So one of the word's for a Kike hat is a Kippah
It is interesting that Google translate default assumed it was Hindi instead of Hebrew when detect language was selected
Someone might argue that I typed the word in English letters so it got the language wrong because it was not Hebrew letters but it automatically assumed it was Hindi letters which also is a different alphabet than English and Inserted the Hindi letters to match the English letters
https://translate.google.com/?sl=auto&tl=en&text=kippah&op=translate
I will suggest the word Kippah did not originate from Hebrew and Kikes did not start speaking Hebrew until recently and the so called Hebrew they recently started speaking is not ancient Hebrew nor Biblical Hebrew but a new made up language
So Kippah in Biblical Hebrew means to bow down and it does not mean a hat
So maybe they borrowed the word Kippah meaning a hat from another language where it means hat
There is a sentence taught in beginner Hebrew to English speakers to learn Hebrew pronouns
"Who is he? He is she"
Sounds very transgender
They call singular males who and singlular females he
The kike hat has more than one name to it
"kippah (skullcap or yarmulke, pronounced “yamaka”) is a small hat or headcovering. In traditional Jewish communities"
What if the Kike god is not gullible he just is not all knowing and has a unique type of blindness in which hats make people invisible to him
If you read the Old Testament does it ever seem like God is trying to be a good vampire but needs the blood to stop being a bad vampire.
Like God is all mellow until someone does something bad and then he can not control his wraith until he drinks some blood
Like it is medicine to stop a fit of violent insanity or something
I am not saying God is a vampire, I am just saying sometimes the text seems like it could be understood that way when I read it
I noticed many times when I looked at Jews head when they had the hat off it still looked like the hat was there. I thought maybe wearing the hat so long effected the pattern of the hair on the head. It seems like I can see the hat even when the hat is off when I look at male Jews hair. I noticed this a long time ago. Now you might still be able to see these magic Kippah and spot them by their hair or maybe they have been using them a long time.
Another possibility is you can spot Ashkenazi and Sepahrdic Kikes by their hair and it is genetic so they wear the hats so people do not know how to spot them when the hats are off because they do not want people to know about the genetic difference
Maybe it looks kind of like the hair was pressed flat where the hat would usually be
It also looks like light shines differently over the spot where they wear the hat
"I thought the kike hat was a yamika."
So that is another word Kikes use in their religion that does not come from Hebrew because their primary ancestry is not from Israel
https://www.etymonline.com/word/yarmulke
yarmulke (n.)
1903, from Yiddish yarmulke, from Polish jarmułka, originally "a skullcap worn by priests," perhaps ultimately from Medieval Latin almutia "cowl, hood."
also from 1903