Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Related for Eruvin 57:19

לא קשיא הא בעלים הא באימהות דתניא אכל בצל והשכים ומת אין אומרין ממה מת ואמר שמואל לא שנו אלא בעלים אבל באימהות לית לן בה ובעלין נמי לא אמרן אלא

a' Ardaska<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' MS.M., Ardaskis. Artaxata the capital ',1 Armenia (Wiesner) , Damascus (Kohat and Jast.) .');"><sup>56</sup></span> when a certain man appeared before him and said to him, 'Master, I have prepared an 'erub' from onions [to enable me to walk] to Tibe'in',<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Tibe'in was within two thousand cubits (the prescribed Sabbath limit) from the spot where the man's erub was laid down, and Ardaska was on the way between the 'erub and Tibe'in.');"><sup>57</sup></span> and R'Meir ordered him to remain within his four cubits?<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Tosef.. 'Er. VI; from which, however, the phrase 'to Tibe'in' is absent. Now since R. Meir did not allow the man to move beyond his four cubits (cf. infra 41a) it is obvious that he regarded, an 'erub of onions as ineffective. An objection against R. Simeon R. Eleazar.');"><sup>58</sup></span> - This is no difficulty, since one ruling deals<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'that', R. Meir's.');"><sup>59</sup></span> with the leaves while the other refers to the bulbs.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' 'while the former are unfit for human consumption the latter are quite fit and consequently admissible as an 'erub.');"><sup>60</sup></span> For it was taught: 'If a man ate an onion and [was found] dead early [on the following morning] there is no need to ask what was the cause of his death', and in connection with this Samuel stated: This was taught in respect of the leaves only but against [the eating of] the bulbs there call be no objection;<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'we have not (any objection) against it',');"><sup>61</sup></span> and even regarding the leaves this has been said only

Tosefta Peah

We do not reduce [the agricultural gifts] to the poor during the years of of the poor person's tithe (i.e., the third and sixth years of the agricultural cycle) to less than half a kav of wheat or a kav of barley (Peah 8:5). In what context does this apply? [For grain that has been brought in to] the threshing floor, but [for grain brought] inside his house, we give [the poor person] any amount (כל שהו not כל שדהו), and we are not concerned [that it is too little]. And [similarly for] the remainder of the priestly gifts and the [gifts for the] Levite, we give any amount, and we are not concerned [that it is too little]. [If he is saving some to give to his poor relatives, see Peah 8:6], he can save half and give half. Abba Yosa ben Dostai said in the name of Rabbi Eliezer, "[If he] wants, he [can] place before [the poor people] a third and retain two-thirds for his [poor] relatives."
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