Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Related for Yevamot 225:10

ההוא חרש דהוה בשבבותיה דרב מלכיו אנסביה איתתא וכתב לה ארבע מאה זוזי מנכסיה אמר רבא מאן חכים כרב מלכיו דגברא רבה הוא קסבר אילו רצה שפחה לשמשו מי לא זבנינן ליה כ"ש הכא דאיכא תרתי

since otherwise<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'for if so', i.e., if the Rabbis had entitled her to receive a kethubah. ');"><sup>26</sup></span> men would abstain from marrying her.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Cf. supra p. 793, n. 5 mutatis mutandis. ');"><sup>27</sup></span> If so,<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' That eligibility to receive a kethubah is determined by the likelihood of the consent to marry the deaf person. ');"><sup>28</sup></span>

Tosefta Terumot

A Gentile that separates the terumah of his friends (חבריו not חברים per the GR"A), or of a Jew, even with permission, his terumah is not [valid] terumah (Ter. 1:1). It so happened in Pinah (alt. "in Pigah" =בפיגא), that a certain Jew said to a Gentile, "Separate the terumah of my threshing floor." And he separated the terumah, and [subseqently] the terumah fell back onto the threshing floor [becoming mixed with the rest of the produce]. And this matter came before Rabban Gamaliel (alt., "Shimon ben Gamaliel") and he said, "Since the Gentile separated the terumah, it is not [valid] terumah," [and thus the resulting mixture is not forbidden]. Rabbi Yitzhak says, a Gentile that separates the terumah of a Jew, and the owners [of the produce] remain near him [throughout the process], his terumah is [valid] terumah.
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Tosefta Bikkurim

A k'vi (see Bikkurim 2:8) -- how is it like a wild animal? Its blood requires covering like a wild animal. Rabbi Eliezer says, they are liable to bring a variable guilt-offering for [partaking in] their [forbidden] fats. How is it like both a wild animal and a domesticated animal? One who flays (המפשיט not מפסיד, see GR"A) it, [the laws regarding whether its hide is] connected [to its flesh is] like wild animals and domesticated animals (see Tos. Chullin 8:6). And [the laws of] the sciatic nerve apply to it, like they do to wild animals and domesticated animals. If he said, "Behold, I will become a nazirite if [the k'vi] is [neither] a wild animal or a domesticated animal," behold, he has become a nazirite. Rabbi Yosei says, a k'vi is a unique creation unto itself, and the Sages were unable to render a decision about it, if it it is a wild animal or a domesticated animal.
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Tosefta Ketubot

A wife's ketubah [is collected by her] from the worst property—words of Rabbi Yehudah. Rabbi Shimon says: Why did they say that a wife's ketubah [is collected] from the worst property? [Because] more than a man wants to marry, a woman wants to be married. Furthermore, a woman's shame is greater than that of a man. If so, she shouldn't have a ketubah at all! Rather, [it is because] a wife is divorced willingly or unwillingly, but a man only divorces willingly.
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