Sinai

[ sahy-nahy, sahy-nee-ahy ]
/ ˈsaɪ naɪ, ˈsaɪ niˌaɪ /

noun

Also called Sinai Peninsula. a peninsula in NE Egypt, at the N end of the Red Sea between the Gulfs of Suez and Aqaba. 230 miles (370 km) long.
Mount, the mountain, in S Sinai, of uncertain identity, on which Moses received the law. Ex.

OTHER WORDS FROM Sinai

Si·na·it·ic [sahy-nee-it-ik] /ˌsaɪ niˈɪt ɪk/, Si·na·ic [si-ney-ik] /sɪˈneɪ ɪk/, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for sinai

British Dictionary definitions for sinai

Sinai
/ (ˈsaɪnaɪ, ˈsaɪnɪˌaɪ) /

noun

a mountainous peninsula of NE Egypt at the N end of the Red Sea, between the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aqaba: occupied by Israel in 1967; fully restored by 1982
Mount Sinai the mountain where Moses received the Law from God (Exodus 19–20): often identified as Jebel Musa, sometimes as Jebel Serbal, both on the S Sinai Peninsula

Cultural definitions for sinai

Sinai
[ (seye-neye) ]

Peninsula in northeastern Egypt (see also Egypt), bordered by the Gulf of Aqaba, an arm of the Red Sea, to the east, and the Gulf of Suez, another arm of the Red Sea, to the west.

notes for Sinai

Sinai has been the scene of fighting during the Arab-Israeli conflict. Israel conquered and occupied Sinai in the Six-Day War but returned the region to Egypt in 1982.

notes for Sinai

In the Bible (see also Bible), Moses received the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai.