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A DICTJ'
OF THE TARGUMIM
AND YERUSHALM
M
— — ;
J Lamed, the twelfth letter of the Alphabet. It inter- bCtf &0, mj&O, Koh. B .to VII, 1 1 end-misplaced
changes with the liquids, e. g. Jibisbttj a. rnia"lttj; n313 a. read :
'31 xnxp E)K msxi pb'Jl X'iSxb pbo v. ib. to . . . ;
npb &c. — b as first radical letter often rejected in in- IX, 10, end.
flection, e. g. npb, rig, nnip &c.
ns5,
T T
v 1Kb.
.
v."11X11.— sort, xab, v. xa III. Ber. I, 1 bisxb to eat; B. Kam. 10 a If-PX 'ba without him.
lb. b nK 'b iKbut for thee
within one day (until morning). Zeb. 5, 3 '31 flbibl Dlib it) with me. Ib. itfi 1S153 'b 1H3 his force (pressure by
within a day and a night until midnight (v. comment.), leaning) is not to be considered as an action equal to
lb. '31 "jO DiJSb inside of the curtains. Ber. 2 a msb be- (sitting on it with) his body; a. v. fr. 'b KbK but, must
—
it, rTnn&6 after it. lb. 14 a naxb D3inbx
you not admit?, i. e. but to be sure, v. xbx. Ber. 2 b a.
fore
fQ between
Elohekhem a. Etneth. lb. 13 a '21 155 ia*ibl but as to Babbi's v. fr.
—'b ix» what (does this mean)? Does it not (mean)
;
&c— Ex. B. s. 3, v. -SCn. Ber. 2 b *I^V»OB x£ was un- absence of any severer punishment indicated in the Script-
known to them.— Chald. *itfb (v. i3Pl) let the text ure, is punished with thirty-nine lashes (v. D^aiX, s. v.
: read;
X£ib (v. X72X) lethim say. lb. 2 a sq. a. v. fr. ;
nsa-iK). Men. nibbsaUJ 'b an implied prohibition,
58>>, a. e.
2>^ II m. (preced. wds.) Opllb). B.Mets. lll a 'b i3^a libs liasb to make the trans-
particle, mote. Yoma 20 b
gressor answerable for two acts. — 'b iann those guilty
,
87
—
n
wb, v. w*. 3?Sb, part, of i?b.
"W, v. •<«. m.
n
"^fcO, JlfcO (b. h.) fo Jafcor (in rain); fo 6e <irea\ Gen.
SpSb, v. IKRYJV
sary. Ib. '31 3TDT 'b it is not; for it is written &c. Snh.
as the palm-tree '31 inx ab xbN lb "pat has only one 'heart'
40 b nSBia "W13BX ""Kb it is not so there is indeed an ex-
(sap-cells only in the stem but none in the branches), so
;
a
pression in the text open for interpretation; Sabb. 64 has Israel one heart directed to his Father &c—b) centre,
'31 i«b is it not? it is indeed &c. Yoma 22 b mSiaa TjnBK 'b central portion. Lev. B. s. 30, end '31 bia nab ablb a Lulab
S03ab in the beginning of the verse. —SOp"n '3X on an empty stomach; a. v. fr. "i xa'bx
(rr^bx), V. aaiba.— PI. £ab, 'apb, s^aab, s^aab, paab,
JDD&O, v. TtpDKb. nab, '^b. Targ. Prov. XXVII, 19 fc^ab (ed. Lag. pniab).
"&&&* v. -inbx.
Targ. Jer. XII, 3. Targ. H Esth. V, 1 ; a. fr.
&05 b
nab)/fa»we. Erub. 53 a Galilean woman
T$
?fi * v. f. (b. h.
;
»3b 687 W
(v.T^"S) says instead of X3bn "fiO'lK'l "SP (come, 1 will purposes); expl. Tosef. ib. IV (V), 7; Y. ib. II, 41 b ; Bab.
^sO v m. pi. (preced.) dried up, laid dry. Kidd. 72 a amb, aesb, v. *2b.
Stnaan 'V 1*1113*7 &n-S IBpX Ar. they surrounded (with nets,
"Q>, v. 12 III.
mats &c.) a pond of fish that were laid dry on the Sab-
bath (to prevent the fish from being swept along with the 35 [to join,]
id5 to full, stamp. —Part. pass. 112b q. v.
comirig flood); [for differ, version and interpret., v. t*5p].
"Qv m. (preced., Arab, libd, v. Fl. to Levy Targ. Diet.
D^fcCb, v. r*-cA. I, p. 429 ') felt; thick, fulled or felted stuff made of wool,
• t :
r»
hair &c. Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. V, 3 sq. (interch. with 112b).
J-> m. (b. h.) = 2b, heart; (in rabbinical homiletics) — PI. ra*H2b, T"i2b. Ib. 3.—Esp. felt-cloaks. Ib. 1 1 . Tos. Neg.
double heart, seat of two opposite inclinations (v. is";). V, 1; 14. Kil. IX, 9 rallies', 'b felt-clothes (of mixed ma-
Ber. IX, 5 (ref. to Deut. VI, 5) '=1 -p-*i i2UJ2 *j22b b32 terial) are forbidden.
'with all thy heart' means with both thy inclinations
Ire. (i. e. break thy evil inclination for the love of God).
K^b, '"0 ch. same.-P^T12b, ***$>, "*. Y. Ber. II,
PI. f. trhnK Tanh. Ki Thabo 1 (ref. to Deut. XXVI, 16) 5^25 (preced.) the hairy side of cloth. Targ. Y.
m.
21 'b ir-rtU . . . taibbBns DnxiD TOim when you pray before
Lev. XIII, 55.
the Lord, you shall not have two hearts, one for the
Lord, and one for another thing (idol); ib. 2. Sot. I, 8 &TGb, v. ^312b.
'b 'a 235 (Bab. ed. p. 9 1
'
H1235) he deceived three hearts
(v. 335). B. Bath. 12 b before eating and drinking man has ^p'lDb m. pi. (v. Dip-Gib) Libyan asses. Targ. Y.
'31 'b T'i" two hearts (his thoughts are not clearly de- Gen. XXXII, 16 Ar. (ed. -plpilb, ppl ymft, 1 ^ibll, read:
heart').
Op"D>, v. Gipi2ib.
Ib. Kin i211p1 JOUPb 'b WPl SSlUa "WO where is the proof Succ. 16 b i*al 'b3 i"iirbtt)o Dins b3 wherever there is a gap
that this root 22b has the meaning of bringing close of less than three handbreadths, the parts so separated
together ? Answ. ref. to WQafc (Cant. IV, 9) 'thou hast are considered as a solid (partition), e. g. a mat suspend-
chained me'; '21 02b 1533 crib ,
",i1ti'1p ,a IIS "YD!* S<bl2* Ulla ed vertically so as to leave a gap of less than three hand-
says (I'bubin refers to) the skin which is tied against breadths from the ceiling and one of the same size from
their chests to protect them from the attacks of wolves the floor is to be considered 'a solid wall completing the
Y. ib. V, 7 b bot. '31 1125 ',ni3 XiniH (v. ",1iD112).— 2) (denom. requirements of the Succah (v. "1212). Hence labud, the —
of 2b) part. pass. 212b (112?) a hide shotting a hole in the legal fiction of considering separated parts as united, if
place corresponding to the heart. — PI. 2"<212b, 11212b. Ab. the gap is less than three handbreadths. Ib. tVO M*m
Zar. II, 3 (29
b
) 'b M112* hides with holes &c. (are for- '31 'biin "fl^VM 'b in you might have thought we adopt
bidden, because the heart has been cut out for idolatrous one labud but not two labud (a fictitious connection with
87*
"Cab *b
the ceiling and with the floor) ; Erub. 9 ' "piiax nnx mia 'b nb); Kel. Vill, B, v. ni^bx. Mikr. IV, 2 tsrab Hltfa.
'al mira 'b. lb. 4
1
'
the traditional rule aplies 1Mb '31 'bbl ed.; a. fr. — H fty?^ "pTatb, 'nb.
Pes. 1. c, v. supra.
to the fiction of stretching (v. 133), of labud &c; Succ. Krl. XVIII, 1 (ed. Dehr. 'ppapb); Tosef. ib. B.Mets.VIlI, 1
6 b 'bbl Ms. M. (ed. 'bl, corr. ace). Erub. 9
:l
, v. BOr). ffttrt ed. Zuck. (Var. r^W* oth. ed. Tt arfr) .
;
"HSj, .'Wife.
"J-r? P r n - - m ' Libzah. Y. Shebi. IV, 35 a bot. W*tea
'b ma, v. mm.
D'tanb, :
v. B?b.
- t
7
1Q23 (b. h.j cmp. Sam. 33b = n33>, Ex. XXII, 21, sq.)
lp2b9 v. tw^.
to knock about, send from place to place. Mekh.B'shall.,
to
KVJ> J y\ J J m. pi. (Liburnicus. cmp. Liburnici cu- trouble for their sake; Yalk. Num. 729 (v. Targ. Hos. IV,
culli, 8m. Ant. s. v. Cucullus) Liburnian mantles. Targ. 14 s. v. ©21).
Is. Ill, 22 (h. text mriBBB) ed. Wil. a. Bxt. 'b SOB'VU'mj,
taking 'b as an adjective Liburnian clothes; (ed.Lag. 'bl; :
;
of (inseparable from) its body. Taan.21 ,v.NnV1 pi3.Sabb. l, a^n nniabb ^ID if there was in his blow enough force
to set it ablaze, he is guilty; Tosef. ib. VI, 22 ina^l na^,
77 h (playful etymology) n©13 Nb X©13b no shame. Nidd.
nia_Db "no. . . ed. Zuck. (Var. b for 3).— B. Kam. 1. c. "Oni js«)
20 a ; a. fr.—P/."piri3b SMtiCb. Targ. Gen. Ill, 21. Targ.
,
a TaiS*i
ywai purple 'al '3 "Wl "|X73l... 'b he who teaches libbah is not at fault,
; garments;
a. e. — 2) circumvallation. Targ. Zech. XII, 6 1131 'b (h.
nor is he who teaches nibbah (ref. for libbah to labbath,
Ex. Ill, 2, for nibbah to 3^3, Is. LVII, 19); Y. ib. II, 5
L
M. (ed. "pTSnb pi.) a board which has no edges; Kel. 11,3 'bl nbm
he placed in his charge glowing coals, and he
TQtb (R. S.in some ed. ta'pab). Tosef. Ukts. II, 18 ©i© nbaa (the irresponsible person) did the blowing, opp. to 10a
rw4 nb ed. Zuck. (oth. eth. pOJab). Tosef. Oh. XII, 5 rsnbtn lb. Y. Sabb. Ill, beg. 5 C 'ai M11M mbs naba he lets
an inverted vessel (v. n©iB3) tUBQ T^b nb ©1 which has hatchelled flax blaze over the hot ashes (so as to form
a rim of one handbreadth projecting from the bottom a cover on which to place dishes for the Sabbath ; Tosef.
(so that it can be used as a receptacle in its inverted ib. Ill, 2 ip^bin).
state). Tosef. Kel. B. Kam. VI, 17 nrbn nb ©i (read HP Nithpa. nabr-3 to flame up. Sabb. 37 ' nnafewi nadp
— —
«^b 689 rt
if after having covered the embers with ashes, the flames Temple. Ib. 81 b (expl. D^ca nblb) '31 tY*Va 'Obabtt) b3
blazed up again; Y. ib. 1. c. nabrui. such as sprouted forth between New Year and the Day
of Atonement; a. e.
S'D^ m. (b.h.; preced.) [the flame-colored, cmp.rvnx,]
lion. Snh. 95 a the lion has six names '21 'b "PE3 *W. Ib. 3^25 I ch. same. Targ. Ps. I, 3. Targ. Job. VIII, 19 ;
106 a
fisoabb 'b "pa . ... tB who will dare to throw his a. e—Ab. Zar. 38 b
"ababa lpBSIX by the time they leave
garment between the lion and the lioness? PL d n !!<ab. (the bathroom), the seeds blossom.
Y. Peah I, 16 a (ref. to Ps. LVII, 5) UTTO *b "Pntt3 ill this . . . Ithpalp. ababnx same. Targ. Ps. XCII, 8.
pr. n. pi. (?) Labia. Y. Shek. VII, 2 Bab. ed. (corresp. to nix, Mekh. B'shall. s. 2). — Pesik. Dibre, p.
'Vi Xp-i:i2D Ms.M. (v. Rabb. D. S.a.l., p. 63, note, ed.^b"!; no b (expl. -pp, ^bnx, Is. X, 30) -jbip -pbab (Ms. 0. ynbab
Y. ed. 50 c bot. "iVi 'EX) in the inn of L. -jbpa, read "plbab; oth. Var., v. Buber a. 1. note); Yalk.
Is. 284 p^bab (,corr. ace).
n&TZ5, ^"'l^ f. (v. SOab) lioness. Snh. I06 a , v.
JOab.—
t
Midr. Till. toPs. XXXIX; Yalk. ib. 721, v. Spate.
' t • :
•
&GtQ3, fcO^nt), *yO m. (abab I) bloom, blossom.
Targ. Job XV, 33 'b^b (ed. Lag. 'lba"b; h. text naj.— PI.
"Trf' v. x*ab. pabab, ^bab, 'a^b. Targ. O. Gen. XL, 10 (Y. ed". Amst.
Num. XVII, pms). Targ.
mrnb, v .
^ xnaibab). Targ.
I, V^iabab (ed. Lag. 'baib,
23 (Y. II
Ms. iiabib).
Ps.
SST'3" Zlb
l
tZftb, v. ©a>.
and a clerk. — Peah II, 6 'bn dins (Ms. M. ^baan); Naz.
56 b 'bil Dirti Nahum the scribe; a. fr. — PI. l^bab, *$.
K ij n nb,
T
v. ^nb ch. Sabb. ll a . [Ib. 92 b '21 nizbd "nbab pffl for the imperial
scribes cany their bags that way ;
prob. to be read "^ibaa,
J lIZj^Zl^ f. (ijab) putting on, dressing, opp. rWBJI) un- v. ^ba-j.]
dressing. Yoma 32 a '31 "JT2?I3 'b iia as well as dressing
"ibQb, S")bnb, (^b), '2"b eh. same. Targ. II Chr.
(the priest's putting on his priestly garments) requires
sanctification (washing), so does &c. ; Y. ib. Ill,
c
40 tTQ
XX, 34. 'lb. XXIV.'ll a..~e.—Pl. p-lbab, X^bab, '^b. Ib. ;
q. v.).
thee) to wear clothes of mixed material, as an offset I
permitted thee &c.
Q3 I (b. h. ; deuom. of nsab) to make or pile bricks.
« 690 n:ab
R. s. 60, v.
L.
Ot531BK. Koh. R. to II, 26; a. fr.
Gen. XXIX, 5) do you know Him '31 "jabb iv© NlfittJ who
1
will cleanse your sins to make them appear like snow
jJ> II m. (b. h. ; v. "jab) ivhite; tohite color, white sub-
(Is. I, 18)?; a. fr.— Part. pass, "jaiba finished, polished, re-
stance. Gen. R. s. 73 'b "3 a white child, opp. ifflia. Men.
a
fined. Nidd. 31 (of an embryo) niTal 'ba well-formed and
IV, 1 'bfi fiS . fibafifi the absence of the blue fringe is
of strong vitality; Snh. 70 b Num. R. s. 10.— Ib. S»lTia 'ba
. .
',
d^aiUaS
M. Kat.
'b
I, ; a.
glowing hot and cut with it; a. fr. — Part. pass, ^aiba, f.
Sabb. I, 22 'bfi white garments, opp. p"ias colored ; a. fr.
5< >
f- ( b h-j
-
P^ ^° stamp, tread, cmp. lab;
fellowmau to shame in public. B. Mets. 59 a Dltfb lb fi13 v. Schr. KAT2,'p. 121 note) brick. Lev. R. s. 23 (ref. to
thrown into a furnace than put his neighbor to shame. 'zi "ifiifib 'b buj fia*fi fin^fi pin ibxssttja this (brick of
Yalk. Deut. 938 Di-PDB paba rx I should put them to sapphire under his feet) was before they (the Israelites)
shame; (Pirke d'R. El. ch. XLIV fibaa, v. fibs). B. Mets. were redeemed, but after their redemption the brick was
58 b Enal -jBTO "fat/a pabafi b3 he who puts his neigh-
. . placed where it belonged. Kel.lX,6 '31 fisbsitt 'b a brick
bor to public shame is considered as if he shed blood in which a metal ring has entirely disappeared; Tosef.
a. fr.—Y. Succ. V, 55 c bot. (play on bai) fia3 pab'auj V8 Mikv. VI (VII), 12 '31 'ba fiSWDU; nsaa a ring which
lat it shames (excels) many a musical instrument. was stuck into a brick of soft clay. Ab. Zar. 46 u 'b qptu;,
v. 5]pt a. fr— PL D^ab, "*&. Ex. R. s. 5. Pirke d'R. El.
;
Q^ ch. (denom. of Xjab, cmp. fi"1 ^) to liave a strong ch. XL VI II 'bfi pilb pa between the layers of bricks. B.
—
n:ab 691 tthb
Bath. I, 1; a. fr.— Trnsf. Vbenah, the larger portion of a corr. ace) on Liburnian ships from Rome; (Y.I &0313ab "p
line filled out with writing ;
[Rashi : the blank], v. IT^t*. fiObliiK Sl&rai from Liburnia and the land of Italy). Targ.
Y. H Deut. XXVIII, 68 (Y. I K"«sV^); v. TT&k
rrab, b rpa v. nr».
Hi7Z2^ (b. h.) [to join closely; denom. icob garment,
n3!2^ f- (b. h.) 1) fern, of v.— 2) moon.
",2V q. Ber. 59 b .
'b poa until the decision (Halachah) sprouts forth (bright) 'bone (the depth) was naked, the other (the earth) was
Lebanon;
like a kind of ib. V, 12 (cmp. abab) ; a. fr.— covered (with water). Pesik. Ahare, p. 177 b '31 D"0ab 'b
Metaph. King; Temple. Sifre Deut. 6 ;
b
Gitt. 56 ; Yoma clad in white and wrapped in white. Yalk. Gen. 130, v.
39 b v.
, ",?b. — [Y. Kil. I, 27 a bot,, 'b ^"fTD, v. paVte^TS.
supra; a. fr.
a
Pi. "flab to invest; part. pass, aaiba. B. Bath. 122 'ba
n^'lDIlb Qab) whiteness. Neg. IV, 4 'ba WP rraa
f.
'31 D"Hli< invested with the Urim and Tummim. Tosef.
how much of the hair must be white (as a symptom of
Ohol. XIII, 5 [read with R. S. to Ohol. XII, 4) ttttti fOba
leprosy)?— Lev. R. s. 14 'b bl!5 rWB (not rP3lbab) a drop
nip^Sa ©alba a bed frame upholstered with tufts.
of white matter; Yalk. Lev. 547. Lev. R. 1. c. rfliab blU;
Hif. aStairi to clothe, invest. Ex. R. 1. c B**8»n
Yalk. 1. c. Waiaab btt3; "Jin/ib bffl; (Ar. PWM fc», some ed.
l"P3nb Werabrilhe caused one slave to take off his garment
one w. rvynabia, corr. ace).
and the other to put it on. Sot. 14 a qx . . . UPaba KV\ ITB
* *i«— "_i v. preced. nnx as He clothes the naked..., so do thou &e
'31 TZJabfi
Tanh. Haye 3 '31 -pi "b3 "^abai (not a^abai) and clothes
yoDb, i?nb, Pi. f wvov.
them in armor &e Ib. (ref. to Ps. CIV, 1) rpnaabrtU VWiPi
'2"~ ch.=h. XXIX, e.— n^a that is the strength with which I invested thee at
"|2Z~, -p3D>. Targ. Is. 17; a.
