Friso hede fuel sjan, bi orloch was er vpbrocht, and fon tha hrenkum and lestum thera Golum and forstum heder krek sa fuel lered and geth, as-er nedich hede vmbe tha ora greva to weiande hwer hi hjam wilde.
I wold have heder all the gylt plate that Richard Calle leyd up, he can tell wer and I trowe ye know also; and ij.
Item, the seyd John Rus sent me heder a man for this mater only with in thes ij.
Lord; but we have had contynually tydynges of my Lordes comyng heder that causid us for to abide ther up un, besechyng your gode maystershep that ye wull lete my Lord have knowlech of my compleynt.
The teachers decided that we remain within the walls of the Heder most of the time, and show ourselves outside as little as possible during the period of danger.
For why I wyll the saye, 917 Moche folke of that countre Cometh heder for socoure to me, Bothe by nyghte and by daye.
Som~ of his byrdus take hath he, And bryngith hem~ heder to me!
Attendance at the heder was compulsory for all children of school age, approximately from six to thirteen.
On Fridays the heder pupils presented themselves in a body before the rosh-yeshibah himself, to undergo a similar examination.
The establishment of these heders was left to private initiative, every melammed, or Jewish elementary teacher, being allowed to open a heder for boys and to receive compensation for his labors from their parents.
Opposite the house of prayer was the heder or school, where the learned and much-respected Reb Moshe ruled.
I rushed into the heder like a madman, spoke ugly words to the melamed, and took the boy away with me.
If the family were very poor, all the girls might go barefoot, but the heder boy must have shoes; he must have a plate of hot soup, though the others ate dry bread.
More than once in the bitter winter, as my father remembers, she carried him toheder on her back, because he had no shoes; she herself walking almost barefoot in the cruel snow.
I was wild with indignation and pity when I remembered how my poor brother had been cruelly tormented because he did not want to sit in heder and learn what was after all false or useless.
The heder was the only beginning allowable for a boy in Polotzk, and toheder Joseph must go.
The boys came to heder before nine in the morning, and remained until eight or nine in the evening.
Joseph was inheder all day; the baby was a quiet little thing; Mashke was no worse than usual.
There was nothing in what the boys did in heder that I could not have done--if I had not been a girl.
And so every boy was sent to heder (Hebrew school) almost as soon as he could speak; and usually he continued to study until his confirmation, at thirteen years of age, or as much longer as his talent and ambition carried him.
He sought to supplement his son Mordecai Aaron's heder education with a knowledge of secular sciences.
Little infants from heder are torn, And forced to wear the soldier's uniform; What a misfortune, etc.
The heder is indeed far from what a school should be, and the yeshibah is hardly to be tolerated in a civilized community; yet what spiritual feasts, what noble endeavors, and what unselfish devotion are witnessed within their dingy walls!
And brought heder many babbles dese countrymen to beguile?
Me will be a Turk; me came heder for dat cause: Derefore me care not de so mush as two straws.
Only an insignificant percentage of Jewish children went to the Crown schools, and even these children did so only after having received their training at the heder or yeshibah.
Youths, who had no knowledge of the Russian language, were torn away from the hederor yeshibah, often from wife and children.
Finally a compromise was effected: the traditional heder was to be left intact for the time being, but the proposed Crown school was to be given full scope in competing with it.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "heder" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.