this is the basic science of the fleshy faggots spinning yarns
Dreidels for sale at Mahane Yehuda Market in Jerusalem
A dreidel (Yiddish: דרײדל dreydl plural: dreydlekh,[1] Hebrew: סביבון sevivon) is a four-sided spinning top, played with during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah. The dreidel is a Jewish variant on the teetotum, a gambling toy found in many European cultures.
Each side of the dreidel bears a letter of the Hebrew alphabet: נ (Nun), ג (Gimel), ה (Hei), ש (Shin), These letters were originally a mnemonic for the rules of a gambling game played with a dreidel: Nun stands for the Yiddish word nisht ("nothing"), Hei stands for halb ("half"), Gimel for gants ("all"), and Shin for shtel ayn ("put in"). However, nowadays they are commonly regarded to represent the Hebrew phrase nes gadol hayah sham ("a great miracle happened there"). For this reason, dreidels in Israel replace the letter Shin with a letter Peh, to represent the phrase nes gadol hayah poh ("a great miracle happened here").[2