•Vl sp-iN, v. Kj3"lH II.
the Red Sea. Ib/31 1©S<*ib tW$*) yum -niri^ part of thy
glory and majesty hast thou put on Abraham's head by
*C2~ m. (Xe^t);; cmp., however, DSb) caldron. Kel. granting him the dignity of old age. Yoma 5 b "i^'abti ^iS^a
XIV, 1 '(Var. OEb); Tosef. ib. B. Mets. IV, 1 '31 "^B ^1 the in what order did Moses clothe them? Y. Shek. V, 49 a —
caldron (if defective) must be capable of serving as a (expl. ahpBan Ores, ib. V, 1, Mish. ed. VK&HBtl b>3>) TttW
receptacle for cups (in order to be fit for uncleanness). '31 ilJa la^aba he invested (the appointed person) with
— PI. Tp"nb. Sifre Num. 158 pO'ab (corr. ace; Pesik. (had in charge) the high priest's garments; a. fr.
li???i v. ijjib. 19; a. fr.— Part, diab, ^ab. Targ. Job XXVII, 17. Targ.
Ez. IX, 2; a. fr.—Ber. 28 a ^Ktfl Vfm dab^ K*ia Wlb~l pta
. ninnip pr. n. Libruth, a river or canal. B. Mets. niirabx jtJXI ... let him who has been invested with the
87 a 'Vi vernm is r^i nyia (Ms. m. nnab, Ms. r. rrtafc, or shall he who not invested
priest's cloak wear it; is
v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) it requires a Vav as large as a
say to him who has been, take off thy cloak, and I will
rudder on the L.; Meg. 16 b (v. Rabb. D. S. a.l. note 6, a.
put it on ? ; i. e. let us respect the hereditary office of
&*T?! II).
the Nasi, v. rtW. Keth. 54 a tf&ah inainOS'W WWfriai
b
SOS she put on all her dresses and wraps. Sabb. 10 [read :]
*]i TJ"p5, "jiiajlQ^ m. (Xapparov, Xaupeaxov, S.) ",-ppi ^'^tfjiabx xrVvp (v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 30) cloaks
theemperor's portrait wreathed with laurels. Yalk. Ez. are precious on those who are invested with them, i. e.
356 '31 "jVa b® fWCb
Clbaa (corr. ace.) she took the
a pupil likes to quote his teacher; a. fr.
king's portrait and used it as fuel for making a hot drink,
Af. la-obx 1) same. Targ. Ps. XCIII, 1 a. e.— Ber. 1. e ;
?Jp (denom. of taba) to stack ivith the pitchfork. Tosef. (ref. to Ps. XXXV, 16) 'b *pO">:> by mpb WtM) they
Sabb/lX (X), 10 yTSftl .... D"0D if two take hold of a flattered Korah for the sake of entertainments (to which
pitchfork and stack; Sabb. 92 b Sifra Vayikra, Hobah, ;
he used to invite them); Yalk. Ps. 723. — 3) living, sup-
a
ch. IX, Par. 7. port (our 'bread and butter'). Gitt. 7 (play on naaial aVpS
risoDOi, Josh. xv,3i) traiiiTrnn bv xmb np3tf ib urir ia bz
"pI2JUj 'J" * m. (legatum) bequest, legacy. Snh. 91
1
a
•
(
one has cause to complain of being
"H ibnffiS" n2D3",3lUJ 1
if
'Di 'b arott ax Ar. s. v. aa (ed. ?•»» insu;, Ms. m. "po^a, hindered in his livelihood by his neighbor and keeps his
v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) if a father made a bequest to his peace, He who dwells in the thornbush will take up his
children in his life-time; Yalk. Gen. 110 'pEr^ft (read cause. Bekh. 35 a -jrimTl s6 xaiabb we do not apprehend
•p-jyibp/.).— R. "pW'fc, «©*/& (legata). Tanh. Noah 14 that their testimony may be influenced by their bread
Abraham was the first (in the Bible) mentioned for old and butter, i. e. by their dependence on their employers.
age, for a wayfarers' inn, 'bai and for disposing of prop- — a
PI. niaiab. R. Hash. 18 '31 'b "i "1333 corresponding to
erty in life-time (ref. to Gen. XXIV, 6). the ten meals which Nabal gave to David's servants
Sam. XXV,
fc^"
1
15 '
'b
D"UUp two wild-tempered legions. Ex. R. s. 15 ip"rt\a D1311
laginin (less rich than the "pa ibiU, but wealthier than
JtTBIIB 'bf\ lb a general before whom the legions cast
the ni&13 ibsa).—Yalk. Sam. 161 ni3-<3b 3tf; (the water) in
the purple cloak (whom they proclaim emperor). lb.
the bottles. — *2) also nSTib
a garden-bed requiring a f.
:
"jTJD, NDYl?!?,
Y. Num." XIII,
'
n
pnalbab Diaia'X.] — 2) (popular corrupt. = legatus) legate, v. XrWpb.— PL 'ppab. Targ. Job. XXXII, 19 (Var. fSpb,
delegate. Lev. R. s. 30 '31 "aaab 'b in ^iba? nas (Ar. 'b Sp131T h. text tVOk). Targ. Lam. IV, 2 (h. text ib33).
;
bs) to sneer. Sabb.30 by3l li?3> 'ip a certain student sneered nDri!5 f. (b. h.) same. Deut.R. s. 11 'P ^Bltt) flaming
at him. Ber. 39 a d3>13 ^3K 3P3pail P3> I am angry with him Seraphim.
who sneers; Y. ib. VI, 10 c top nj&als tvA iinK why didst
thou laugh?; a. e.
r^MDnb ch. same. Targ. Ps. CVI, 18.
pleasing to me.
from this glowing fire (hell)?; a. e. Part. pass, din?, f. —
aOaO) J ~ m. = 3i?3^!i (n rejected) 1) purslane, v. nzft'rib; pi. lANl*), "pwris; ttrewni gloiving; (with *TtN)
»ft?kj«— 2) pi constr. ^JftaV, '3^, only in Vt«1 'p stems passionately following, anxious for. Gen. R. s. 94 "inx 'p
'31 it (the fire of hell) turns around man and heats him
OJD, Pari. Pa. bj&a, fo stammer. Hag. 15 Ar. b
(ed.
through from top to bottom &c. Num. R. s. 18 tt)Xri idm 1
?
d3aaa).—
the fire seized him ; a. e.
'31 dn^-jnbd d^ltt) ilttWa IPX 'with their fe^'m' (secret art's)
&<2n5, WT5 m.=b.h.)y r
,sheath. Targ. I Chr. XXI, refers to works of demons, 'with their Vhatim' — to works
27. Targ.'H Sam. XX, 8; a.fr.— Targ. I Sam. XVII, 51 (ed. of sorcery (with. ref. to drib Gen. in, 24).
Wil. "13).
fcratanb, v. ^aidp.
t t :
3H m
Deut. R.
."3
.
s. 1 1
(b.h.;
tt)K 'p
precedO/^atMe.-P^.d^tnV, constr. "Van"?.
-[ina . . ,1» T^ 1 aindestined to re-
bnb, j^bnb, ^bnb, f .b*, &n, ^
ceive the Law from between flames of fire. onb,
Jl>, Hithpa. drftnfi, v. dribna.
88
I
— ;
694 K-nb
fcfc
"lPI2 =TnirX, but, only. Taan. 12 a (quot. fr. Meg. Taan. S3lb, NiP (or N3b) ch. same, 1) small bottle.— PI.
ch. XII, ed. Meg. Taan. 'pb). "\ab or i»b. Yoiiia 83 b [read:] "WSl 'M WHrTO(v. Eabb.
t :
' D 13 D A l> m. (Xoyi<JT7j<; = curator orbis among the
Eomans) market commissioner. Tanh. Tsav 1 b^aba^b, ed.
n&flb, v. w*\ Bub. Global (corr. ace); Yalk. Lev. 479 GIGGaib; Yalk.
ace); (Tanh. Balak 12
wb, v. *(&
Mic. 555 Giaaib,
piian).
'isa^b (corr. ba'b
are the same, v. "Qlb. {filled with a quaff)Kba a mouthful, quantity of liquid
; 'b
a
filling one cheek. Pes. 107 Kaaib Kba (Ms.M. TTBH&). Yoma
&Q13 m. (preced.) = nKblb Libyan. Sabb. 51 b Klsn
VIII, 2; Tosef. ib. V(IV), 3 '21 VaMb Kba nnilin he who
'b a Libyan ass.—PZ. ^Kb/fc. Targ.Nah. Ill, 9. Targ. II Chr.
drinks (on the Day of Atonement) a quantity equal to
XII, 3; a.e.— Tam.32 a 'V> "nan, v. supra.—V.^b, "•^WpV-
the fill of his cheeks; expl. Bab. ib. 80 a and corrected
'b Kba3 Ka^K say as much as would cause the appearance
Dtnaib, DpTrnb, v. o<?p$i
of puffed cheeks. Y. ib. VII, 44 d bot. [read :] 'b Kba3 *W\
^b m. h.a.ch.(b.h.,v.blb).L%aw. Y.Kil.VIII,31 c ;
nnK Kaaibb pia ¥%& inal there is a version (for Kba
. . .
Y. Sabb. V, beg. 7b
an Egyptian bean when fresh *pni1X TTOSlb): l^aaib Kba3, and what is the difference? (xbaa
'31 'b tYb is named Libyan, when dried, they call it l^aaib means) a mouthful which can be kept in one cheek.
Egyptian bean; ... *iXB Kin 'b Kin hT«» Kin this proves Ib. '31 p b® ioaift the mouthful of Ben Abatiah which is
that Libyan and Egyptian means the same (v. bib). Ib. more than a quarter of a Log; a. e.
'ba ia a proselyte descendant of a Libyan. Y. Shebi. II,
fcOJOJrD, S n mft Num.E.s.2 'b ittin, a corrupt.
34 a bot. 'bt "pb^a bunches of Libyan beans. PI. dh3>lV
for K^aab or Kai^aab (Xa-^veia or XaYVsujxa) lewdness ;
Y. Kil. 1. c; Y. Sabb. 1. c, v. biplb^b. Ib. 'ba b^Kbn 6i*tt
(Lev. E. s. 20 nxatB, Ar. Kn-J^T).
proselytes, descendants of Libyans ; v. "Hb^b.
bTCQDJlb, v. G^ob^ft.
D'H'O'lb, Yalk. Deut. 950, v. 1B«ft.
rrrabaib, v.-^ib.
S©J^ m. ch. = h. tt5=b. Y. Sabb. II, beg. 4 r .
the white color (of leprosy). Nidd. 31 a a.e. 'bn the white ,
from Jerusalem). Tosef. Erub. IX (VI), 2. Y. Meg. I, 70 a
substance (semen virile). Ib. ^938 'bit the white of the
bot. '31 niSpla 'b Lod and Ge Haharashim belong to
. . .
K;i m. 1 1. 2 ; a. fr.— PI. b^Slb, fvb, "psfe. lb. ; Kel. II, 2 ; a. fr. Luda, (Ludaah), an Amora. Sabb. 96 b (Ms. M. mib: Ms.
l —
nx-nb 695 Y*
O. snib; Yalk. Ex. 413 *fo). Ib. 137 a (Ms. M. mib; Ms. matador (v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Venatio a. Bestiarii). Ex. R. s.
0. imb); Yeb. 71 b nxTib.— Y. Taan. Ill, 67 a mib '-i. 30, end, v. KWaft"* Gen. R. addit., ed. Wil. 376 top,
p.
v. oiaairia.
M^TD m. 1) =h. Lyddan. Ab. Zar. S6 a 'b 'wbaTU
I'Tib
mOKp thou citest Samlai, the Lyddan; (Y. ib. II, 41 d mb, t. iib.
v.
T T
bot. Wm).- Yeb. 71 b , v. preced. — P/. wV?. Ab. Zar.
1.c. i^bwi 'b ^«ffl it is different with Lyddan scholars, Tl Jj v. ixb.
because they disregard traditional laws.— 2)" 50*lb (denom. 1
people hiring men for gladiatorial contests, lanistae (v. milk after delivery, a dainty dish. Targ. Job
the first
Sin. Ant. b XX, 17 (ed. Lag. 'vb; some ed. "*& h. text nxan). Ib.
s. v. Gladiator). Gitt. 46 bot. fWI 8*133 Stinn ;
had sold himself &c—Y. Ter. VIII, 45 d top ysTH H33T ib^St
<D1 7-7-2 Ml pwftb (not mn; prob. to be read: y^b) if
"^i]b,v.^b«.
thou hadst sold thyself to the lanistae, thou wouldst have
sold (thyself) at a high price, but here thou hast sold
"frnb, "fpTb,v. ?p-ab.
(risked) thy life for a trifle.—V. G*VP.
HI" 5, v. x^b.
rmb,rmb,
— t — v
«rmb,
tt: .
-'t
v **, ««>.
'" wheat (which can be made direct use of) for prepar-
lbllb, v .abab.
ing &c.;Y.ib.I, end, 6 a nv^a br&«3...bl£ (corr.acc); Tosef.
ib. 23 nvnb ed. Zuck. (Var. nvmb).
J,
y
— — ;
rb 696 oiy*e*6
Sennaherib left undisturbed, and Nebucadnezar did not de- B. Mets. VIII, 4 '31 -pnilb; Sabb. 47 a Q^nilb (Ar. ed. Koh.
stroy, and where the angel of death has no permission BTTib, oth. ed. d^mb) X11I (XIV), 1 5 Y. ib. XII,
; Tosef. ib. ;
to enter &c; Gen. B. s. 69 (applied to Gen. XXVIII, 19). beg. 13 c , v. 031-JD. Sabb. XII, 4 Sp3S TPfli ^SUJ to (Bab. ed.
104 b tlllb; Y. ed. nH as in Mish. ib. 5) on (the rims of)
Jl* II m. (b. h.) nut, almond, hazel-nut; also nut-tree. two boards of a writing tablet (pinax). B. Mets. 1 17 a (expl.
Bekh. 8 a 'b "j^fita "p533l corresponding to chickens (hatch- nipn) DTillb boards of the ceiling; a. e.
ed in twenty one days) is the almond tree among trees;
Y. Taan.IV, 68 c bot. (ref. to lp!D, Jer. I, 11) mm 'brt na 1115, XITI5, SriTlb ch. same. Targ.Y. Ex. XXXVI,
'31 as the almond tree requires twenty one days from 19, a. e. (O.Wi, h. text imp). Targ. Prov. Ill, 3. Targ.
blossoming &c; (Koh. R. to XII, 7 IpTUS-l). Gen. R. s. 69 Is. VIII, 1 (h. text "jiib) ; a. fr.— PI. -pnib, N*nib, Tiib/iib.
(ref. to lib, y. preced.) '31 MB lb "p* 'b na (some ed. tb, Targ. Y. I Ex. XXVL 15 (Y. II mb). T
Ib. 20. Targ. Ex.
fem.) as the nut has no opening, so nobody could find XXXI, 18; a. fr.— [Sabb. 18 a ; Gitt. (51
a
top, v. next w.].
the entrance to the town. lb. '31 1al5> ff*1 'b a nut-tree
stood before the entrance, lb.; ib. s.81 end, v. 30*1; a. fr.
Sfll^, t&TJD m (= NSib; v. 'Tib) 1) jaiv, cheek. Y. R.
.
Ft.trtb, yn^Vi Y. Kil. I, 27 a bot., v. Na.313.— Trnsf. btt 'b Hash! I, 58 b top tprjft, v. n??.— PI. N^nib. Targ. Y.Deut.
nine the nut of the spinal column,a hard vertebra,(Juder\- XVIII, 3.-2) fish-hook.— PL ^nib, *>n'b. Sabb. 18 a Tub
"""iplpl Ms. O. a. Ar. (ed. Tib) hooks (fish-lines) and traps
knochlein, v. Low Pfl., p. 375 a. quot. ib. from Hyrtl, Das
Arabische und Hebr. in der Anat., Lev. R. 18; of little joists; Gitt. 61 a top.
p. 165). s.
Koh. R. to XII, 5; a. e.
Hi"I pr. n.m. (b. h.) Lot, the nephew of Abraham. Ber.
?l5, JKjlb ch. same. Targ. Gen. XXX, 37. —PI. pfa 54 a inmx. ..nxnn he who sees ...Lot's wife (the pillar
'b bu>
RW& Targ. Y. I Num. XVII, 23 (Y. II XTVb 13 fflVj h. of salt, Gen. XIX, 26). Erub. 65 a 'b bffl IMISiab S^n who
text D^ptt5). Targ. Y. Gen. XLIII, 11. is as drunk (unconscious) as Lot. Gen. R. s. 44 (play on
the name) '31 UCJlb Bib cursed Lot shall not be Abram's
ll* III (b. h.) to turn, bend, twist. heir ; a. fr.
BUJTB, v. W) l">bs> ta^attniB vnx nx Kin t^bai tib; (or t^al) 131I2&2 q. v.
Hif. t^h same. Y.Dem. II, 22 c bot. vbs Ff$j ^ =tl "f*1
131 5, T31 5, T31 J 5ch. [to cover, talk secretly: cmp. lanb,]
all people talked against him. Lev. R. s. 6, beg. Cant. R.
to IV, 12 '31 inK "prta hTnan blp saUil heard the people
to curse. Perf. lib, Bib. Targ. Lev. XX, 9. Targ. I Kings
II, 8 iSOlb ; a. fr.—Part, B*>Nb, B«b, SJ^b, Ii?b, -Jib. Targ.
talk evil of his daughters. Gen. R. s. 54 )T\HQ "prba spoke
disrespectfully of the ark (v. Sot. 35 a
sq.); a.fr. —Y. Shek. Y. I, II Num. XXIII, 8. Targ. Gen. XXVIl'29; a. fr.—
a
V, 49 bot. -prba (some Bab. ed. "pnsba).
Part. pass. &b, Bib, Bllb. Ib. Ill, 14; a. fr. Gen. R. s. 44
N'Jlb 'Jib; Yalk. ib. 76 bWb, v. Bib I.— Snh. 49 a top (prov.)
S?l5, v. Wi II ch. n-JXb KW1 fctbl KBlb xnn ed. (Ms.
V M. KO*»K v. Rabb. D. S.
T T T T T IT?
a. 1. note, Rashi ffisb xbl) be cursed rather than cursing.
rmb, v. m^. Ib. lll a ^b na^b xp tsb^a wilt thou curse me?— Ib. 113 a
t^nilb, "pnllb, constr. Yplb. lb. Ber. 8 b '31 'b "na»1 'b the
text nbp) ; Y. ib. 34; a. fr. — PI. "pDlb, «•»$, 'lib. Targ.
(second) tablets and the broken tablets were both preserved Gen. XXVII, 12, sq.; a. e.
in the ark, (therefore despise not an old scholar when 011215, Midr. Sam. ch. II 'bb (some ed. 'bib) a cor-
his memory forsakes him); B. Bath. 14 a ; Men. 99 a .— Y. rupt, of 03ibl3b.
Kil. IX, 32 b top n-nnn 'b; Y. Keth. XII, 35 a top 'b (met-
aphorically for R. Jehudah han-Nasi (Keth. 104 a "jinx U '"131* pr. n. m. (corrupt, of Diocletianus ?) Lu-
;
ampn, v. tom)', a. fr.— Meg. 32 a v. rWtt.— Tosef. Kel. , tianus, a Roman emperor. Gen. R. s. 83, end "]baiU 31^
1
bsoiaa . . . iiSHS 'b on the day when L. became king, E. '21 "pxn .iriibn rtai . . . 131x1 Tvubri na3 see how much
A. heard in a dream: To-day Magdiel became king (i. e. I lend ( to man,) without taking interest, and what
the last but one King of Edom-Eome, v. Gen. XXXVI, the earth lends &c. B. Mets. V, 1
y
31 rrsam sbo mban
43); Talk. ib. 140 Wvb. he who lends a Sela to get five Denars in return. Ib. 62 b
n:a "ailbii lend me a Maneh.—B. Kam. 94 b rrOT\ >*ba (a.
