Related for Eruvin 74:15
רבא אמר שאני התם דבעינן ראשית ששיריה ניכרין
is of the opinion that he who upholds bererah does so in all cases<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'there is to him'.');"><sup>45</sup></span> making no distinction between a Pentateuchal and a Rabbinical law, while he who does not uphold bererah does not do it In any case irrespective of whether a law is Pentateuchal or Rabbinical. Rabbah replied: There<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' In respect of wine bought from Cutheans (supra 36b, f) .');"><sup>40</sup></span> [the case is altogether] different,<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Bererah which R. Simeon well upholds having no bearing at all upon it:');"><sup>46</sup></span>
Tosefta Demai
[If] an am ha'aretz who said to a chaver, "Buy me a bunch of vegetables," [or] "[Buy me] a loaf of bread," Rabbi Yosei says, there is no need [for the chaver] to tithe [what he purchased for the am ha'aretz, see Dem. 6:12]. Rabbi Yehudah says, he needs to tithe. Rabbi Shimon ben Gamaliel says, if he exchanges the money (i.e., he uses his own money rather than the am ha'aretz's money to purchase the vegetables or the bread, see Minchat Yitzchak here), he needs to tithe.
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