英:[treɪf]
美:[treɪf]
英:[treɪf]
美:[treɪf]
noun
a homestead or hamlet under old Cymric lawusually: a group or area acting as a single community as regards cattle and plowing, constituting a taxable unit, and consisting typically of nine houses, one plow, one oven, one churn, one cat, one cock, and one herdsman
adjective
ritually unclean or unfit according to Jewish law—opposed to kosher
威尔士语,字面意思为“小村庄,家园,城镇”,源自原始印欧语 *treb- “居住”(参见 tavern)。
Noun Welsh, town, home, dwelling place, tref; akin to Cornish tref, tre dwelling place, town, Breton trev division of a parish, Old English thorp village Adjective Yiddish & Hebrew; Yiddish treyf, treyfe, from Hebrew ṭĕrēphāh animal torn by wild beasts, torn flesh
1 They tempted him with combinations that were very tref.
2 The event was being sponsored by the Center for Kosher Culinary Arts, a three-year-old organization in Midwood, Brooklyn, that offers instruction to kosher chefs seeking the secrets to fine dining, minus the tref, or nonkosher.
3 Clean, according to Jewish ritual law; opposed to tref, unclean.