Dtaib, v. a*& r"0"G) those who lend on interest; B. Met*. 62 a ; a. fr.
1 >, ffsl > ch. same, 1) to join, cling to. Targ. II Sam.
:-). Targ. Y. I Gen. X, 18 ; Targ. I Chr. 1, 16 (h.text XX, 2 (h. text pan). — 2) to join a caravan, travel with.
—Hull. 7 a Viwro illlbl Kr*a HfMl an Arab that had
been travelling with them. 3) to escort, v. infra. —
Pa. ""fe "">3? to escort. Targ. Y. II Gen. XXVUI, 12
mrb t V. -'--. T&* (Y. I'pib ',13^ni).— Gen. E. 8. 48, end 13b, v. $0*1,
7
Tosef. Keth. VII, 6 -g^ta "*£ (ed. Zuck. ^lb.Var. "jb -pb^l,
'
Dj f n™ (b. h.) 1) to join, be connected, v. Piel, a. read: "jllbii) escort (the dead) that people may escort
!">""'".
— 2) (cmp. Sm. Ant. s. v. Nexuni) to assume an obli- thee ; Y. ib. VH, 3 b bot. frib^i ""lib (not «r6) Bab. ib. 72 a ;
gation; to borrow. Shebu.41 b Keth.88 a ; B.Bath. ; 6 a laiiOi ni3*l3i *wbl him who escorted, people will escort; a. e.
'z" "~"'r X3 he who (being sued for a loan duly testified Af. '"vjbs? same. Targ. Gen. XII, 20. Ib. 0. XVUI, 16
by witnesses) says, 'I have not contracted any loan', is con- yiniJtilbxb ed. Berl. (some ed. '(inn^lbitb ; Y. ftntfofb;
sidered as admitting that he has not paid. Hull. 84 a "J1S3J h.text cnb'rb); a. e.— Sot. 40 b '21 "ib Vnibx walked with
•"•N ","- "N may buy
(delicate persons) like ourselves E. A. (on dismissing him) from &c. Ber. 31 a fT^lbX; ; a. fr.
food on credit. B. Mets. 72 b
ISO b:> "plib ","« (also '21
n
l>?, v. "Wibx.
""."') you must not borrow money with the choice of re-
paying in grain at the present price; (another defin., v.
">lb,
T
v mb.
t
.
Sot. 1. c. '21 ii'bra" i"!"~r "*x- 33 whoever omits to escort fr.— 4) (law) a fictitious name. B. Bath. 43 b ; a. fr.
'21 lii'ba and what does escort him (to the grave)? Merits T T
?, **. [Ezra VI, 16.]— Targ. Ez. XLIV, 15: a. fr. — Y.
Maas. Sh. V, 56 b bot. ; a. e.
and good deeds; a. fr.
Hithpa. n-:r- Nithpa. fi'br; 1) to join the company
uN J
>> > \J> j)r.n.Bar-Livianus,n&me of a family
of, to associate. Midr.
on jTVTfc, Till, to Ps. CIV, 26 (play
(gens). Hu'lh 87 a ; cmp. "S^Elb.
rncSffc TT» pnO nj&raB "a io whosoever joins
ib.) '2*
them (the Eonians) will be made sport of with them n"!^, n"i, "l^ I f. Olb) 1) Levite, daughter or wife of
in future days. Ib. '21 .1"3pn TTC fTXO illbnaB "'a 32 a Levite. Y. Yeb. X, 10*1 top; Tosef. ib. VIH, 2. Bekh.
him who joins them (the scholars), the Lord will cause 47 a ; a. fr. — 2) the community of Levites, status of Le-
to rejoice with them &c. ; Yalk. ib. 862. Gen. E. s. C3, end; vites. Ex. E. il3in2
s. 1 'bl priestly and Levite families. VQ
Yalk.ib. Ill 'Z' 13".*3p
: "ar tT&TOB the disgrace of starvation Y. Maas. Sh. V, end, 56 d *bl roiPD 1PO0 friends of priestly
was made his companion. Tanh. Vayishl. 3 13 rrilbriiib to or Levite families. Bekh. 1. c. yniUB 'bl 1131.12 the priests
be his escort; a. fr. —2) to be escorted, to accept escort. and the Levites are exempt; a. e. — 3) the community of
Sot. 1. c, v. supra. the attendants of the Tabernacle, priests a?id Levites. Sifre
Hif. ttlbfi 1) to escort. Ber. 18 a •lillbn OKI if he does Num. 1 ; a. e. — 4) the Levitical offices. Ex. E. s. 5 b-13 tit
escort him (the dead). — 2) to lend. Ex. E. s. 31 iilba '21 'b ",ni31 Si3lii2 the one (Aaron) took the priesthood and
ttCCO lends on interest rrefQ Kbit) 'a without inter- ; gave (Moses) the Levite offices; the other took the Levite
est, lb. '21 »6? xba that they must not lend &c. Ib. 1JC offices &c; (Tanh. Sh'moth 27 ri23a); a. e.
ppib 698 a^fc
njlb, TV^b II or TVT} f. (nji) 1) consor/, wife. >\J a word in an incantation against thirst. Pes. 112"
T
Yoma 54 ''
top Kings VII, 36), v. fins II.—
(ref. to rvnbl, i (Ms. M. b-h).
eller's escort for protection. Sot. IX, 6 'b Kbn *TBTfiTn and
'31 there was a small passage way between the graded
we let him (the stranger) go without protection ;
(Y. ib.
ascent (1ZJ33) and the altar; ib. 77 a (Zeb.62 b T>1K; ib. 104 u
IX, 23 d bot. fi"«lbn). Bab. ib. 46 b 'bb "pBIS we may force
(the inhabitans of a place) to provide escorts for trav-
ltm)r-H. V&fo, ftyb. Y. Erub. VII, beg. 24
b
msb Ifia
DTO "1 > staircase rooms and the provision room [comment, refer
pr. n. m. Levitas (Lat. Levites). Ab. IV, 4. ;
12) IFyjjYlVs.
's.
happy he
. . .
wpb, v. tigtfe
!S>" ch. same, small room tvith a staircase. Y.Yoma
TOS film
p n
ib,v.^b. I,
Lul
38 c ] Y. Meg. IV, 75 c bot.
of R. II.
'31
to the
the
srmb,
TT! .
v. Bffrvni.
t :t :
law of M'zuzah) in agreement with the opinions of the
Rabbis.
jH^" >> ]
I" m. (b. h.) Leviathan, a legendary sea-an-
imal reserved, with B'hemoth, for the righteous in the rriab^, v. i**
hereafter. Lev. R. s. 13, v. niafiS. Ib. s. 22, end. Ab. Zar.
3 b ; a.
fr. —
M. Kat. 25 b (in a wailing song) 'b a great ^!y\J m. (=3bdb; v. db3.b) 1) sprout. Esp. Lulab, the
man, opp. pp"i *2!~i the fish of the swamp, common hu- branch of the palm-tree used for the festive wreath on
manity (v. d-ITX). the Feast of Booths (Lev. XXIII, 40) also the festive ;
the diagonal line. Y. Kil. IV, 29 c top 'pzb Tliad (R. S. to Lulab was performed in the Temple seven days &c; Succ.
Kil. IV, 6 "|1D23X) when he measures by diagonal lines. 46 a '31 'b nisa -,im-i dV on the first day it is the Biblical
Y. Yoma V, 42 d bot. 'b VOBb fin^fiUJ Ha yTl except that law of Lulab which is carried out, on the following days
(corner of the altar) which was diagonally opposite to it is the carrying out of an ordinance of the elders; a.
him. Lam. R. introd. (R. Josh. 1) '31 ynjgft 1fi"TO ttJTlfi fr.— PI. d^dblb, Tnbsib. Orl. I, 7. 'bfil d^brfi leaves and
ploughed his field crosswise and put up an image in the eatable young sprouts. Shebi. VII, 5, a. e. d^Tff ^b^ib.
center &c. ; a. e. v. *Prt. Ber. 55 a ,a. e. d^Bl 'b sprouts of grape-vine; Yoma
—
Mb* 699 1*
81
lj
, v. abnb. —Gen. R. s. 41, beg. 33n*> t n&tif its branches I
'"=... hmmVl Oisn plXib they did not change Reuben
are used for praise (v. Vrn); Num. R. s. 3, beg., v. 3*'-""; into Rufus, or Judah into Juliani; Lev. R. s. 32 (corr.
Midr. Till, to Ps. XCII, 13 (sing.). Succ. IV, 4 nx p3"^10 ace.).—Y. Ned. beg. 37 d 'b* "Q n^Tt ed. Krot.; Y.
.. — _•_.•,
t nev use(i to bring their festive wreaths to Yoma H, 39 d ;
Ill,
posts supporting the beams of the press (At.). Ab. Zar. "•on) Lulian style of hair-cutting, clipped hair. Ned.
75 a ; Y.ib.V,end,45 b ;Nidd.65 a ; Tosef.Toh.XI,16; Tosef. 51 a (expl. Wfitf< Q1D= Ez. XLIV,20)'b pro like the L. style,
Ab. Zar. VIII (IX), 3. expl. nx"Pn^ t) 'the style of a distinguished person', IGMn
'31 nt Vo the top of one (row of hair) touching the root
SZ"^*, X—*"']™ ch. same, esp. palm-branch, palm- of the other; Snh. 22 b 'b niSOn poo.
tree. Targ. Cant. VII, 9 (h. text Tan).— Succ. 32 a ^XOO
xin 'bn e^non niso ^xm ed. (Ms. Kin obi? nisn . .) how .
srrbib, v. «#*.
do you know that this kappoth (Lev. XXIII, 40) means
a green sprout? — B. Kam. 96 a '21
'*b"b 3Tin pta "^xn, v.
ma"obib,v.^ ?
ib.
xurn. Gen. R. s. 6 '21 1\i&fo "Op nxi ",n when thou tiest
t2S^^b,v.O£^3.
T T t - t :
thy Lulab (for the Succoth festival), tie thy feet (stop :
travelling); Y. Sabb. b
II, 5 ; Talk. Is. 317. — PI. pOPlb, XZilx m. (popular1
corrupt, of nummus= sestertius)
-,"-'-•
'p. ""PIP. Targ. Lev. XXIII, 40. [Targ. II Esth. HI, sesterce (v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Sestertius). PI. "VM?. Ab. Zar.
8 xrobib, v. next w.]— Targ. Ps. 1, 3, v. X0303.—Ab. Zar. 57 a 34 b W&
'no . . XOlbo Gallon xrO-p XOCp Ar. (ed.
'SrW WI(Mb.M. W^ tmmA) took branches down. '01 noibo
.
ib. trWn man (some ed. xoipibi, Ms. m. sa*»Vft r"i). for one numtnus, while one of wine sells for four nummi.
—Tosef. Dem. Ill, 12 '=1 nC3 rTVB po^? ^50 (R. S. to . . .
for
pO* 1
?) a quantity sold for a
more than a nummus is
nummus
wholesale.
(or less) is retail,
Sam. 78).
^'yO {., pi. nixb^ib (b. h.; redupl. of nib) loops, coup- S IZj i>j v. preced.
lings. Yalk. Esth. 1048. Sabb. 99 a top *31 'bo pOlp f*n
the hooks in the loops looked like stars on the sky; Yalk.
nOD2l5, Y. Hor. I, 46 a top, read n02o 3101.
Ex. 370; a. e.
"|", *P™ I (b. h.) to stay over night, to take (night-)
oij&cb-b, -:s-:-b, ratf^b,™* *•**. lodging; to be kept over night. Num. R. s. 12, beg. (ref.
pr. n. |
"jVv'U, "j" 1
**^, Ab. Zar. 18 b read f*fib (ludi) #ames,
stayed over night in the burial ground; a. fr. —[Gen. R.
,
s. 60, distinction between p*P3, Gen. XXTV, 23 and pV?,
V. p-|30.
ib. 25, v. «*&]
a
iJ <"i^> C*""
m. Lulianus (popular cor- pr. n. Eif. '^r\ to keep over night. B. Kam. 99 O110O 1015
pbnT 30 (X^) transgresses the law which says, (Lev. XIX,
rupt, of Julianus) 1) name of an influential man who
suffered a martyr's death together with one Papus. Sifra 13) 'thou shalt not &c.'; B. Mets. IX, 12 D110O "Z VT
B'huck., Par. 2, ch. V (ref. to Lev. XXVI, 19, v. nxs) 'Z', rttl X*3 the prohibition to keep the wages of the hired
'31 -moobx *Vl ttrm -p DISS JCB like P. son of Judah man over night applies to it; ib. lll b ; a. fr.— Esp. to leave
and L. the Alexandrian and his associates. Y. Taan. II, a corpse unburied over night. Snh. VI, 5 'ol nx "tfbtjfi ~z
66 a top 'SI 'b cr the day on which L. and P. were
. . .
whosoever postpones the burial of his dead transgresses
put to death; Bab. ib. 18 b *$*J v. fr., v. tCp-fl;.— 2) 'b a prohibitory law (ref. to Deut. XXI, 23 in its general
X=bo King (emperor) Julian. Y. Ned. Ill, 3V bot.; (Y. application); '01 111003 i^n but if one kept him over
Shebu. Ill, 34 d Oirx^bpin). night for his honor's sake (to prepare a more honorable
burial) &c. : a. fr.— V. r\$*2.
*3"^bl5, 'fc^blb, pr. n. m. (preced.) (son of) *JW Hithpol. pisnn, Nithpol. "isipn: to seek shelter; to tab
T
Lufian (Julian). Cant. R. to IV, 12 [read:] piip Ttl xb refuge. Num. R. 1. c. (ref. to Ps. 1. c.) [read:] pi'prn "mr
3 ; —
1* 700 xnsib
'31 "jls MU5SU) ?XB. Almighty, be pleased to lodge in the IMa D^HB '? IVO 13> so much about lof; how about oni-
shade which Bezaleel has made for thee. Yalk. Job 906 ons? (Answ.) D^lta SOM '? SOM the same law applies to
fsn WW
1331^12" Ol3a DM? V3* have a place of refuge lof and to onions. Ib. (ref. to Mish. 3) '31 MBltt) '? "«bsa
where to find shelter from the judgment of Gehenna; the Mishnah speaks of leaves- of the wild lof, i. e. lof train-
(Yalk. Jud. 41 1?S3^). ed for the leaves. Ib. VII, 1 MDTOM '? M?3> the (edible)
leaves of the wild lof; ib. 2 'IBM '? 1p3> the (inedible) root
V0 II (b. h.; cmp. Mlb) to join. of &c. Sabb. XVIII, 1 '31 '33 IVra permits the handling of
Nif. Y&3, Sif. "p!rM (cmp. bM£) to rise against, murmur, (the beans) of lof, because it may be used as food for
rebel. Ex. R. s. 25 '31 rTtl W&Mia fPO when they rebelled, ravens. Tosef. Maasr. Ill, 10 '?M niaia (ed. Zuck. nai3) lof
it would have been necessary that the anger (of the preserved in pits, v. supra. Y. Erub. Ill, beg. 20 c DpblpMl '?M
Lord) &c. the bean of the lof and of the colocasia (not eaten raw),
Hithpol. ",3i?nM same. Tosef. B. Bath. VII, 9 D^33i?rr?n a. fr.
'31 D^JlaMI the rebellious (Num. XIV, sq.) and the spies
. . . took no share &c. P]*l^ (cmp. KBV, ft]S&) to join. B. Bath. 4 a bot. M^IBM T\St
M">3 tp?l (ed. M^13M M^? '?) his neighbor may go to work
Ipb = jWb, unto them. Y. Ber. Ill, 6
b
top ; a. fr.
and join (a front) to the hedge (v. M*nM). — Part. pass.
with ni»31?N).— PI. ni*D31?. lb. Ill, 6 a ; Tosef. ib. XVI goods are not yet cut. Shebu. 43 a tt'wVra (Ms. P. "^Vn,
(XVII), 15 ttttnaji Var.; a. e. v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 5) when the girdle consists of
pieces sewed together.
fcrab,T.«w*.
T t: : •
3?i^ m. (b.h. ?'?; 5>2>3 or SI?, cmp. Sft, a. SOtte) jaw. Gen. ymh v. w?.
R. s. 81; Yalk. Prov. 959 (ref. to S&J, Prov. XX, 25) 331S*
cs"ft v. W-&.
15132 D^lElp who chews sacred things with his jaw. Ib.
Snh. 58 b (ref. to Prov. 1. c.) '31 13>i? 1D1DM he who strikes ;
"1D l* ("llD^^J m. (prob. corrupted fr. XoY^o^opo;
an Israelite's jaw, is regarded as if striking the Shekhinah.
or oopocpopoc; cmp. MXSB'i'n) spear-bearer, guardsman,
,r satellite. Num. R. s. 10 DffiSMl '?M N31 and the guards-
SSH3, ch. same. Targ. O.Deut. XVIII, 3 (Y. S^rVi?,
man came and arrested them (the revellers). PI. D^BI?,
h. text D^M?). Targ. I Sam. XVII, 35; a. e.— Sabb. 54 1 '
S l" l>> v. preced. by 'merchants', 'satellites' and 'chiefs of tribes', yet they
are all names of tribes; Yalk. Chron. 1073; v. "pTfiwJJJ.
!7ib, v. $. Pesik. V'zoth, p. 196 b 1?l» *p"i^Bl?? tal he motioned to his
guardsmen, and they stabbed him; Yalk. Deut. 950 D^"P21??
*j l~ m. (cmp. MBb) Jo/", a plant similar to colocasia, (corr. ace); Yalk. Sam. 151 'p'MSl?? 1JO (corr. ace).
with edible leaves and root, and bearing beans. [It is
classified with onions and garlic] Peah VI, 10. Shebi. XHDV f.pl. (v. ^Bi?) cotiplings. B. Bath. 6 a '?1 Wlpa
V, 2 '31 '3M MSt fCHBft he who puts lof in the ground for (Ms. M. XMB^BI KM3p3, read '3"ip3) if a neighbor built
preservation in the Sabbatical year. Y. ib. 35 (1 bot. [read:] against the party wall in an angle and joined his wall
1
rb 701 nb
to it with couplings; [Ar. rWI "~p3* '~Z if a neighbor elephantiasis) one who is ichite-spotted in the face. Bekh
joined a previously erected structure to the party wall VII, 6 '=5 ed. (Rashi Tft); ib. 45 b expl. SOTn (from an-
or built against the latter in an angle]. alogy with "CXipib, v. pieced.); Tosef. ib.V, 9 p^lb (read
'lib). Tosef. Ber. VII (VI), 3 pllb ed. Zuck. (Var. ypib);
715, 7" 5(b. h. : cmp.'Jlb IV) to talk, esp. to scorn, scoff.
Y. ib. IX, 13 ,J
bot. 'lib; Sifra Emor, Par. 3 ch. Ill '3b;
Ah. Zar. 18 1
'
(ref. to Ps. I, 1) ytib 1E10 3W CX if he sits
Ber. 58 b
'lib (Ms. M. 'lib, corr. ace).
;
C ll""i^ m. 1) (Xuzo;) wolf, an opprobious epithet of rfl<, D"ll 5 (v. W, tin) unto; ivith. Targ. Gen. II, 19
the altar. Succ. 56 b ; Tosef.ib.IV, 28 0*pib ed.Zuck.(corr. rib (constr.): a. v. fr. —With suff. "^nib, ^ni*3 &c. unto me,
ace.) ;V, end, 55 d .— 2) pr. n. m. Olplb, t^p" ', TP^-
Y. ib. 1
unto thee &c. lb. XXXIX, 15, sq. (h. text Wx) ; a. v. fr —
read Oi"pib Lucius, v. W*a. r'fea /rom the presence of. Targ. Ex. IX, 33; a. e. —B.
P*5 Kam. 1 1
,J
; B. Mets. 62 b bot. Till? pS3 ...MeyOtJ *S when
m. (-pb) picking, pinch; 'b 'b in small quan-
!tf
— me
tities. Vam.R. to 1, 1 ("TOM) 'b 'b 1? mm xb(Ar.X"J£'::::p
I die, R. O. shall come to meet ; a. fr.
