Related for Niddah 60:59
(תהלים כב, ל) לפניו יכרעו כל יורדי עפר תשבע כל לשון זה יום הלידה שנאמר
Its hands rest on its two temples respectively, its two elbows on its two legs and its two heels against its buttocks. Its head lies between its knees, its mouth is closed and its navel is open, and it eats what its mother eats and drinks what its mother drinks, but produces no excrements because otherwise it might kill its mother. As soon, however, as it sees the light<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'went out to the air space of the world'. ');"><sup>58</sup></span>
Tosefta Ketubot
If she were pregnant and they said to her: "What is the nature of this foetus?", [and she said:] "It is from Ploni the kohen"—Rabban Gamliel and Rabbi Eliezer say: She is believed since this is testimony that a woman is fit for. Rabbi Yehoshua says: She is not believed. Rabbi Yehoshua said to them: Do you not agree that, regarding a captive woman who was captured among the Gentiles, who has witnesses that she were captured, and she says "I am pure" that she is not believed!? They said to him: No! You would say this with a captive woman who has witnesses [that she was captured], can you say it about this one who has no witnesses [that she had a child with this man]!? He said to them: But what greater testimony is there than this, that her womb is between her teeth!? He said to them: There is no guardian for illicit sexual relations [i.e. women aren't expected to check the lineage of their sexual partners, so we have no idea if the father of the foetus is in fact pasul]. When does this apply [that a woman's testimony can be believed]? For testimony about her body [i.e. whether she can go onto marry a kohen or not], but with the child everyone agrees that he is a shetuki [a genealogical blemish belonging to someone whose father is unknown].
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Tosefta Terumot
Brine and vinegar and fish brine and oil and honey are exempt from [the restrictions against] exposed liquids, but Rabbi Shimon forbids them. Said Rabbi Shimon, "I saw a snake drinking brine in Sidon." The [Sages] said to him, "That snake was a fool (alt., crazy), and we don't bring proofs from fools" (cf. Shabbat 104b:5).
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy