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Just Say Nu: Yiddish for Every Occasion

Just Say Nu: Yiddish for Every Occasion

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Manufacturer: St. Martin's Press
Category: EBooks

List Price: $23.95
Buy New: $9.99
You Save: $13.96 (58%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 9939

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320

Dewey Decimal Number: 439.181
ASIN: B000V770B4

Publication Date: October 25, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Just Say Nu - a cross between Henry Beard's Latin for All Occasions and Ben Schott's Schott's Original Miscellany, the book is a practical guide to using Yiddish words and expressions in day-to-day situations. Along with enough grammar to enable readers to put together a comprehensible sentence and avoid embarrassing mistakes, Wex also explains the five most useful Yiddish words - shoyn, nu, epes, takeh, and nebakh - what they mean, how and when to use them, and how they can be used to conduct an entire conversation without anybody ever suspecting that the reader doesn-t have the vaguest idea of what anyone is actually saying. Readers will learn how to shmooze their way through such activities as meeting and greeting; eating and drinking; praising and finding fault; maintaining personal hygiene; going to the doctor; driving; parenting; getting horoscopes; committing crimes; going to singles bars; having sex; talking politics and talking trash.

Now that Stephen Colbert, a Catholic from South Carolina and host of the "Colbert Report," is using Yiddish to wish viewers a bright and happy Chanukah, people have finally started to realize that there-s nothing in the world that can-t be improved by translating it into Yiddish. Wex-s book is the one that-s going to show them how.


Book Description
A cross between Henry Beard's LATIN FOR ALL OCCASIONS and Ben Schott's SCHOTT'S ORIGINAL MISCELLANY, JUST SAY NU is a practical guide to using Yiddish words and expressions in day-to-day situations. Along with enough grammar to enable readers to put together a comprehensible sentence and avoid embarrassing mistakes, Wex also explains the five most useful Yiddish words–shoyn, nu, epes, takeh,and nebakh–what they mean, how and when to use them, and how they can be used to conduct an entire conversation without anybody ever suspecting that the reader doesn’t have the vaguest idea of what anyone is actually saying. Readers will learn how to shmooze their way through such activities as meeting and greeting; eating and drinking; praising and finding fault; maintaining personal hygiene; going to the doctor; driving; parenting; getting horoscopes; committing crimes; going to singles bars; having sex; talking politics and talking trash.
Now that Stephen Colbert, a Catholic from South Carolina and host of the "Colbert Report," is using Yiddish to wish viewers a bright and happy Chanukah, people have finally started to realize that there’s nothing in the world that can’t be improved by translating it into Yiddish. Wex’s JUST SAY NU is the book that’s going to show them how.



Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars very good reference book   September 23, 2008
This is an excellent reference for Yiddish expressions, but not the crisp and witty humor I was expecting.


5 out of 5 stars No Kvetching Here- Wex Has Done it Again!   November 25, 2007
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

With Just Say Nu, Michael Wex has again given us something rare in popular literature about Yiddish, a laugh out loud synthesis of scholarship and humor. It's an entry point to Yiddish that I wish had been around when I started studying the language as an undergraduate.

In fact, Just Say Nu should probably have been published before Born To Kvetch. It covers the basics that Kvetch (which covers much more advanced cultural contexts of Yiddish life) skipped over. Just Say Nu literally starts at the beginning, covering the nuances of language basics (like greetings and interjections) and delves into the many non-verbal aspects of Yiddish conversation.

Just Say Nu will give the you the conversational tools to handle any Jewish situation, whether it's running into Rabbi Goldberg at the burlesque house or getting your pain in the ass brother or sister to pass the milk at the table.

I only have one quarrel with Mr. Wex. He claims that Yiddish is unique in that it can diminish human misery without providing a concomitant increase in happiness. Yiddish brings me closer to the entirety of Jewish experience, both the good and the bad, the cursed and the blessed, the happy and the reserved. Just Say Nu, and the richness of Yiddish within it, did indeed provide an increase in happiness.





1 out of 5 stars just say nu   November 8, 2007
 2 out of 13 found this review helpful

a waste of money.

my chief criticism is the author's idiosynchratic phonetic spelling of the yiddish words. by doing this he made the written yiddish almost indecipherable. it was the flip side of the author who translated shakespeare into yiddish and then boasted his translation was new and improved.




5 out of 5 stars Linguistics and Laughs   October 22, 2007
 12 out of 12 found this review helpful

Oy, Shprintse, what a book! It's a lecture on Yiddish, no doubt, and also on religion as the essential part to understand what's going on in the language. And it's so funny on such a high level that one may think the jokes will be missed -- but that's what I feared when I read "Born To Kvetch" already which has turned into a hit instead. Wex is not resting on the success of BTK (don't even think of Dennis Rader or the Bulgarian Telecommunications Company). JSN risks to introduce its own transliteration on top of YIVO's. But, hell, it works and turns pronunciation into fun! This is not a Yiddish for Dummies. Kvelling on scholarship, life and love, Just Say Nu manages to unite science, fun and understanding of a language that -- and this book proves it -- has SURVIVED hell.

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