"2S"p"~, S p". *i> n!? m. pi. (Xioxdtov) a flower Tll^ f. (b. h.; M? IV), constr. rite eft/ fatt. Yeb. 24
h
;
b b
of the genus levcoinm, snow-flakes. Bekh. 45 a man cried Keth. 22 (quot. fr. Prov. IV, 24).
out, "nm r OIItPKl '5 "Wl 1*W (Rashi "C^pib; Ar. "OpTfl^v.
next w.) who wants to buy levcoiumsl, and it was found n " m. (b. h. ; Hfi? to be sticky, sappy, fresh) moist,green,
to be white flowers (snow-flakes). [Rashi: white lambs.] fresh; liquid; opp. -2\ Dem. II, 3 UJS^I Tvs either fresh
or dried fruits. Ib. 5 "Oil rteai in selling fresh fruits
thou shalt die in the possession of vigor (cmp. Deut. (ref. to Juc" XV, 19) '3 ia\15 Mnn Dipan the name of the
\ XXIV, 7); a. fr.—Fcm. nnb. Sabb.49 a '3 D1D3 a moist place was i.
garment; a. fr. — PI. o^nb, firfe; nin?. lb. "pass nans 'V
W naturally moist, inx "Oi nana '3 moist through some "Fir ll, YD m. (b. h.; nnb; cmp. 6Wft) [joint,] \)jaw.
incident. Y. Ber. I, 2 bot. '31 D^am Ttl '3 the heavens
C Tanh Ki Thissa 18 '33 IJWhW mnib the tablets are called
were liquid . . ., and on the second day they congealed hih< n, because they must be studied with weariness of
(v. iba); Gen. R. s. 4, beg. DTPlSSa TNI '3 (corr. ace); a. th', lehi (jaw). Du. D^nb. Erub. 54 (play on rnb, Ex. :i
fr.— V. nnb. XXXI, 18) '31 pVQ ?iyf> tfT« (v. Rabb. O^a OX Ms. M.
D. 8. a. 1. note) if one will make his jaws as (untiring in
n5 m., v. nnb.
repeating lessons as) a stone &c. Cant. R. to IV, 15; ib.to
v, 12 (ref. to ib. 13) '3 )*V3 nxsv nabn xnntr is a^nba rn
fcnni
t
_ -:
v. nnil. . . .
ill-smelling moisture (purulent substance); a. fr. — Trnsf. jatv. — b) the cheek-pieces of a casque.
Kel. XI, 5. Ib. 8
nriTO '3 (prodiict of) ill-smelling secretion, i.e. man. Cant. (v.Maim, comment, Dehr.). — inserted with
ed. c) sticks,
R. to VII, 9 'O '3 SWl ^X Oh, thou wicked mortal Ex. R. ! which theploughis guided. XXI, — Esp. a stake Ib. 2. 3) lehi,
8. 20; a. e. fastened in the ground by the side of a wall, serving as
a mark or as a fictitious partition (enclosure) for the pur-
Nnainb,
T T .'
v. ^nb.
t : •
pose of enabling the inmates of an alley to move objects,
"l*n* on the Sabbath, within the space thus enclosed (v. S'rTOT.
"Tin!?, adv. (v. "in II) 1) singly, separately, only.
Erub. 12 b nsTia Dlltta 'b a lehi is to serve the place of
Targ. Ex". XXVI,' 9 (h. text 133). Targ. Gen. VI, 5 (h. text
p"i); a.v.fr. —
Taan. 21 b '3 "TOl '3 nQS the men separately
a partition (palisade), contrad. to "0*t\ dltUa a mark to
for the poor man (when he goes to his meal) and an-
on the Sabbath ... are a stake and a beam on top; 'bx 'i
other for the priest (when he goes to eat T'rumah), ¥$$} 1aw R E - - "Ha** frb
says two stakes. Ib. 6 '31
the stakes about which they speak must be ten hand-
opp. irWB
in the same time. Hull. 55 a -jmsi '3 api3
'3 is one thing, and a removed one
a perforated milt
breadths high &c. Ib. i5 a 'b rn . .. -nbxa WWH 'b a pole
put up accidentally (not with the intention of making it
another (the laws are different); a. fr. With suff. "Hinb, —
a Sabbath mark) serves the ritual purposes of a lehi.
"ninba for, by myself, -ftfrfe, ^nba for, by thyself &c. . . .
3 d top "31 1W
xbl 'bai provided that he does not do ing (loosening) their bridles (h. text DnTlb). — 2) stake as
L in^, H^Hv
;
m. (v. rnbl) flaming, red. Targ. Y.
.Gen. XXX, 32, sq. a. e. (0. D»nr, h. text Din). ^^tO* 't^^ f - P1 - ( v -
^^ 2) P alisa des> whence
axi'^a n^nb,' rwrtb = (awra) ^r pr. n. pi. Fort (of Moab).
n> I (b. h.) pr. n. pi. Lehi (v. next w). Gen. R.s.98. Targ. 0. Num. XXI, 15* r.*nb; Y. rY»*»nb. Ib. 0. 28 ttT?)
;
703 Dnb
l
Sn^n>t : •
ch. same.— PI. %vbn\\ Y. Ab. Zar. H, 42 a
IX, 27. '
•jTib, v.^. Tt
!T1
5
n
jr\ J} n
3 f. same, moisture, juice; vitality. Gen.
!
'
XXXVII,
Ez.
flaming tongues lapped them (the words) as they were bones' are men ms"3 r3 'b CMS pXU3 in whom
4 ; 1 1) 'dry
lapped when coining down from Sinai.
there is no sap of good deeds; Sot. 46 b bot.; Yalk. Kings
n."n~,
T
nirpf. (v. nextw.) maidservant. PI. — 226; a. e.— [Cant. R. to I, 6 'b nbri, read: PCWiVsK]
XX, 17. Pesik. R. s. 16; Yalk. Num. 776; Yalk. Job 926; Tanh.
I Kings XI, 3. Targ. 0. Gen. XxV, 6. Targ. Y. ib.'
'3MM^ab? ear-rings, (namely) that which is put on the place H5HO (redupl. of MM3, v. Ms) to moisten.
where the whispering for charming purposes is done (the Nithpa. rjbtftro be moistened. Gen. R. 36 (expl.
ear).
—'33 in a low voice. Gen. R. s. 3, beg.; a. fr. — [Y. Ber. M31XM CiX,Gen.ix,20)M?3nXM
to
I, 3 d top, v. X'irib.].— 2) hissing (of the serpent), emission his sake the ground became moist again (cmp. Gen. R.
of venom. Ab. II, 10 '=" WDTft fhuftjl their (the scholars') s. 33, end, quot. s. v. THJ). Y. Sabb. IV, 6 d bot. TWV
hissing is that of &c; Num. R. s. 3, beg. —Trnsf. invidious IMbrtbpsra dry (plants) which have been moistened again,
talk, tale-bearing, insinuation. Pes. 57 a •jilttTMb'a *b "nx
opp. "pass nana "Mb, v. Mb.
woe to me on account of their talk; Tosef. Men. XIII, 21
JW** tva their mouth.— PI. nvs'-rb. Tosef. Sot. XIV, 3; nbn5 ch. same. Gen. R. s. 41 (expl. ftta, Is. LI, 23)
Sot.47 b pn3 'b Willi) those influencing the court by means
'
Tt » UJ pjl>nlujfl "pPMO yyqacfl pb^X (some ed. ip-^) those
'
of secret talk or insinuations. who make thy wounds flow, who moisten thy wounds,
v. am.
?jn5 (b. h.) to lick, lap (cmp. rns). Y. Meg. I, 71 c hot.
'=1arm WnBfa M=rpb he licks it (the ink) off with his Dn5r 1 (cmp. rib), to join, or to be joined, be inserted.
tongue (from the interspaces of the letters) so that the insert; to tenon. Y. Sabb. XII, 13=
ESf. vtf^n to fit,
Divine Name remains intact. Hull. 142 a "£> ~*M3^ ME . . .
'31 rx CMbaM he who inserts the shutters (of a shop):
Oh that the mouth which gave forth pearls must now 60 c DM372M (corr. ace). Cant. R. to V, 12; ib.
Y. Bets. I,
lick dust!; Kidd.39 b -n>- (Pi.). Esth. R. to IV, 15 Tpfb >= Lev. R. to the harmonious
to IV, 15, v. "rb. s. 3 (ref.
'=1 'IfMl for I should have been willing to lick the shoe LV, 7) p^nol 0^02^311) 0->M3^ WTttrtC
parallelism of Is'.
of his (Haman's) foot; a. e.
Mtb MT as one (with tenon and mortise) two boards
fits
~~"'
Pi- 5 same, esp. (of lapping flames) to lick up, dry and glues them to one another; "'""O TC '"O XIM'i" D1X3
B. Kam. 6 a rn MSfA (Rashi ">b) it (the
1%.
fire)
make glowing.
lapped his neighbor's ploughed field. Gen. R. s. 4,
M^^flM (leave out MT3 MT yOT tfl, v. Ar. s. v. M32) as one
inserts two legs of a bedstead.
beg.; Yalk. Job 914. Y. Hag. II, 77 b bot. r=nVc, v. Mis-Tib.
'b
- 'i'" there is still some moisture in it; (Midr. Till, to Hithpa. onbrn to contest, dispute. Y. M. Kat. Ill, 8l
Ps. I rrrt&rby.—v. 3**. top '31 BTOnbtTO D^SM nx if scholars are at variance with
89*
orb 704 put
'=* pit rst nt DTttBto). inform. Tanli. Vaera 4 (ref. to Ber. V, 1, v. ni^na) HB
':•, nenb^ r,»ab"an rjx s-nn: •Jnb"? rn:n as the serpent
n5 111. (b. li.; fr. nnb to chew, v. Ges. H. Diet. 1
" s. v. hisses and kills, so does the (Roman) government hiss
^) food, bread; [Arab. m/<v<*]. Ber. V, 1 the benediction (inform) and kill; [read:] -plOWl rPS3 Bnxn rx fTtH X-n
over bread (rB) reads: '=1 'V fcOXTan who makes t food I3*nm rbj' irnba Xini the same (officer) puts a man in
Kiow out of the earth; ib. 37 Men. XI, 1 'bn Titt (sub. prison and the same informs against him and puts him
1
'.
nVXffl) the two loaves of bread (Lev. XXIII, 17). lb. 'b to death; Ex.R.s. 9.— Tanh. Balak 14 fTO mnst "paJriVt
P"W1 the show-bread (on the table of the Sanctuary); 'tl fill' they (the demons) repeat after him in a low voice,
to II, 14 rTOVo bl25 nsnb IT that is (thou shalt partake of) incite, mislead. Ber. 7
1
'; Meg. 6
1
' '=1 Taib D1X r,'inb OKI
the royal maintenance! Zeb. 85 a ; Meil. 7 b nan blU to* and if
b
one mislead thee saying &c; Gift. 23 Num.R. s. 4 .
ihe tribute belonging to the altar (cmp. Lev. XXI, 6; 8; 'Z"\ X^uinir "jCnb **£ who told thee that the Lord dis-
note 90.]
Dnb, D^nb tfOnbcli. I) same. Targ. Gen. XIV,
Nif. dnbo (with b) to be hissed at, be incited. Koh. R.
18. Ib. XLIIlVi ; a.fi\— Snh. 100
1
'
(from Ben Sira) IS* to X, 11 'zt lb '3 ="KK .... irren "px no serpent bites
I eat bread (to season it)?', take the bread from him. Ab. b^sb^ nor does government persecute a man, unless it is
Zar. 35 h l
<KBnm 'b (Ms. M. X~n3) bread baked by gentiles, set on from above.
v. PB. Ber. 42
1
' '21 'b VOW VfO (Ms. M. X^ilS) let us go
and dine at a certain place; a. fr. — 2) meat, flesh. Ex. R. I*n5, tliriD eh. same, to whisper, charm. Targ.Y.
s. 42 (ref. to B"2nb, Zeph. I, 17) 'b VirW& "pip IWW in Gen. xi,' 28.—y. Sot. I, i6 (1 bot. vvv\ nr^-b dinVnj .b= . .
Arabia they call meat lahtna. a inb r let any woman that knows how to cure a sore eye
"1, ,
>i
by charm, come forth and charm for me. Ib. -pans ^OS
^12TD m., rPEHb f. ( = lanbfi n-a) of Bethlehem.
151 n"»b ntanb act as if you were charming to him and you
Bekh. 22' 'bn rYOTl Beth-
Tosef.Kel. B. Mets.' VII,
lehem wine jug. — PI. rriWjb.
1 ;
nnb 705
'
7 3*~i:i32 the tribe of Levi was exempt from public service
KHTlb, Srn"", f. (v. -nb, irjrfcj, xr-3i *> the
in Egypt; (Tanh. ib. 6 "IB rTZV2 "".t).
splint-bone, the miter, smaller bone of the leg, fibula. Yeb.
103 a rT ;r="i
'3 35 ,
1X3 "xn Ar. ed. Koh. (Yar.'^S; ed. Wl w"I/ (b. h.; cmp. Z)Trs) to polish. Pes. Ill, 4 (48 b )
rzr
he who -walks on his splint-bone (his feet being turned
'"':)
ny>] v. -?•
{2JT2-P, U^t35 ch. same, to polish, sharpen. Targ.
H>s".2T, v. rrx-jbn.
- Gen. IV,' 22 Levita.— Targ. Prov. XXVII, 17.—Part. pass.
t t : t t ;
r-v*3. Ib.
[-" —^ gum-mastich (Ladanum), a resin
m. (b. h. -3)
used as perfume. Targ. Gen. XXXVII, 25.—Shebi. VII, 6 *
"=r^2, not. Y. Maas. Sh. V, beg. 55 d yn-2 p •& n33 why
DT& (Ms. M. ="_•>; Y. ed. no*); Nidd. 8 a Cl-*3. [Maim. a. do we not say?— Y. Snh. Ill, 21 b T1 V*BM i;t for I eat no
oth. take our w. for chestnut or hazelnut, whereas the unclean meat; a. fr.— xr?, n3-?=x:x ":; J3"4=T» "V. Ib.
context proves in favor of a resin.] I, beg. 18 a ftm BNtl '3T that I know not how to judge,
lb. X, 28 b 3'-- rtrft I will not go. Ib. 'z: VtsPi 'si and
S" — — ~,S""2 V—"STf (>.aTOu.ia,lautumiae)2«a/r^.
I
"i
cannot bear it. Y. Oil. II, 62 c top p "-3X '3 -,:xi but we
Ohoh XVII, 3 '31 K^MO&O Talm. ed. (Mish. K'nwiiw ;
do not say so. Y. Shebi. IX. 38 d '31 "4w 3TX ': will I not
ed. Dehr. X^"33:n33) he who starts ploughing from a
go and make sport of that elder of the Jews?, i. e. I mil
quarry (where chips of stones, bones &c. are deposited)
go &c; a. fr.
or from a deposit of bones &c; Tosef. ib. XVII, 3 SOS'S
KWB ed. Zuck. (read '-"Xr?; ed. X33H X33, corr. ace). X 1T ",T tail, v. X"*;.
' »*
[Comment.: = X-3:: ^'r fi*H of bones; but "3 is the prefix
as context proves.] S 11
V, S"T > pr. n. m. Laya, abbrev. of Ilai, Hilai (v.
X— ,
^, v.
"l
W3tM3.
Fr. M'bo, p. 75 1
'). Y. Ber. II, 5
C
. Ib. Ill, 6' 1 top; a. fr.
Sr"— «C3 v. X -1
.
-:- rrmA
-pax rr*xAn
> f. (--J3) curse. Snh. 48'»
T : - '• , :
(Yalk. Kings 172 X~3"p) his curse with which thy father ?
lS"", Sr ?.S'~, '""* f. pX5, ^3) 1) labor. Targ. Is.
cursed him (euphemism for: the curse with which thy
XL, 28 (ed.Wil. "?). Targ. Gen. XXXI, 42 (ed. Berl. a. oth.
father cursed me). Nidd. 13 b ",:r. '; IX y.r so -1 ";
does the
r-x-3).— Esp. vain labor, vanity. Targ. 0. Num. XXIII, 2
Mishnah(II, l)mean a law (punishment) or an execration?
(Y. 'rr-3; h. text 2":r). Targ. Is. X, 1; a. e. — 2) earning,
XV,
Pe. 0^n& same. Ib. II, 14. Targ. Jer. 10; a. fr.
S"5 heart, T •
v. abch.
'
T
D5 J X"^> same. Targ. Gen. V, 29; a. e. — Snh. 48 b ,
XZ'b, Pi. of XB3, v. -a'3.
v. xr"33. Ber. 7a n"^:x I will curse him.
S32"
t
*,
:
1
*
v. 33** Ch.
t T :
''--.
— — v.
-
i-^t. Deut. 231 OpEVn (corr. ace). Y.Kil. VIII, 31 c •*&> n^X
-:>
OpTS^ ":n some read Nibd'kos (Numidicus); [read:] "|X3
w" — ^
/-
i I
1
f. (-i'33) hammering, furbishing. Kel. XIV, 1 n*3"i3 nr sr 3 n3X*i he who reads L. refers to Lubbim (Dan.
district of Northern Africa (Libyae nomos) between Egypt Nidd. 29 b a.fr.— '3
; MXdd (sub.nXdld) subject to the laws
and Marniarica. Y. Kil. VIII, 31 c &Q STVOn d"na prose-
b
of cleanness for a woman in confinement (Lev. XII, 2 — 8).
lytes from L. (Y.Sabb.V, beg. 7 BTCp&Q), v.^ba. dip^'-.
; lb. 23 b ; a. ir.—Pl. nTT*. Y. ib. Ill, 50''; a. fr.
"|
?
lZi" J, 3" m. 03.3 II) 1 ) whitening, cleansing. B. Kam. arrb, v »•£.
.
9a 1
' i"i2", ttJ "Hrl ""d '31 is whitening (the stolen wool) a change
(by which the right of paying an indemnity instead of fctlTP V f. pi., v. WrT'V'.
restoring the object is acquired)? Y. ib. IX, beg. 6°; a. e.
W
'
nrrb, v nnb.
vcfefy sybyb, fttfWbi
.
v. «$$.
yzpb, v.
^JfWb, v. rrsnab.
ffff.
TH^ICPb m. pi. (perh. a disguise of T'lfefl or of
PTO^m. (libra) scales. Y. Sabb. VI, beg. 7
a
$jm pTia^l, v. lid^Stb) informers or advocates.
ffi,
Y. Meg. Ill,
W fcOflTi (Ar. nin^b) to put a pair of golden scales (as
74 a bot. (in a secret letter) '3 fittjblttb 13d">S "03 we have
an ornament) on her head dress. won over three informers (or speakers).
f&.
he must not say, weigh for me '31 '3 "W3"l '5 three quarters
m b
]T) b, ;bfb, i&xb, xbpb, s;f b, v. sub #. of a pound, each quarter separately &c. Y. Ter. X. 47 top
—— ; — —
vtpntfo 707 Kn^b
•:*• ns - X~r, '5 -_:* and how much is aL.'f One hundred J ?J * '" ." U1 ( D n -) 1) w ^^> evening: darkness: - -
zin (v. Will). Ned.59 a r^b:*- 'b a Litra of onions; a. fr. PL metaph. suffering, misery. Cant. R. to II, 17 nroba be ",Wj
— -•'-, tvnt
fb , rtttntfi,
f
Vft fb B. Bath. I.e. Tosef. Ter.
.
the misery (of exile) under thegovei'nments; OfURJ b'i'ib'b
c. Gen. R. s. 10; Lev. R. s. 22. Y. Peah II, 20 a bot.; a.
64 a top,
1.
the sufferings in Egypt; v. fflTB. Y. Taan. I, v.
fr.—Tosef. Kel. B. Mete. 1, 16 'b ixxr; (not -•-ia" b), 'b ---br. !
