.A.), page 107:For the exiled black man who had to bear his skin — the symbol of rejection — like a "Judenstern," there could be no escape.
2011 March 18, Ingrid U. Cowan, The Shadow of the Hakenkreuz[2], Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN, page 3:A yellow Star of David—a Judenstern, as the Germans called it—with the word “Jude” embroidered in the center was on the left side of her coat just below her collar bone..
2014 April 1, Gerhard Falk, The German Jews in America: A Minority within a Minority[3], Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, →ISBN, page 46:Therefore, Jews had to walk wherever they tried to go, although the wearing of a “Judenstern” or Jewish star on every outer garment was enforced at pain of death.
German
Etymology
From Jude (“Jew”) + -n- + Stern (“star”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈjuːdn̩ˌʃtɛʁn]
- Hyphenation: Ju‧den‧stern
Noun
Judenstern m (strong, genitive Judensternes or Judensterns, plural Judensterne)
- (historical) yellow badge (in Nazi-controlled states, a cloth patch that Jews were ordered to sew on their outer garments)
Declension
Declension of Judenstern [masculine, strong]
See also
Further reading