Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Related for Zevachim 181:10

איבעיא להו תדיר ושאינו תדיר וקדים ושחט לשאינו תדיר מאי מי אמרינן כיון דשחטיה מקריב ליה או דלמא יהיב לאחר דממרס בדמו עד דמקריב ליה לתדיר והדר מקריב לשאינו תדיר

It was asked: [If one thing is] constant and [another] non-constant, and [the priest] slaughtered the non-constant first, what is the law?<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Whose blood must be sprinkled first?');"><sup>14</sup></span> Do we say, since he slaughtered it, he must offer [i.e., sprinkle] it [fir or perhaps he must give it to another to stir the blood until he offers the constant, and then offer the non-constant?<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' The blood would have to be stirred to keep it from congealing.');"><sup>15</sup></span>

Tosefta Berakhot

Everyone is obligated in [saying] Birkat Hamazon (Grace After Meals), Kohanim (Priests), Leviim (Levites), and Yisraelim (Israelites, regular Jews), converts [to Judaism], freed [non-Jewish] slaves, Chalalim (Kohanim who have lost their priestly status), Natinim, Mamzerim (bastards), [a person] castrated by [a deliberate act of another] person, [a person who was] born castrated, [a person] with [one or both] testicles crushed, and [a person] with a cutoff member. All of them are obligated [in saying Birkat Hamazon] and they can absolve others (i.e. say it for others) of their obligation [of saying Birkat Hamazon]. A Tumtum (a person of unknown sex), and a hermaphrodite are obligated [in saying Birkat Hamazon], but they cannot absolve others (i.e. say it for others) of their obligation [of saying Birkat Hamazon].
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Tosefta Pesachim

They mix him the first cup. Beit Shammai says, he blesses on the day and then he blesses on the wine, because the holiday is the direct reason for drinking the wine, and the holiday had already started when the wine was brought to the table. Beit Hillel says, he blesses on the wine and then he blesses on the day, because if we didn't have the wine we wouldn't be saying Kiddush on the holiday at all. Another explanation: the blessing on wine is regularly said and the blessing on the holiday is not. And the halacha is according to Beit Hillel.
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