BTft v. X^:. Job III, 3), name of the angel of night and of conception.
Snh. 93 a . Nidd. 16 b .
S"* •, v. X\ - • "
Si/ ^ I m. (~?b) beating (wine and oil) t«/o a mixture. ?pT5> "P" -?, 1
Sabb. 134 a , v. "=b.
ib. 22
a 'Vl
which he cannot say (at the beginning of his
n""*~ f. (b. h.; r>b) night-demon, Lilith. Targ. Job
servitude). Ib. 4 b T)JD3 'b~ x;^n where there is no other
I, 15 '21 risVo 'b (h. XOr).— Erub. 100 'b= "WB nVtiti
text
1
'
b
v. Rabb.D.S. a. 1. note), v. T^Tiri. Sabb. 151 'b ininx L.
TD"V| Snh. 106 a , v. "SOX.
will take hold of him. PI. "o"o, yb'TJ m. night-demons.
:)" sr J, VI JlJJ J t v. sub ",zi. Targ. Y. Num. VI, 24. Targ. Y. I Deut. XXXII, 24. Targ.
b
Is. XXXIV, 14. Targ. II Esth. I, 2 a. e.— Erub. 18 ; .
""",
Tosef. B. Bath. I, 4, read: bib.
Si;"""* B. Bath. 73 a v. preced.— Gitt. 69
1'
ch. same. ,
""", Targ.
Y. II Deut. XXXII, 10=V^, v. xV?". 'bi x-r^a Rashi (ed. xnb/'bn, Ar. ^bibn), v. x-^a II.
— — ' —
vnork 708 cecb
B. Kam. 17»; Meg. 27 a (Ms. M. -I133n). Hor. 13 a DTT3SW tor use by being kept over night. Ex. B. s. 1 ; a. fr.
'3fl rx cause man to forget what he has learned; ib. Gen. R. s. 60 (ref. to "p33, Gen. XXIV, 23, a. y<33, ib.25) '3
'31 '3 2",,i" - brings back to recollection the study of seventy ns-in pnr3..rnx lodging for one,.. for many.— Ft. Vctrk.
means Num. R. s. 12, beg. (ref. to 'jS'ftW, Ps. XC, ro-.n '3 3^ "}5*
W
"p»5 (the root hfi in Hif.) 1 )
years. Ex. B. s. 43 '3
to teflcA. Ber. 7
1
'
WWaVo ... riblX the ministrations where he (Moses) lodged many nights (Ex. XXXIV, 28).
(of the disciples to the doctors) of the Law are more val- Lev. R. s. 20; a. fr.
Snh. 65 b
ib. 20 mnx fi-nnb; ed. Const. HISS, ed. Ven. MIS, corr.
T?W\> "Z~. Yalk. Deut. 918 (ex pi. f/W, v. ',1?)
'~ '- rVi'51 .... *rWl an oven which came in parts from 84 a , v. xn^C^3. Yob. B. to VII, 26 [read:] K^Wi K1fifi3
the workshop and which (after being put up) was sur- '31 r pni
(
'3 pB3 that night the robber (with his band)
rounded with a frame. Ib. V*IW% r.K p30 ed. Dehr. (oth. marched out, but the guard was close behind them. Esth.
ed. 'B") if the frame was removed; Tosef. ib. B. Kam B. to I, 12 '31 '3T -,n (not nX3Di3l), v. 'jn. Lev. B. s. 30
IV, 12. Ib. VII, 9 '31 '';.... T:n 5TB ","' a chimney-flue KB©^ Xinn TSrtW; Yalk. ib. 651 '31 '3 JOW1 SBrTW that
which is Tosef. Pes. VII, 1. M. Kat.
lined with boards. robber was captured. Snh. 106 b (in a gentile record con-
II, 2 '31 he makes a frame of shingles and
'*3
1? itlL'i" cerning Balaam) '3 C)"i3E ... 13 when Phineas, the robber,
covers the vat that the wine may not get sour; a. e. slew him; a. e. — Pl. ^33'v:, "p3p" 3, "WEO"^, 1
'33. Targ.
2) a sort of common bread, 'shingles'. Tosef. Hall. I, 7; Job IV, 11 (Ms. K*OB . . .). Targ. Jud.V, 11.—Pesik.Shub.,
a
V. ib. I, end,
r
. >8 imBt '3 rWMDS if he made the 'dog's p. 165
1
'
(synon. with niD^S). Gen. B. s. 60; Y. Shek. V.
dough', into 'shingles', it is exempt (fioin Hallab); Ber. 48 d top; a. fr.
life, lawless-
ness. Kidd. 30 b '3 113*33 ... l^Jt'i' ";3 whosoever does not
"ET* ]iyb harbor, v. fd>. teach him (his son) a trade, trains him for robbery; a.
e.—Pl. rvi'ap'V:. Yeb. 25 b '3 l"3 MM he was arrested on
yD'Ot Tosef. Dem. Ill, 12, v. X5313. account of robberies (that had been committed). Snh.
46 b '3*3 K2" 1
turned to lawlessness; (Ms. M. N , 3p",,33 =
SSjU2 v (Provencal, corresp. to French limace).v«nj7. ).r,JTEta).
Gen. B. s. 51, beg., a gloss to "^D i&O, v. X^S"3.
]tt*PnPftvTTOT6 nb| read: n^*.
rb=rK v. i%1.
Sn^'^D^b, 'pb ch. = preced. art. B. Mets. 84 a (ap-
srb,
T
nrb,
T "••
v *..
D^p^b, DtSD^b, 'Ob (frequ. incorr. WO . .) m.
(X-g9Tl)0 1) robber, pirate, freebooter, in gen. rover. Targ.
( Q 2 f. (",13 1) night-rest, staging over night, lodging. Y. Gen. XXI, 13.— B. Kam. 57 a , a. fr. yiT3 '3, v. ",17; B.
Y. Maasr. II, 49 d top rhzrj. n:\\ '3 taking a night-lodging Mets. 43 a ; 58 a T'JCb (corr. ace). Y. Ber. IX, 13 b top.; a.
(on the road to Jerusalem) does not make Tebel (v. 533 II). fr.— PI. tnv&b, T&Ofo, 'db. Gen. B. s. 64 (v. -na II) 'OSSTB
Ib. rarOCfc '3 "2, fi3 why should there be a distinction '31 'b rovers had come to his house and revelled with
between a night-rest and a day-station? lb. 5*5418 D"IN — him the whole night. Sabb. 10 a ; Pes. 12
b
'b 33X3 the
'33 one has to put up with a night's lodging (cannot help meal-time of the lawless (prize-fighters &c, cmp. O^s);
— —
wb 709 tfipfc
Targ. Job V, 5. — 2) pr. n. m. Lestes (cm p. Roman name there is no generation without scorners. Ex. R.s. 52 "li""
Latro). Cant. R. to IV, 12; Lev. R. s. 32 '3 q»rf> *Vl nor ;X—-" the scoffers among the Israelites; Yalk. ib. 417 ';
did they change Joseph into Lestes. -n-n. Ab. Zar. 19 a ; a. e.— V.
f3.
the Lord has broken up the strong den (Egypt's idols), people; Yalk. Ps. 688 '31 WO X"in. Pes. 112 b '=1 tfi 'Vi
how much the more will lie break up the weak one (the (Ms. M. "-:*: '': "V9W1) for they are scoffers, and may draw
golden calf)! thee into scoffing habits.
"ISSD^b, Koh. R. to XI, 2, v. lOtJ II. HlJaii. > f. (preced.) scoffing habits, sneering, irony. Y.
Ber. II, 5 C bot. '=1 nnVTOBS 'stl XT, r>^p (not rYPiX^n)
tnticrb, jnacrb, v. $•**&*«. scoffing is a serious thing, for its beginning brings suffer-
*
ing, and end destruction. Cant. R. to I, 3 '3 "0*l friv-
its 1
S~C"~,
T :
v. KBD3.
* *
*
olous speech, v. Cpnt. Ib. '3 3TC "Q1 D333 EX when a . . .
•• j. Kni> ^, v. wo. word of the Law (a religious thought) enters the heart, a
word of scoffing is removed &c. Num. R. s. 7 a. e. ;
m
v "-• 'p" m.
T" - n*|> ", (n-3) purchase. Tosef. Bekh. VII, 5
'; "nVX what purchase is this (that exempts from tithes)?
—Bekh. 56 a nrr^E", '";3 irx '32 ps -p :a n- (Tosaf.
Tl£"~, v. --r-*3.
thy children are not obtained by purchase
•:"X "pa n"D) as
or donation, so are thy sheep... not subject to tithes in
Sr*^"" m.(zz'-)coupling, joining. Targ.Y.Ex. XXVI, the case of being obtained by purchase or donation. Ib.
4 ; a. e.. v." *Vb. — B. Bath. 4 a bot. 5^n FWa '3 (Ms. R. *"2T ~C'r~ rr zr, 'bn purchase takes effect (exempts from
St""':) the joining (to the hedge) would be recognized, tithes) on that which is not yet subject to tithes because
v.V'3.— PI. MWirb. Targ. I Chr. XXII, 3 (ed. Lag. NMrfb, of lacking the required age; a. e. Pl.U^rSpt?, TT/lp" 1
", 'p;
rsp: "•--.
v. '";
nrr^ n*3 he (in taking her back) went through the
regular ceremony of conducting a wife home; B. Bath.
C£*~, C£*~ f. (Xot-a;=reliqua)re>Haiwfer, arrears,
120 a Ex. R. s. 1 (v. yr-QX). Kidd. 22 a (ref. tor.np3\ Deut.
,
r
the gathering of bones, i. e. the transfer of a body from
sr^"*, wfief^, v sub '—;.
t:. &<rt rz"", : •
"ir^*",
I t : t t : •
.
UV| ;*> a suburb of Je- Kat. I, 80 d top 'r '; DTOO "- ","X -n25on he who trans- . .
pr. n. pi. Litsuy, prob.
rusalem. B. Bath. 75 b nfora *4 qpx (earlier ed. ittVl r*;x) fers a coffin from one burial place to another need not
a thousand times the area of L. containing country seats; observe the ceremonies connected with the transfer of
Yalk. Zech. 568. [Comment, takes ""IS"": as numerals = bones. Ib. 'zVs '*3 UTTK what is 'bone-collection' in a ritual
.>,
jester. Midr. Till/to Ps. I, 1 "«£ rT*l« pOB (ed. Bub. '"3) reference to the collections (by the poor, v. ---).
— "V'T 5
""
this proves that the serpent was an irreverent talker. nl^Sr, v. supra.
90
X — ; 3 8
710 T3b
TW^?
NtCa WWS""!!! "~!"i V-3 evil gossip, calumny, dvnnnci-
rw* alion ;
also "XrV-ri '5 the talk about third (absent) persons.
apr ) v. CJ3
Targ.Y. Lev. XIX, 16; a. e— Arakh. 15 'WVknVap.'n's 1
'
Ar. (ed.yUL's, corr. ace.) the talk about third persons kills
"£"*] in. (b.h.) lion. Snli. !u
b bot.(ref.to
ntifs.ls. X, three persons. Ib. '3 's DHL'S M3 tv£ . . . Xns"3 S3 what-
30) srnxs Vwtfi . . . x*3 'xrra of him (Sennaherib) be not ever evil is spoken in the presence of the person con-
afraid, but be afraid of Nebucadnezzar who is compared cerned is not to be called evil gossip; '3 'si XE3TI ]:'i 32
tO B lion (Jer. IV, 7). lb 95 a '3 X3H 1-ftt Dm *& *8 how so much the worse, it is impudence and calumny. Ib. 16'
can you draw an analogy between these two passages?; '3 'S 611BB tt3 P.'1 ; BtTtsM . . Wrfe*^ S3 whatever has been
.
there ( Is. 1. c.) layish is nsed, while here it is dri\ — said in the presence of three is not gossip (if repeated
lb. '21 .... mWB ITOtD the lion goes by six appellations by one of those present); a. fr.— &.y*VS!fi, WS&b, "':'?'•
&c.,v. X"33; Ah. d'R. N.ch.XXXlX; ib II Vers. ch.XLIll Targ. Estli. 11,22. Targ.IIEsth.1,2; a.e.—Men. 6,V l ,v.b"3.
"CO II (b. h.) pr. n. pi. 1) Laish, the northern limit J^lTO f., pi. Knti/s = «ti/i>. Targ. Y. Ex. XII, 17.
', v. pieced.
ms.— Targ. Prov. XXV, 14 r^XS. Targ. Ps. XXXVIII, 4; a.
"
Y. Sabb. VII, 10 hot. Bnti ^ 3S for kneading it. Y. Snh.
1
'
1
'31 ;33 Itlirisn (not l
!l . . . .) which do not occur in the
X, 29* top in&b the kneading of the show-bread a. fr. ; Torah, opp. TrTSTWlj a. fr.
TTSlfrh, v. nstib.
(h.tex tx'i3S). Targ. Num. XXIII, 24. Targ. Job XXVIII,
(h. text Sirft). Targ. Ez. XIX, 2 (h. text X*5s); a. e.
w* *, WCO, w 3 m.
"| ob.=»h. *,rr';, tongue; language; "V>, HD5 unto thee, v. -: ; v. Wl.
expression ; meaning; version. Targ. 0. Ex. IV, 10. Targ.
Y. II Gen. XXXI, 11 WBVip )€' sacred tongue (Hebrew); iS» >(~3*-;cmp. Arab. ^a/r/cr/,Lat.]acca)j(eice of a plant,
Targ. Y. ib. 47 tW I lp tTQ "jti^b; ib. XLV, 12; a. fr.— Lev. used for dyeing. Pes. 42 b 'ss !"P3 ^3"T Ms. M. margin
K. s. 33 'si x:x -m 's "»s pi nx . . . . x:x *13 when I told (ed.X33 1H3 " "3^'7) (bran- water) which they use as a
1
thee to buy me the best thing in the market, thou priming for lacca. Hull. 28 a 'V; .... ^"Spl its blood is
boughtest a tongue, and when I told thee to buy me used to be mixed with lacca.
the worst, thou boughtest a tongue? — Hull. 142 a 'TJ '?
fcO* (v. X2) here. Targ. 11 Estk. I, 9.
'21 he saw the tongue of R. H. lying on the dunghill.
B. Kam.6 b Xsi'sp '3 (hob for hayab, v. Mnli.) is the easier nniSD5, v. nn-ixl.
form (of the Jerusalem dialect). n "~- '" refined ex- —
pression, euphemism. Ber. II '; a. fr. Ib. 28 a X"om 's
1
X"3) another version (reads), lb. 104 a ; a. fr.— fflTQ "JBT^, she (Jerusalem) be taken?; a. e.
—
-Db 711 V'ttb
|TD5, v.-; a.
"*-. Part. pass, as ab. Yoma 77
1
' '31 r.1333133 T*P TTl Ms. M. 2
(v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 100) if his hands are soiled &c.
"Dl D5, v. eas. Gen. R. s. 65 'S3 I used to attend 3^533 IttJOffla VMh
him (working) garments. Ex. R. s. 22, end (ref.
in soiled
"j"^, Snh. 106 1
, v. -r-X. to Job XVI, 17) '31 stta *ya t*VW ^3 he whose hands are
soiled with robbery, will
call .... but not be answered.
J> m. (prob. a corrupt, of keoxtaxo;) //<e ?c/«7e Ib. s». end r*T3"3 'S3 soiled with sins. Lev. R. s. 1,
27,
wuCrf. Y. B. Mets. II, beg. 8
1
17 nx*S ^C^Vcs the (moist) stains of excrements, lb. 9 SPD> f. (~;nj going, thrusting forward, x:r^2l **>
rVPHB '- ed. Zuck. (ed. c;i3S, corr. ace.) stains of fruit- thrusting forward and pulling home, a bolt or pin attached
juice. Ib. 18 D"caCJ D^TBO 's the muddy sediments in to a cord for fastening the panniers, barrels &c. which
the cup. hang down on each side of the beast of burden. Sabb.
102 a '31 'sb it which you can
applies to thrusting a bolt
Ii J"i>«j>, J ^ f. same,l) glutinous moisture, humors: pull hack by the cord in your hand; [Rashi reads: X3p3
Gen. R. 48 Ar., v. rfTfktfs. Ib. rope.] —lb. 154 'S3 :"X (Ar. some ed. xrX3^33 pi.) or
1
vitality. s. 61 beg.; ib. s. '
'"'•
s. 79 '=1 *|3 X"3r Ar. (read:
333 X"3r) thou shalt '*;
when the burdens are fastened with a bolt (which you
go to the grave in the fulness of vigor; (ed. ns X*", v. can pull out without touching the animal).
";). —
2) thick nauseating substance. Lev. R. s. 14 n£"3
3 bo (of the semen virile). Ned. 66 1
', v. W\
:|3jD!j| J > (cmp. "-'-)
1) (=nsps) fo moisten; to
SE* I wherefore f ; v. xr.
•Tpttjaa if the cane is saturated with oil. Ker. 13 a ME*- Meg. I, 71 c bot., v. n3«3nx. Y. Yeb. I, 3 a -piSS ia*1 3=
'31 t" '33 the drop with which the nipple is moistened; a noun which would require the prefix Lammed {to)
'31 's
a. e.— 2) to soil, stain ; to defile. Midr. Prov. to XI, 22 ; Yalk. and has it not, is given a He as suffix; Gen.R. s. 86 a. fr. ;
90*
— ;
•rak 712 r*
"1C* I, "IE> (b.h.) 1) to ^ joined, affixed to, v. P?'.— "IE* II m., HID*, HTQ" f.l) accustomed. Tanh.
tempered teach, v. 'jC^Z. lb. IV, 1 Bnx b30 naibh he who the scholars (e.g. Levi before Itabbi). Meil.9 1
learns from everybody. lb. 20 "ib" 'bn he who studies at 1 (v. Rabb. I). S. a. 1. note 3). Men. 80 b ^2n Mjb 'b. — 3) (of
an early age; "jpT 'bn who begins to study at an advanced subjects) having light thrown iqion, defined. Pes. 25 b a. e. ,
age. lb. I. 9 *£ttfc tltfel N,:c lest turou g h thein "mb &aaD1 nabb SO hi i*in (a proverbial phrase: behold
(your intricate cross-examinations) they may be led to this one comes as a teacher and turns out a learner) this
a
Macc.lO a '21 'Vpv\ nann I have learned is intended to throw light (on the case of a violated be-
tell a lie. Taan.7 ;
[Mob here you learn, i. e. this proves. [Targ. Esth. I, 1 stood from the context; a. fr.— Y.Kidd.I.59 a |-rPab rr>na"
nab nnX" N23 from this you will learn.] mnaSa 'b it»! "pnin naa the case of the Ibriya (that a
(
•,n (not JrTTfBOa; Ms. M. "pb^aniB) because they (the Jews) inn, Gen.I,2)Blb2 xbi 'bb nVUi; naught who was reduced to
have experience in afflictions; a. e. — 3) to teach, instruct; and nothing (on account of his sin, v. Bl;3). Y'lamd. to
to naibh he who studies the
argue. Keth. 50 a Rnjjiboi . . . Ex. V, 4, quot. in Ar. (play on nab ib.) 'b WnaTl 'b DTW
Law and teaches it. Pes. 112 a FHVl "ana; teach me the you are vanity, and your words are vanity; Yalk.Ex. 176
Law rpaba 'WW 1 will not teach thee. lb. nsbja hOKffia
; . . B2"nan 'b arw 'b. Cant.R. to I, 7 (play on nobw, ib.) kVo
'21 "!"i~ab . . when thou teachest thy son, teach him from '21 "W2 'b niai'X that I may not appear a nonentity in
a revised (correct) copy. Snh. 19 b '31 '">b niral nb"> *pnx the sight of &c, a. e.
Aaron begot (his sons), but Moses taught them, therefore
they are recorded under his name; a. v. fr. —mpa^n TSlbo • N'lGip (b. h.) pr. n. m. Lemuel, homiletical surname
of Solomon. Cant. R. to I, 1 13;3 bxb Mtt 'b (not iabb23)
primary teacher. lb. 17 b . B.Bath. 21 a 'n "naba teachers.
— bs riDT 'b to argue in favor of, to plead for; nam 'b he was surnamed L. because he spoke against God in his
to plead against. Sabb. 32 a nabs nnxi B"naba . . . . "Wl
. .
heart (saying, I may take many wives and yet not be
and even if nine hundred. .plead against
bljp3 ni2T l^b? .
seduced to sin); Koh. R. to I, 1. Num. R. s. 10.
two verses which coincide (teach the same),prove nothing, "£<, ")?2
n "72"" m. (wrr^) haven, bay. Esth.R.
^,
cannot serve as an illustration for similar cases; a. fr. to l, 8 '2i n\up2a rnx 'ba mbis m rwvio T»» two ships
Hithpa. nabrn to practice. Gitt. 24 l}
; Zeb. 2 b B^ifctJa attempting to enter the harbor (from different directions)
'21 nsbnnb O^llL'Sn it treats of scribes who are in the one desires a northern wind &c. Y. Yuma III, 41 a n: -1
^:*
habit of writing documents merely for practice. Gitt. 1B"| S« the harbor of Japho. Y. Gitt. I, 43 b bot. bin Wob
60 a m
'brnb 3T2b to write one portion of the Penta-
. . •pnBp of Ca3sarea. Gen. R. s. 31 'ba moW VtftnO . . . BX
teuch for a child for practicing purposes; a. fr. if a man wants to build a ship able to stand in the
wiab 713 Mfc
harbor; (Yalk. Ps. 876 WOS).— Erob. IV, 2 (41 b ) -::: &c. (believing her to be a harlot). Ib. XIII, beg., 14 a "jrim
y:bb Ar. (ed. b^b). Ex. R. Koh. R. to VII, 1 a. 48, beg.; '31 3133 'TX 'b (not n::"Bb) as regards the thin web, even
(ref. to 'the day of death' &c. ib.) it is like two sea-faring the finishing (adding the fringe) is considered an act of
ships *31 '';!"! "jE nXSV' rns one leaving the harbor, and weaving (in the Sabbath law). Y. M. Kat. II, 81
1
'
top fhrti
'21 'b "pins decided concerning (the sale of) stuff for veils
one entering it; Midr. Sam. ch. XXII T; (Yalk. Koh. 973
r::). Koh. R. to VI, 5; a. e. (during the festive week) &c.—Pl. rVBiob. Y. Sabb. IV, 7a
n2"12~ ch. same. Y. Ber. Ill, 6 C hot. '33 p^B" ft'n R. A. was engaged in weaving veils. Ib.
. .
;BB S"n 323 N"n because the Israelites worshipped idols beg. 15 c Sabb. 151 b ; Lev. R.s! 18, beg.;
. Koh.R. to XII.2
(Vat)), therefore she (Jerusalem) became tributary, the (expl. VaiTOm ib.) 'bn (^B'XI) ibx that means the flesh-
letters of 32S and BB3 being the same; ib. [read:] n:2tt covered cheek-bones.
322 OoVl the inversion of BB3 is b«6. lb. 6W1 Vte 6W1
'31 'b the numerical value of "O^B (130) is the same as SrD", '0'* ch. same. Targ. Y. Deut. XIV, 9. Ib.
that of B23. Ib. X231 X323 IBS p3"rl (v. BB I) but the XXXIV, 7. Targ. Job XL, 26.— PL XrB^b. Targ. Lam. Ill,
Rabbis explain lamas, unto melting of the heart (she be- 30. Targ. Is. XXX, 28; a. e— [Targ. Job III, 9, v. nr}?'*.]
63''(ref. to Job VI, 14, v. Targ. a. 1.) 'b 2323 -p-pp v^3 pjfl civiously (with 3). — Y. Sot. Ill, 19 a ^3n3 n»Voi PCWP
for in Greek they call a dog //»JS (?). [The sentence is an '31 who sits down and quotes Biblical phrases in a las-
D^JBDb, 0"lDnb, v. preced. XF> (b. h.; cmp. preced. wds) to jest, mock. Pesik. R.
s. 34 '31 b? i::3b K"rb in vain did we deride their words.
. ^ m. pi. (lanae) icoollen garments. Y. Snh.II, 20 c
i
Hif. VShft same. Y.Peah 1, 15 d top (ref. to Prov.XXX,
hot. "p"H 'b (not "fab; corresp. to X"iB5l "TplbrT. in the
17) '21 35 na"rb~-' y9 the eye that mocked at the law
second version ib.).
commanding honor father and mother and despised
to
the law (Deut. XXII, 6) &c. Erub. 21 (ref. to aflb, Koh.
1
"]3j" = -,:x sb. y. Peah in, i7 J top toi ynas 'b nasi
'
Mb 714 nsyb
J$Z oh. same. Targ. Jer. XX, 8 (ed. Lag. 2^"'-); v.2"'~. the milt.
rtft in. pr';) speaking a foreign tongue, esp. Greek. "2/3, S2?~(v. iN3) 1) to labor, work; to study. Targ.
v. Meg. II, beg. 73 a »» 03 kxt ':n nr::n= ra*r= nnm Y. Gen. Ill, 18; a.fr.— Targ. Prov. XVI, 26 6Cs£.—Lev. R.
if the Book of Esther was written according to law (in mX33 "'V- work right (Tanh. Emor 2+ P""*;). lb.
s. 32
Hebrew), the Greek-speaking (reading Iron) it) in Greek s. 34 D^SJI *3b Vw PlX P"^ why doest thou not go working
(translation) performs his duty. H.rYTTi9%. Mish.ib. II, — 1
and have something to eat? — Y. Keth. V, 30 top -pOTTl
1
'
2^b, v. 2V,.
eign tongue, esp.fo speak Greek. Meg. II, 1 TSrb, pi. rviwlP,
JT^ n 2?^ f. (tofe) jetting food into an animaVs mouth.
v. fW». — 2) (v. flft IV) fo talk against, criticise, cast suspi- ,;
Hull. 55 ,v. rrarsn.
cion. Pes. 51 a 'l". '2 I"1
;" rrt5; the entire country criticised
him ; a. e. >^, v. -"r.
—
; ;
"r?b, v. c-:-rr.
2) evil talk, disrepute.— b" 'b N^ain to spread evil talk
against, to cast suspicion, discredit. Kidd. 81
a
xnn xVi"
nO"3?" f. (OS5) pap or 2>a»te; ro" "-: HG^sV pap made
1
rr:z bv 'b SPXIQ that you may not (by punishing her for of grits 'of beans' Nidd. IX, 7 (expl. "fC-n; "•*)'; Tosef.
private meeting with a man, v. *OTP) cast suspicion on
ib. VIII, 9.
1,
the legitimacy of her children. Snh. 43 \9 'b X">:;V ";x
'31 do not discredit the decision by lots; a. fr. rtO"^> m. ch. same. Y'lamd. to Deut. beg., quot. in
Ar. '21 'b i
_
nn a"iX remove this paste from off thy eyes
ran?].
"N3?5
t t
abbrev. of
: mr
-Tr*;X, q.
' v.— [Y. Sot. Ill, 19 a top, v.
(said to a bribed judge).
Ci^bx fiB) '=1ii:^in oy&S Q3X (KWB "^ 53 whoever is top '-, ~-]2
*W*0; (Koh. R. to XII, 12 xbr *p 1K>).
tongue-tied and eats greedily of it (the Law), will have i
his tongue loosened &c. ni^3 II f. (b. h.; Arab, la'an to curse) bitterness;
Hif. w^ri to feed an animal by putting food into its wortuwbod. Tanh. B'shall., ed. Bub.. 21; Yalk. Ex. 258,
motith, contrad. to 03X. Sabb. XXIV, 3 *{*&<$& 33X but v. -!.- L
—
KP5?b 711 «*
v-^>~ (cmp.
~zv'z a. ens) to clew, masticate. Sabb. XIX. 2 iNw ijx, v. xce;.
';* ":~r2 cr*'; one chews (cumin for a plaster) with one's
teetli and applies it. Tosef. ib. XII (XIII), 8 'ppS'ft "pS
'21 you must not chew gum-mastich on the Sabbath.
m> ( r ?^ glutinous substance, pus. Mikv. IX, 2
Tosef. Pes. VI, 1 '31 ^2 DS1S1 aitOS UUBMttJ (not W» •,":
P : .
1 . . . l
pT»a pus sticking around the eye; ib. 4 f?Kl?J '3
'z
CT") when the attendant gets up from the table to mix in the eye. on the eye-lids.
the wine, he must close his mouth and chew (the meat
of the Passover lamb) until &c. Pes. II, 7 2"1X Ci:*:" x";
ND'lVirV ch. (pieced.) 7>i(/7J, ao/l portion of cabbage.
'2* one must not chew wheat (on Pesah) and put it on V. Ter. X, 47 "hot. PIM3B3 STTI ri2"X |a 30 take (for thyself)
one's wound; a. e. — Part. pass. C>l??. Y. Ter. VIII, 45 1 ' from its trunk and give (as T'rumah) its pulp.
hot., v. r';2.
"ocb, ":sb, D-DDb, v .tr ?B .
"I*"", v. -r'r.
v. SjCK. Y. Hag. II, 77 d top [read:] TnWGl mn ';2, v.
OB3 X. Y. Shebi. VI, end, 37 a pT SB nnx 'z a stew of veg-
I»V| v. TB;ch. etables. Peah VI11, 4 fefiVa out of his stew. Y. Ned. VI,
beg. 39° ';; Tffp a dish prepared in the stew-pot; (Bab.
SS'IS. ^ m. (IS;, cmp. ~ZZ) pap, esp. of figs. Sabb. 37
''
ib. 5i a M>s6 Trm ;
Tosef. ib. in, 2 bift'wa yrawi). Hull.
of pap.— PL '-€-. Ned. 50 b (expl. -pOSirs) TOTI. .x:T2 . &C.; a.fr.— PL B^OBs, feDs. Tosef. Sabb. XVI (XVH),13 :
';
V~ : - a species of figs of which pap is made. Ib. XE;x Y. Bets. IV, 62 c bot, v. crb. Eduy. II, 5, v. W<tt"fW; a. e!
/•- -..„
NC£~ ch. same. Y. Peah VIII, 20"' bot. X15 jo rv:pr
^ ©!3 m., prob. to be read: X*TB- pi. (v. T 2:) stew-
, 'z gave the T'rumah out of the stew-pot. Ib. VII, 20 a
pots. Targ. Y. II Num. XI, 8. bot. (ran -iE2i X0*B3 (read: BDtffe; Keth. 112 a 12= C2r-x
"ri) the pot of K'far H. (which was very large). Ib.
"Tltv, v. T*BD. VIII, 21 a bot. '=1 XVI '1 ya . . . . . *pXf does not the dish
originally come out of the (earthen) pot? Eat (now)
U'lt-3, according to, v. WE. of it, v. XS23. —
PL X*; C2c. Targ. Y. 1 Num. XI, 8, v.
x-2"2x;.
"C^iD" m. pi. kettles, v. 033.
jOi^ m. (pieced, ws.; cmp. /.a-Vivy;) charlock, a plant
i, ^ according to, because, v. !"!2.
resembling the mustard plant. Kil. I, 5.
D^j >S5> to join. *]D^ (cmp. *ZZ) to cling to, to clasp. Tanh. B'har 3 (ref.
Af. "BrX (cmp. Tab) fo arrange. Targ. Y. Lev. VI, 5.
to r23-i, Ruth HI, 8) inES!; she clasped him; Ruth R. to
1. c. rvTTnr lr22? (some ed. Ttttb), v. rVtWt.
if ^
I a pot in which light is carried
in.(b. h.; cm^.'Ot'-) Pi. T2'- 1) same. Bekh. 41 a (interpret. TSS^) r22*-"r
': rep-TMl it continues to cling (to the body) to the day
(v.Maim. toKel.II, 8 a. Ar. s. v.) ; torch. Kel.II,8'pn (U.S.
-•Z-) the light-pot — Midr. Till, to Ps.LII(ref. to Gen. XV, of death, v. supra. Sot 3 b (play on iT'sb^, Job VI, 18)
17) '=• min x';x ''z 1'W torch means the Torah &c. (with '21 1"2£p rzsin" "inSS^O (sin) clings to him and goes be-
ref. to Ex. XX, 1 8) ; a. e .— PL &T»b. Snh. 108 1
'
(ref. to TSV fore him on the day of judgment. 2) to wrap, swathe. —
Sabb. 129 hot. '21 ibTW TX y^ECO you may swathe a
1
Trnsf. lightning, fash. — PL as ab. Mekh. Yithro s. 9 (ref. new-born child on the Sabbath. Part. pass. ^S1?2; f. —
to Ex. 1. c.) '? "n^l JYlVlp ^Zip various sounds and various rwfta Dent. r. s. 3 £X2 fy& CX2 ntfmn the . . . mim
flashes; Vn '~ JiaOfl . . tVSff] were there various kinds of Torah scroll which was given to Moses, the skin was of —
sounds? various kinds of flashes?; a. e. white fire, written upon with black fire, sealed with fire
and swathed with bands of fire.
™ ©" ch. same. Gen. K. s. 30 (ref. to "PBr, Job XII, o)
rr'z 'z rrt mo ynaK pP (Ar. "7B?) there (in certain places) *]£v ch., Pa. Cpgib (interch. with ZfSzJ 1) to swathe,
they say (instead of) 'he has a crier' (that walks before bandage, wrap. Targ. Y. Ex. XV, 2. Targ. Lam. II, 22
him): 'he has a torch' (carried before him), i. e. he is a eetnh (some ed. mBB?).—Sabb. 66 1
'; 147 lj
xpi2"> i2^Bb to
distinguished person. swathe a new-born child. —Parti pass. ~2;^ (rE^). Targ.
II Cbr. XXXIV, 15 (of a scroll, v. preced.). Targ. Lam.
ITSlDPSi), Tanh. ed.Bub. B'resh. 24, Var. •*"--':, read: II, 20 (Ar. 'irm Ithpa). — Trnsf. to handle in the tcay a
"*:"""£- m. pi. (leporinae, sub. lanae) garments made of child is swathed, to turn clay, mould, shape (cmp. 3ST).
hare-wool; (cmp. Gen. R. s. 20 n^ix T2X). B. Mets.74 3 '21 X'pl "Web iDirra xni does it not require
— — ..
a
moulding, drying, putting into the stove &c. lb. "132 shaped. Bekh. VII, 1 (43 ) *,PBb Mish. (Talm. ed. CiPEb),
JWtniWJibBn Ms. M. (ed. WO**! PEBb^l, eon ace.) when i»T1 XPBb (read D... or ",...), v. MT^| W.
1 >
1
, expl. ib. 43 ' '31
read:
TTppZ*,
xpT PT B:T;
Targ. Y. Lev.
XEpib?.
I, 16 in Ar. s. v. -jpb some ed., P r
,v.
r b.
v.
Y
^j y 5 m. (b. h. ; V*lb) scorns r, scrfffer, frivolous person
"
E)2 (b. h.; cmp. r|EP) 1) to twine around, cling to, PI. CWSb, '"b. Sot. 42 a 'b P3 the class of scorners. Snli.
clasp. Ruth R. to III, 8, v. C)Eb; Tanh. B'har 3(expl.nB^i, 101 a , v. "ii33; a. fr.— 'b niTVa (Ps. 1, 1) scorners' gathering,
Ruth 1. c. 'he felt himself embraced') bl PEib-l rTOSfl las bad company. Kidd. 41 a 'b 3t5TO ISOa his company is
as you read ( Jud. XVI, 29) and Samson clasped &e— 2) (cmp. the badcompany (meant in Ps. 1. c). Ab.Zar. 18
1
'
("HOX)
~7©) to wrap up, to insert, combine (dishes). Part. pass. — 'b '"O ">3S2 (is forbidden as) coming under the category of
HE;, pi. "prttti. Koh. R. to VII, 7 (expl. ",nB:) ","«^»an "fl» being in bad company ; a. fr.
7
PT3. P" 'b two messes combined.
mS--' f. (preced.) 1) scorn, lasciviousness. Cant. R. to
Pi. Pfb same. Ab. Zar. 3S U ; 59 a TBft PX W PBbb to III, XXI, 4)'b ^"Ql pfiB JttTO HE
4 (play on Plxbfl, Is. the
go with bread as a relish. mouth which spreads words of lasciviousness; "pE3U3 *'$
'b "Q*lb because they went out for lascivious entertain-
TD" ch., Pa. P:b as preced. Pi. Bets. 16 a Fffotfl "WS ment; cmp. XPSfiS" ?. 2) sport, pleasure. Tosef. Sabb. VI
1
—
ptR3 (Alf. PESTS"!) something used as a relish is required, (VII), 4 'b nb XPPU) that she may be entertained; Yalk.
KPtlfeB xb r«fl (Ms.M.PEbTa, Alf. XPBS-2) whereas bread Lev. 587 PX^b nb^PPPa (corr. ace).
is not used for that, purpose.
Ithpe. rs'^X to be used as XPBb ; v. supra. nb,
It" rasb,
t ••
maib,"T T
v. sub 'A
» "
Ps. CIV, 12). — Esp. lefeth, turnip. Kil. 1,3. lb. 9. Keth.
Keth. IX, 8 'bP p P3nB3 X^PI . . ."Ott if her husband sold
and she wants to collect (her
his property to strangers,
11 l
b '31
Smip»l 'te yp fc*TO a fox made his nest in a
K'thubah) from the sold property (sues the purchaser).
turnip, and when they weighed it &c. ; a. fr. PL PlPiBb.
B. Mets. 12 b "pa xb£ 'b CpB'nsb ^PXI and he might seize
Y. Ter. 1I,41 C hot. 'b iBlfl turnip-heads. Yalk. Leut. 944.
the sold property unlawfully.— B. Bath. 107 a Ipbnu; a^PXP
Snh. 19 1
'
bot. (ref. PBb*n, Ruth III, 8, v. Targ.) TOS ITOWtt
'b "USSOB his body became as soft as (boiled) turnip heads.
IIP 'b after the heirs have divided up the estate, the3'
are considered as purchasers (from one another, and the
Ber. 56 a Ar., v. JfT&fc'Hj a. e.
brother whose portion has been seized for his father's
7
nij>*,
, ', .
v. rwpb. •
call seasoned bread piss'tha. throughout Vp''~; Ms. R. a. ed. Ven. 21pb, v. Rabb. D. S-
a. 1. note 7) why is it different with the gleaner? Because,
D*nS52, Jfw™ I m. (v. PEb), one whose head is turnip- if he has none, he will borrow from a fellow-gleaner. Ib.
—
;
tflaVl 'lbb iSUJn xs^ia IS until the market price has been STJKb itttJX npbfi if a woman is married (marries herself)
announced for (the goods of) the gatherer and the merchant to a man (Var. npT\).
alike ; Tosef. ib. VI, 1 nplbb (corr. ace.).— [Keth. 54 a aipba. Hithpa. ripbnn to be enclosed, squeezed in. Num. R.
Ar., v. 'J"^.]— PI. rnefip\. B. Mets. 1. c. btt51 ... 'b bliJ Ttt s. 12 ; Cant. R. to IH, 1
1 ; Pesik. Vayhi, p. 4 a (expl. riHpbrra,
'21 D18 33 Ms. H. a. R. (v.Eahb. D. S. 1. c.) if the gleaners' Ex. IX, 24), v. xrvvairs.
&^/lp> f. (ipb) 1) punishment. Targ. 0. Deut. XXXII, R. Hash. I, 9 p*P 'i? if one picked vegetables; a. v. fr.
32.-2) &ew# beaten. Yoma 71 b J-rnipb, v. "jFfO; Zeb. 18 b ; Maas. Sh. II, 5 '21 ** ">bUJ HO Y. ed. (Mish. a. Bab. ed. Sia
Yalk. Ex. 380. — 3) disorder, disease, defect. B. Bath. 16 b lipb EpbttJ) what coins he picked up singly belong to the
Xlti 'b ttnpn sc"ip a complexion like the color of the horn second-tithe fund. Y. ib. 53 c "b b3.K p*«ai pia '^bUJ Nim
of the unicorn is a defect (and not a perfection). Hull. 43 a '21 *P31X bs (not "piK) provided he picked up here and
tf^m'bthe disorder of the kidneys mentioned byKakhish. there (deliberately selecting), but if he did so at random
Ib. 55 a bot. '21 '? iJO'S'i when the disorder extends to &c; &c. Bekh. 7 b '21 apba D^sa b^^H b2 every animal that
a. fr. lays eggs supports its brood by picking up food for it,
except the bat . . . which
M. Kat. 1, 5 tipba gives suck. —
npy (b.h.) 1) to take, receive. B. Kam. 119 a fip-JlS ifiCU '21 D1X one may (during the festive week) collect for final
'21 yTipl? collectors of charity may receive from them burial the bones of &c, v. lilp^b. Snh. VI, 6 DN "pBjjfca
small contributions. Ex. B. he received his s. 3 lbttJ rix 'b '21 SrrasSil the bones (of the convict) may be collected and
due (punishment). Tanh. Korah 3 irnba 'b he took up his buried in their family tomb; a. fr. —Esp. to glean, to take
—
cloak; a. fr. 2) to carry away] to persuade. Ib. 1 (ref. to the poor man's share in the crop. Peah IV, 9 '21 apbas ">o
Num. XVI, 1) '21 roiirs abx npil fW vayikkah means (Y. ed. '^bitt) if one gleaned the corner of the field and
attraction by soft words; ib. 2 Wbs }W)> xbx np^l f« said, tbis is to belong to &c; Gitt. ll
b B. Mets. 9 b .
;
inpb lap'U vayikkah has the meaning of separation, for PeahV, 6 uipbb (Y. ed. Bpbb). Y.ib. IV, 18 b topP^I 12b"*
his heart (pride) carried him away; Num. B. s. 18. — 3) to '21 let them have an opportunity to go and glean in an-
buy, acquire. Bern. IV, 5 '21 ib rip buy (provision) for other field &c, v. "WIST?, a. v. fr.— [Peah IV, 5, v. Hif.].—
me of one who is reliable &c. Ib. "Wripbl .... np^b ~jb>n
[Sot. ll b '21 ",nb apbai, v. ap;.]— 2) to pluck (hair) out
he went to buy of him (of the designated person),
'21 "jb if
singly. Naz. 40 b I3pba3. iup-b if he plucked it singly with
and not finding him I bought of &c. Ib.V. 1 "p Ijpibn pinchers; Mace. HI, 5 i'Jpb. Ib. 20 b '21 r,133b lipbtta when
'21 he who buys of a baker. B. Mets. 16 b lri|ri}MW»b when
one plucks out the white hair among the black; Sabb.
b
I shall have bought it; a. v. fr.— Ijpib buyer. Ib. 15 bot. 94 b a. e.; —
[Naz. 1. c. 13>nn tWpV'B IS, read "oba-ilD as
'b n^l when the buyer is dead. Ber. 5 a rraia 'bl and the
Mace. IH, 5.]
purchaser is glad; a. v. fr. — Part. pass, nipb, f. Sinipb ;
pZ.
Nif. Bpbs l) to be collected, harvested. Tosef. Shebi. IV,
=T'?b,",irpipb; ni'rapb. Y. Pes. il,29 b Ittwoqtta 'bn'that 21 S"Oiro '31 mim biaiU what has been growing under
which has been bought with tithe-money. B.Mets. 110 a 'b obligation (as eventually subject to tithes) and been har-
T3 N^ni have it as a purchased property. Y.Snh.IX,beg. vested under obligation ; rP3nsi»:i '31 rWSiU:! biaii) what
26' 1 [read :] lb '? fOT PHln WttTttJ tP until the first wife has has been growing in the Sabbatical year and collected in
been legally acquired (betrothed) by him (Y. Yeb. XI, ; &c. ; R. Hash. 15 a ; a. e. — 2) to be made smooth by plucking.
H' top npipT), v. nnipb; a. fr.—V. nirapb.
1
Sabb. 97 a , v. Mpb'?.
Nif.fffAl, rip" :, Hp3 to be taken, bought, acquired. Maas.
1
fr.— Kidd. 2 b (ref. to Deut. XXII, 13) it is not written V Hif. u^pbn 1) to cause picking, to strew feed for birds.
91
; — —
epb 718
#?
Tosef. Sabb. XVIH, 4 ftJ^pWfc contrad. to •pBptoa (v. cording to the original value of his charge in case of
Bpbvt); Sabb. 155 b .— 2) to arrange the gleaning by the depreciation, or according to the present value in case
poor. Peah IV, 5 (3) bsnn b3> •ptt-'pba Wi Y. ed. (Bab. ed. of a rise in value. Tosef. Yeb. IX, 3 npib "pH rmo TO
a. Misb. "papba) arranged the gleaning by the line, leav- justice suffers under this rule, i. e. it is inconsistent; Y.
ing a corner at the end of each furrow. B. Kam. IV,beg.4 a ; a.e. —Esp. to be smitten, afflicted with
Hithpa. apbrri to be collected; to require collection. disease (esp. leprosy); (of crops) to be struck (by hail &c);
Maas. Sh. II, 5 Dilipbrrafi those coins which have been to be blighted. Sabb. 87 b rvni33 npb the first-born (in
picked up singly, opp. "pbbssn.— Hull. 46 a tUS Mpbrra if the Egypt) were smitten. Ib. 97 a ;
n^inn Yomal9 b nplb . . .
required size of sound flesh can be obtained only by col- 1S13.3. he who entertains a suspicion against worthy men,
lecting (it not being in one place), how is it? —lb.77 a 'brra will be smitten with disease ; Ex. B. s. 3 Silpbb "Hjo JlfiK C]X
liia how is it, if the quantity of flesh required to cover nS*iSS thou, likewise, deservest to be afflicted with lep-
the broken bone is scattered? rosy. Hull. 55 a nns iObl3S nnpb if one of its kidneys
is disordered. — B. Mets. IX, 7 «inpb the wheat crop was
T2p~, 13 'p*, ch. same, to pick up; to gather. Targ. blasted. —Ber. 18 b
'b Nb ibltt his crop was not struck by
Gen. XXXI, 46.1b. XLVII, 14 (ed. Berl. CJ&). Targ. Ex. hail.—Makhsh. IV, 3, a. e. brYOfi ripb 1
] abtt) that the wall
XVI, e.— Part. "Jipb, "Jpb. Targ. 0. Deut. XXIX, 10
26; a. may not suffer (from the rain) a. fr. ; — 2) (of luminaries)
-"'pb ed. Berl. (ed. Amst. Bgb, corr. ace; h. text 2i:rt); to be eclipsed. Mekh. Bo. s. 1 npib iianniro when there
Targ. Josh. IX, 21 *U$ Bxt. (ed. "cpba).— Sabb. 156 a sbl is an eclipse of the sun ; B^pib rYlVrafiias when planets
fT'awbla B^pbfa calf) that does not take up with its tongue are eclipsed; Succ. 29 a ; a. fr. Part. pass, "^pb disordered,
(the fodder placed before it), v. infra; a. e. sickly, stunted. Sifra Thazr., Neg., ch. VII, Par. 5; Neg.
Pa. i^pb same. Targ. Gen. XLVII, 14, v. supra. Targ. X, 1 pi dak means diseased
(expl. Lev. XIII, 30) *i2lp 'b
Lev. XIX, 9 (Y. II Pe.); a. fr —Targ. II Esth. Ill, 8 T'Jpbai (sparse) and short hair. Yeb. 80 a 'b lax "©aa!!} bs one
(not papbai), v. asm—
Lev. B. s. 6 b"K apba Ninn "mp born with defective genitals. Tosef. ib. X, 6 'b iblp his
-pba nx agb Epb he began to pick up (the scattered
. .
voice is abnormal (womanly, thin). Ib. 7 'b flblp her voice
Denars) said he to him, pick up, pick up, for it is thine
;
is abnormal (manlike; Yeb. 80 b ri33>). Ib. 'b 113>ir his hair
—
own thou art picking up. Y. Sabb. VII, 10 a bot. "jMpbai is abnormal; a. fr. —
3) (law) to be punished ivith lashes.
(not n-pbll) and gathers them (the sun-dried fruits in Mace. I, 1 Disn-iK fiplb he receives forty lashes (v. S?*TK).
cakes or strings; v. Maim. Sabb. VIII, 6); a. e. Ib.III, 1 "ppibri *|H lbs the following persons receive (thirty
Af. ^pbx to cause to take up, to put the mouth to. nine) lashes. Snh. IX, 5 fi3lUl 'bia ">a he who has been
Sabb. 156 a IffV T'-^pba Ms. 0. (Ms. M. mb fBpba, ed. lashed twice (and commits the same offence again) a.v.fr. ;
paipbita, v. Eabb. D. S. a. 1. note) we may make it take Hif. Hpbn 1) to disaffect, weaken, strike. Ber. 18 b 113
up (taste the fodder). mix fipba hail will ruin his crops. Sabb. 113 b KlrilU i32a
npba because it makes thin (weakens one's constitution);
t3p!3 m. (b. h.; preced. wds.) 1) gleanings; the poor
e.—Part. pass. Rpb*B sickly, broken down. Euth B. to
a.
man's share in the crop (Lev. XIX, 9). Peah IV, 3. lb. 10
'31 -noun 'b WW
what is called leket (the poor man's
I, 5 'al laiUJa Klri 5]K he (the messenger) was likewise
!3pO, S!3p5, ItftSpVch. 1) same, gleanings, poor punished. Targ. O. Ex. V, 14 ipb (Y. Ipb). Ib. 16 ',pb (Y.
man's share. Targ. Lev. XIX, 9. — 2) the accumulated food l^pb). Ib. IX, 31, sq. Targ. Y. INum. XXVI, 11 ; a.'fr.—
in a bird's crop. Targ. Y. I Lev. 1, 16. Tern. 4 b ipb ista:* why should he be punished?— Ib. 5 s
ipb^b ia3 !*n let him, too, be punished. Y. Kidd. I, 61 b
nTt3pb Maasr. Ill, 7; Ohol. XVIII, 10 'btt Ar., v. bot. '31 "pb^a rvja yw if it should happen to thee to suffer,
n^pbx. it is better that I suffer in thy place ; Pesik. E. s. 23 — 24
""abvi (corr. ace.) a. fr.
SJ^ISpb, NpI3pb
;
the disadvantages of loss or gain, i. e. he must pay ac- and publish?; a. fr.
719 t>&
'31 '3 2T3 1»1 *12*3UJ 2VO *ir6l33 in all the other laws
# n
pb II, tiyb m., Xtiy) c. (tip» slow, late (in
of incest the verb shakhab is used, but here lakah is chosen, the season); late rain / late-born (cmp. 3*B2<). Targ. Deut.
to intimate that one of the two must have been legally XI, 14 (ed. Berl. 'p3). Targ. Y. Lev. XXVI,' 4. Targ. Hos.
betrothed to him. Y. ib. VI, 7 b bot.; (Bab. ib. 55 b nrnp); VI, 3; a. fr. — Snh. 18 b
, a. e., v. 1*32. Koh. R. to VII, 26
a. e.— 3) taking away by death. Gen. R. s. 25, beg. D*C05 'b, v. I" *?*:.— Pl.)->ti">pb, K^iTPpb,
1
^pb; **)"£""&! Targ.
Y. I Deut. XXXII, 2 '"pb. Targ. Gen. XXX, 42 (ed. Am.
-£pj?b, vpgb, v. a^. 'USpb; h. text tnSaSH). Targ. Y. Ex. IX, 32— Gen. R.s. 73,
quot. in Arab. s. v. 2*1} ; v. 3?iplp I. two thousand P'rutahs and one Lakan.— Y. B. Mets. IV,
beg. 9 C 1"OX '32 '3 to lend money on Lakan against L.
TD 'p> II m. (part. pass, of Epb) pinched out, chiselled, (counting Lakans in place of Denars) is forbidden.
in bass-relief (cmp. Syr. nz:pb embroidery, P. Sm. 1970).
Targ. I Kings VII, 19. Ib. 26 ; Targ. II Chr. IV, 5 KWtBltttt 'b &Op3,
ti - :
v. x:*p>3.
'• t t
a
after it is harvested begins the duty &c. ; Succ. 40 IJtfit Eif. pbri same. Par. IX, 3 npba S**-TO "JBa (ed. Dehr.
fttftpb (inn). Ib. ll b *,*V rt ttJS BWl It ",no"p5 the cutting itpbn) because it (the weasel) laps (lets the water drip
:
them is their making (preparing for the religious cere- back out of its mouth).
mony) ; a. fr.
««>, Ar. SOIpp; h. text 3B&).— Sabb. 12 a {TOI ""pbb Ar. did I ever promise . . and retard it?; Tanh. B'midb. 2;
.
(Ms. M. iOpbb; ed. X3p3, corr. ace.) into a flask filled with Yalk. Jer. 267; Num. R. s. 23 Eenx "•WUp'brn . . X2H5 did I
water. Ib.l43 a (Ms.M. Hpib, corr. ace; Rashi Ms. Wlpb, promise to bring you . . . and keep you back? — 2) to do
a in a hurry, in a state of exhaustion.
v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 100). Ber. 62 JOpVo Klttplpa . . . a thing late, finish
(Ms. 0. !"01p32) clappered .... with a nut in a flask. B. Lev. R. s. 30 (interpret. CpiP, Ps. CH, 1, with ref. to Gen.
Kam.ll3 b v. XJ^B.— PI. VT$t, ?}pb. Targ. Job XXXII,
,
xxx, 42) i-i2ia*pb** nso-p i*i3stbaaa*.3B^33...32>iBn*-a
19, v. N3"yb.— Gen. R. s. 13, v. next w. 5]1D3 (not 1PI3N353) as a laborer sits waiting for the time
when he may rest a while from his labor, and finally
NrWpb, Srp^F?^ f- (preced.) a little flask. Koh. finishes it in a hurry (when it is late).
r. to i,7 'si moS) i^aVn uni did 'pi? *.iba (not rriuo) they
filled a flask with (Ocean) water and added water there- mpt) ch. same, Pa. UTpb to be late, tired. Targ. Y
to, and it absorbed it.— PI. XMiO-O-pb. Gen. R. s. 13 113m Gen. XXX, 42 "•Wpb (infin., not 'b), v. Kniiyipb.
91*
—
vf? 720 nnb
Af. Epb&Jl as preced. Hif. 2. Yalk. Ps. 855 (ref. to CpS*, Temple treasury for congregational sacrifices. Slick. II J, 2
v. preced.) iib lrpbai TiN Kim for he (the poor man) 'bil MX pallfl . . UJbUJ2 the funds in the treasury are ar-
comes (to prayer late) and goes through it in a state of ranged in three piles. Ib. 'bil Maim the treasure of &c.
exhaustion. Ib. IV, nalina 1 'bil yott) "pbaiS receive their wages out
of the Temple fund; a. fr.— PI. WOttflj. Midd. V, 3. Tarn.
E5j?5, v. &i?\ Ill, 3 ; a. e.
iTlpb, inversion of bph (Dan. V, 25). Snh. 22 a D3N 03tf SrGtpb, '^TO ch. same. Targ. Y. Num. XIX, 2
1B1C3 'b for •pons! bpn WO KM, 'b niJlSx'=*=h.Si3tt5bii nailfi, v. preced. Targ. Jer.XXXV,
4 ; a. fr.— PI. KrOUJb, fW^, '-h. Targ. I Chr. IX, 26. Targ.
3*Hb (= j?-«b, v. KS1X) below. Targ. Y. II Gen. XL, 23
Ezek. XL, 17; a. fr.
*Vl NlOri human favor, opp. b">3>bl. Targ.Ez.I, 27.—3>i!ra
'
(/rom) below. Targ. Gen. 7 (ed. Berl. Sllba). Targ.Deut. n b (v.
I, NFltOTttjb, next w.) foam (of nostrils). Targ.
a
XXXIII, 13; a. e.—Y.B.Hash. II, 58 bot.Y.PeahV,end, Job XXXIX, 20.
19 a Sib "]a; a. fr. — [In Hebr. grammar: Slba accent on
'
n
the last syllable', b^rba on the penultima.] n"Z*OE3^, !p f.(transpos. of nblubttJ, v. bbttj a.cmp. late
Hebr. bltiJbllJ diarrhosa) secretion, chicken's dirt, spittle &c
yiHJ^ c. (b. h. ; Jfcfc) 1) fow^ue. Ber. 61 a v. Tjnn. Bekh.
,
Sabb. XXI, 2.
VI, 8 (40 a ), v. IBia. Lev. B. s. 16; a. v. fr.— PZ.'nisiuJb.
lb. s. 33, beg.; a. e. — Transf. a) language. Sot. 49 ,J 'b "]P>> Hif- ytityn (b. h.; denom. of "jittib) to slander,
»011D, Syriac, v. "^fto; Wtpt\^> (abbr. p'Tlb) Hebrew; speak evil of. Esth. B. to 111,9 '=1 Drvbs Til pV U3S Satan
rYW 'b Greek; a. v. fr. —b) expression, phraseology, par- arose and denounced them (the Israelites) before the Lord.
lance. Ber. 31 b , a. fr. trtfct "OS yittSVs, v. 131. Y. Ned. VI, Ex. B. s. 3 '31 THUS tt)Il3!i »ia as well as I smote the serpent
beg. 39 c iilin 'b Biblical usage; X"3 'b common parlance when he spoke evil (of the Lord). Ib. bs lbttJ nx Jipb
(later Hebrew). — ">pa 'b or iT^pS 'b decent expression, 'PHU was punished because he had spoken lightly (of the
euphemism. Gen. B. s. 70; s. 86 (ref. to Gen. XXXIX, 6) Israelites, Ex. IV, 1); a. fr.
a euphemism, i. e.' the bread which he ate' means his
'3'b it is
marital life. Pes. 3 a ; a. fr. — Ib. b 113.3 'b respectful, chaste "jtEb, Af. w
,U:b5< ch. same. Targ. Prov. XXX, 10.
Gen. XVII, 13) }<i 'f*tt3fP\ 'b the double expressions in-
my bad luck.
timate amplification (repeated action); '31 "pbl£3 'b ('b
mblE3) they are merely double expressions, the Torah ninrp f. (nnb) moistening the grain before grinding.
speaking in the usual way (according to popular usage, Pes. 36 a "p'pin iin^b is not done by'b the moistening
v. supra); Y. Ned. I, beg. 36 c . Y. B. Bath. VIII, end, 16 c careful persons (priests). xbn iliipsb IttJBK iJ< Ib. 40 a 'b
'b ^bsn linguists ; a. fr. — 2) anything tongue-shaped, strip, Ms. M. (ed. IT^pS) white flour cannot be produced with-
strap, wedge. Yoma VI, 8, v. rniint. Erub. 12 a 31 'b a out moistening. Ib. '31 'b h 2Ql S<b "^X if it required no
small inlet, creek; a. fr.— PI. as ab. B. Mets. II, 1 bm 'b moistening what is the guard for? (v. "llH^ia).
•jaMX purple wool coming in straps; Erub.96 b opp. "pEin ,
in threads. Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. VIII, 6 'b Wi3 two straps (b. h.) Lethekh, a dry measure, half a Kor
m.
of a bed, v. I.—Kel. XVIH, 4 'b bs> 13113113 pba a bot-
PPib (113); also (='b ITO) a land-measure. Shebu. VI, 3.— B.
tom of a bed made to rest on wedge-shaped corner Mets. 104 a B. Bath.7 a xbx 13 f^VtO B"3-'X
;
113 n^n 121X!1 . .
pieces; a. e. '31 'b if one said, 'I sell thee a Beth-kor of land', although
vn, 37 c top tr ugwfofl. stir the grain in water for the purpose of moistening it
mb,
_ 'oh. same. Pes. 36 a [read:] nifl>3 TO nFfeia (v.
the wheat (without fitting it for levitical uncleanness)?
U
Mem, the thirteenth letter of the Alphabet. It inter- n^Z2 (b. one hundred. Tosef. Ber. VII (VI), 24
h.)
changes with 3, esp. in the plural termination O"1^-, (Chald.) mxa 'a one hundred religious acts. lb. 8; a. v. fr.
V— > e.g. pX/nip=diX'iip, y»e*T=tPt?n &c.,with d, v. letter Pesik.Vattom.,p.l31 b d nii; "i&n 'a ninety-eight a. fr.-Dtt.
,
;
d. —a is frequently inserted for emphasizing a succeed- d^nxa. Ex. B. s. 23; Mekh. B'shall., s.6. Mace. 1,2. Keth.
ing labial, cmp. ya+WJqb a. "HBO, btt^at a. XSpbdT &c— I, 2, v. na^nS; a. fr.— PI. nixa. Mace. 23
b
a. fr. ;
thought; Y. Taan. IV, 69 a 'ppWa (Lam. R. to II, 2 JO 13 Var. in Lonzano (ed. OlKO, D^xa, D^Xa); Tosef.B.Bath.
*ppE21) when they came forth a. fr. ; V, 6 ",1Xa ed. Zuck. (corr. ace Var. fWO, read fflSQ) ; :
Sifra Vayikra, Hoba, Par. 12, ch. XXII; Yalk. Lev. 479
2£Q, 1XQ ch. = h. na, 1) ichat? Targ. 0. Gen. XXXI, "p^Sa (corr. ace).
26 ed. Berl. (mostly Ha, q. d^xa toTta*
v.). dX Xa, contr.
(will happen) if?, suppose, perhaps. Targ.O. Gen. XVIII, D1&W2, Y. Ab.Zar. V, 44 d bot. 'ab=dlXaXP, v. D1XBX.
24 dN xa Y. d^xa);
ed. Berl. (oth. ed. a.
contr. -pTO, "pTO w/«a£ M tfus?,
a.
Targ.O. Gen. XL, 7 (some ed. "p* na); a. fr.— 2) how! lb. DI^D or D1SD, Koh. R. to VI, 1 ; IX, 13, v. MXa.—
XXVIII, 17 (ed. Berl. xa, oth. ed. a. Y. na). [Part. pass, of dxa, q. v.]
riTDJSD, Pesik. B. s. 33 'a 1VS 1Tl», a corruption, OWD, HDIfctD, v. ckrto, xoiXTO
prob. for rwri« mns nnx, v. nix n.
"lUSD m. (b. h. -fix) 1) luminary, light. Ber. VIII, 5
;
129 b v. XVlTI; a. e. light of the Law. Midr. Till, to Ps. CXIX, 135 d^S 'ad
—
,
'TT '
the Creator of the luminaries; a. fr. — 2) light-hole, open- D SS/Q (v. OXa) to be sticky, soiled; to be repulsive
ing, window. Ohol.XIlI,l nbTlPQ 'a niBWrt he who leaves (cmp.&Vn). Targ. Ps. XXXVIII, 6 (Ms. TOa^X, v. *??).—
an opening (in the wall) from the start (when building). B. Kam. 18 a XWVa 'til (not blNal), v. Wl— Part. OTfcO.
Tosef.ib.XIV, l'ab 1XUJ5J1D nns an opening which one made Targ. Ps. LVIII, 9 (ed. Wil. DXa, read OXa).— Keth. 68°
to serve as a window "ob 1B"<5.n if he filled the window ;
*b$ 'a he is repulsive to me. Yoma 63 b 'tit UWO because
up. Sabb. XXIV, 5; a. fr. it is offensive (on account of blemishes).— Ber. 50
b
ifa
'a xVr Ms. M. (ed. O^xaa) something which is not sticky
3?n"lS)!3 m. (snx I) event, occasion. Sifre Deut. s. 1 (the handling of which does not create aversion) a. e. ;
Yalk. ib. 792 'an GU5 bv lX*lpD they were named from a PI. "pD^Xa, i&itoi. Targ. Y. Deut. XXVIII, 13 (opp.'pVjria).—
certain event which occurred there. Gen. It. s. 37, end Yeb. 100 a "til ailtta because they (tbe uncircumcised and
'an Eiiab pU3 pWWH3 Tft they passed (invented) names the unclean) are rejected on account of their physical
referring to events (instead of to genealogy). Y. Taan. condition; a. e.— Lam. R. to 111,45 (transl. Oixal ^nc, ib.)
I, 63 d bot. 'an *tb . . . jtiin *bb according to the season, X^GB x^bXa loathsome, outcasts, v. X^"GB.
according to the needs of the occasion. Sabb. 24 a laiXl Ithpe. G^xax
become repulsive, to decay. Ber. 50 ',v.
to
'an "pra and insert words (in the prayer) corresponding supra. Pes. 28 a Dixaa ! pan Ms. M. 1 (Ms. M. 2 O^Xa"!;
1
to the needs of the occasion; (Tosef. Ber. Ill, 10, sq. snsia ed. Caal) leavened matter which decays in course of
ed. Zuck., Var. SJIIxa); a. fr. time; ib. Cnxaa nbi X"3> Ms. M. 1 (Ms. M. 2 nO^Xa; ed.
n&psa, v. Rabb.D. S. a. l.note) an idolatrous object which
ptrmn, fstSwn,v.^. is not subject to decay.
f.
sSPSp,
T
12 m. collect, n. (^nx) harmonious singers, '31 iin^MDiXaV XT?X Xin Ms. R. (ed. xmb^Xai) is it on . . .
chorus. Targ. II Esth. I, 2, beg. '31 STf*! 'a -px (Var. "px
account of repulsiveness (that they must not be used for
2"Wi mia) like a chorus that renders praise &c.
offerings), and when they have been sown, their repul-
sivenesswis gone, or &c.
S^mSQ,
T T t'
v. xnna.
t - -:
?
"'SIj (= ^n xa) what?; why? Ber. 2 a 'ai X3S5 'a *m not R. M. but R. Maysha. Hor. 13 b v. "inx. Gen. R. s. 9, ,
what does the change in putting evening before morning a. fr. 'a '1 bttJ VhVa in R. M.'s copy of the Pentateuch.
mean ?, i. e. why does the redactor of the Mishnah put Hull. IV, 4; a. v. fr.
&c? Ib. '31 ixm ifcttaail and whence is it proven that this
&c.?—Ib. b inai 'al and what does v'taher mean? Ib. 'a
iTPKH,
t
Kfrmn,
t •• : : •• :
v. sub -m. "
Xasa.
T _
Hull. 107
-j
b
Tl 'a... MIS "31 and even if one touch n^SD, v. ma.
what of b
the other, it? Ib. 'ax, v. iJOttt Gitt. 56 XHVlOX
X">n 'a... those remedies (mentioned before) which cured •J«n, v. qn.
B.Z.— what are they? Pes. 3 b ",apn Wl 'a what does this
n^Q ch. (v. T^a) to sink; to be humbled. Targ. Jud.
(case) before us mean? Snh. 39 a ^Xn 'a what does this
XXV, VDXa (ed. Ven. V]; 1
(sigh) mean? — Pes. 9 a , a. fr. 'a ^xn, v. TRhj a. v. fr. —In VI,
Wil.
6. Targ.
",1DXa"i, corr.
Is. II, 9. Ib.
ace). Ib.
5
XXIX, 4; a. fr.
:
ed.
v. Xa. [Koh. R. to VI, 1; IX, 13, v. WXa.] one's self, bow down. Targ. Is. 1. c.
Ms.(ed.7,'VS3,v.7|=
,
2). Targ. Prov. XXIX, 11 ed^Til. [read :]
married) women may have their obligation cancelled. Ib.
—n -
: lowers it (appeases the fool's anger), v. 3KJn. '21 rnap she may protest (have
X*rr, ftBttsa her marriage
cancelled) even while yet a minor, and even four or five
&CSE,
T T
V.K30.
« T
times in succession. Ib. 2 •xob n3"nsE TPX what minor
. . .
^DSI2 m. (b. h.; b2X) food; meal; meal-time. Sabb. 1SQ (cmp. X3) who?, what?,tchich?; (relat.) who,which.
10 a ; Pes. 12 b On* b2X*:' v. O^b. Ber. 40 a "IS 11DX [Targ. •,?.] Sabb. 57 a , a. fr. '=1 "Ol "a, v. 1311. Yeb. 107 b
UTttSTai - "jrv«a3 a person is forbidden to eat before giving ",b VTlM xb '3 who
meant by 'they did not agree with
is
food to bis animal. Taan. 20 a DlX '3 food fit for human him'? Ib., a. fr. X3J"i '3 who is the authority for the law
beings; a. fr.— [Y.Hag. H, end, 78 PfBO ^EX '3 "«, read
c
:
just quoted?, i. e. whose opinion is here represented?
r-s: -£X bi-. "rx, v. ba\] PI. nibaxo. Gen. R. s. 20 — Hull. 50 a *Tl '3 "13X somebody said; Bets. 27 a M. Kat. ;
=-xr '3 b="X WTMB that thou shouldst eat food like human 22 a (Nidd. 48 a K"m I). Y. Kil. IX, 32 b Ol T» '3 ^TH plB
;
beings; (Tosef. Sot. IV, 17 B'O'WO, Var. BTW bsxa). go out and see who it is that wants thee outside (an in-
timation of a teacher's displeasure) ; Gen. R. s. 33 (some
n>»SD f. (b. h.; b2X) [preparing food,] slaughter-
ed. yc). Ber. 30 b ; Hull. 7 a '31 X133 '73 Tn see how great
ing knifed Gen.R. "IWBL Pirke d'R. El. ch. XXXI.
s. 56, v. Y. Maas. Sh. H, 53 b
a man gives testimony about him.
Pesik. R. s. 40. Gen. R. 1. c. tm nniX man through the bot. '21 "fJUWI '3 according to him who says &c; a. v.
merit of (taking up) that knife (Gen. XXII, 10). fr.—V. TO.
"ODDNQ, Targ. Prov. XXIV, 25, v. bO^JO. ]ND,"jNE, fcOXE, ]12, #712
T
m. (v.preced.) [thing,]
1) vessel, utensil. Targes. II, 9. Targ. Lev. XI, 33; a. fr.
Jtf^Sp, m. (bbx) spy.— PI. *£&*», T^w?- TarS- (interch. with "jO, "On XTOn 'O it was
',3).— B. Kam. 17 b
Josh, H, 1. 'Targ. 0. Num. XXI, 2; a. fr. a broken vessel he broke. Ib.^bTX'o inn ira we judge by
the final cause by which the vessel was broken; a.v. fr.— PL
jUtXQ, Tosef. Maasr. I, 7 ed. Zuck., v. h^z. b
-:x-9,X^:X3,i:xr,':3. Targ.Ex.XI,2; a.fr— Sabb.l05 13n
"'"Pan '3 broke broken vessels (pretending to be angry); a. fr.
HENS m. (b. h.; *iox) 1) command, order. Ab. V, 1
'21inx TO xbril could not the universe have been created -2) (cmp. "<b3) garment, dress. Ib. I13 b Snh. 94 a rr:X3b -np ;
b
'21 called his dress (garments) &c, v. 1331; B. Kam.91
by one divine command?—Meg. 21 b R. Hash. 32 a rTflWlQ ;
'~ TOO verse of Genesis also to be consider- :X3b (corr. ace; v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1.).— B. Mets. 47 a '33
X"- the first is
BT2ri the upper iTVifSpA ~-Z~ (symbolical possession has been given) by
ed a command. Gen. R. s. 4 *XQ n">lbn . . .
executes a divine command as it has been ordained; a. viz: a. fr.— 3) (=h. ",p:p) [handle,] coulter of the plough.
e.— Pl. tVftOKO. Ab. 1. c. 'Bl "a nittwa the world was
B. Mets. 80 a .
created by ten divine orders (counting nine "i-X"Yin Gen. DfctE (b. h. cmp. DOB) [to melt, faint,] (with 3) to be
—
;
ch.I, and the first verse, v. supra). 2) word, esp. madmar, tired of, loathe; (with accus.) to cast away, reject. Ber. 8
a
the Tabam's betrothal (v. 33^) by word of mouth, con- '31 inbsra 0X13 rVapn "px the Lord never tires of the
trad, to the consummation of marriage (i"iX"). Yeb. II, 1 prayer of assemblies. Sifra B'huck. ch. Ill, Par. 2 0X13
10 H3 rTBJB if he betrothed her to himself; Y. ib. 3 TO
C
ennxa despises others (for being his betters); (ib. 0X13
'z' la x*n what is a madtnar with regard to a Y'bamah'i
O^IHX, corr. ace.). Tanh.Mishp. 11'2T|CXE "02 their god has
Saying, 'Be betrothed unto me', while handing to her rejected them; Ex. R. s. 31. Ib. '31 nD£QV r*"2X is it true
money or money's worth, lb. "raia "a betrothal consum- that thou hast rejected thy son?; a. fr.—Part. pass. OWO,
mates the yabam's marriage (carrying with it all the legal
f. riOM»; pi. 313:1x3, "C5X-3; tV&tXq. Midr. Till, to Ps.
consequences of his marriage), v. "T25; a. v. fr.
LXXV,9 (play on CE2, Deut. XXXTI, 34) 3^31X3? 0133
reserved for the rejected (nations; differ, in Sifre Deut.
S""i72&^3, constr."3Xa ch. same, word, sentence. Targ.
324). Der. Er. ch. II Utl'tfWl '3H those who are despised
Prov/xVl, 24. Targ. Cant. V, 13; a. e.—Pl. X^EX ?, -
constr.
in their own eyes (think little of themselves); a. e.
noao. Targ. Prov. IV, 5 (ed. Lag. -» t1*?&ay.
Nif. 0X33 to be repulsive, loathsome; to be rejected.
T#B (b. h.; v. "jix) to deny, refuse, eep.
"jS/!2, Pi. "X-:, Sifra B'huck. Par. 2, ch.VIH (ref. to Lev. XXVI, 44) . "Oi . .
1) (of a woman
betrothed in childhood, on arriving at lbrJ3xbri ^OX ;: xbSJ what has been left to them so
-
. .
majority) to protest against, to annul one's marriage. that (it might be said) they were not cast away and
Yeb. XIII, 1 rnOIIX xbx fSKSB "px only betrothed (not loathed?; Yalk. Lev. 675 (corr. ace). Hag. 5
a
and be- W
— '
comes loathsome (creates aversion to his neighbor). nsinn) shovel, rake.— PI. niBllNa. Shebi. V, 4 ed. (Ms. M.
V. Cl&Oa. nisi-in).
(ed. "JIOarYi).
T ~ • T T - • T ' I
3; 8 'sa, tfa ed. Berl. (oth. ed. '?a); Y. 'WO; a. fr. — PL
constr. W*9i '??• Ib. 4; a. fr.
^nwEDsn, v. tot*?*
tfKQ, v.-vaa.
rtSS/2 f. (b. h.; liSX) something baked, batch. Men.
v, 9 riBiD nsxa, v. nwa. Erub. vn, 10 swn nxo 'a 'ibk SinSD
T T
fowm, v. ana.
T T
HD11B even a batch of a S'ah but consisting of broken
pieces; Y. ib. VI, 23 d top. Ab. Zar. 35 b v. "^IIB. ,
ypMO, l^Q, v.nxa.
ns
"£SQ
ns
ch. same. Targ. 0. Lev. II, 4 ed. Berl. (oth.ed. W»Sa,
T T -
v. wm t • :
. ., . .).
Erbsxa ... "OX did I not myself illumine your darkness? Pes. I (II), 27 isaitf 'a my name is M.
rvhxa, "WX Tosef. B. Bath. VI, 2 ftvub 'a TOS (ed. Zuck. decay (of my body in the ground; Midr. Haggad. ^man).
ftX'tib D"na) ten spoiled (bitter) pumpkins out of each Snh. 108 b UK bU5 'a a destruction by fire; d*vo hw 'a by
hundred. water Gen. R.
; s. 39. Tosef. Taan. Ill (II), 1 11232 *jD VttJ 'a a
destruction of all flesh (flood, Gen. IX, 11) ; 11132 \>W 'a ed.
nSTIND f. (cp», dial, for Cp» or tpn ; v. ?iB*aa a. Zuck. (Var. DiW ^>U3 'a) of individuals; ib. 1^12a Kin W
—
abiatt 725 »•&»
this (drowning) is his mabbul (v. infra); 131 bUJ 'a an epi- '03 -OS on aboard (cmp. vbvl). Hull. 95* '31 '33 3TH tVf\
demic. —Esp. ('-it) Me flood of Noah's days. Snh. X, 3, v. was sitting by the ford of &c, v. n^OfMITK. Ib. b 'aapina
Tin. Gen. R. s. 31 'an "H2J3K the men of the flood-period; made the readiness of a ferry-boat a foreboding test
a. v. fr. (whether it was auspicious to undertake the journey).
X^llSQ ch. same. Targ. Hab. Ill, 6; a. e.— Gen. R. s. fllj J-iZJ f. (rrna) a woman making an assignment
33 'aa . . . HE3 X? Palestine was not submerged during before marrying in order
exclude her husband from to
the flood ; Cant. R. to IV, 1. Gen. R. s. 32, v. Spa ch. ; a. fr. the right of inheritance. Keth. 79* '3 "ibid the document
of assignment. B. Bath. 150 b '31 ns^is 'a a mabrahath
S^SQ m. (b. h.; 3>33) weW, spring. Koh. R. to XII, 7 must assignall her belongings. Ib. 151 a i3p '3 (sub. 1I31I3)
(ref. toKoh. ib. 6) *3l §SQp b3> bm TX3 the (drawing) . . .
an assignment of a woman &c. gives possession to the
pitcber of Barukh over the well (of prophecy) of Jere- assignee (although it is merely formal) ; a. e.
miah -1-13 bttJ isiaa to . «3 the (pouring) pitcher of
: . .
Jeremiah over the well (of inspiration) of Barukh; Lam. "TOE C^D) f. (inf. Af. of &03) strengthening food
R. introd. (R. Josh. 2).—PL d'WSO.'J'WSig. Mekh.B'shall., (v. ffiffiri), Targ. Ps. XLII, 4 (ed* Wil. 'a).
Vayassa, s. 1 ; Yalk. Ex. 257 ; a. e.
^"QH, Y. Hall. I, 58 a top, ed. Krot., v. "p-Qa.
91 SE, NSjlilQ ch. same. Targ. Jer. XVIII, 14 (ed.
Wil. *WXQ pi.). Targ. Prov. XIV, 27; a. e.— Y. Ab. Zar. J JU pr. n. pi. (v. next w.) Mabrakhta, a caravan
CTVU
V, 44 d '31 'a Xrt the well is before thee, drink ! (i. e. do and market near Mahoza. Erub. 47 b 'ab 1DSH ^isl
station
what you please, I shall not assist you). T. Dem. I, 22 a rams that came to M. (on a Holy Day). Ib. 'a "03 the
top '31 "^33 I"Hb our well does not supply us. PI. y > l33, , ! inhabitants of M.; ib. «l b . Keth. 10 a v. »an.
Wfig. Targ. 0. Ex. XV, 27. Targ. Is. XLIX, 10; a. e., v.
J"!frD"QD (KfiDH3G)f. (?pft; cmp.Gen.XIV.ll) a
supra.— [Targ. Ps. CIV, 6 'pSiaa Ms., v. »St3a.]
caravan (of camels). Y. Keth. XIII, 35 d top maia» firPH 'a
STEQ m. (v. »"ja«) ferry-man. Huh. 94 a yniaa (not a caravan passed (Shiloh); Y. Sot. I, 17 a top; Gen. R. s.
iTniaa) our ferry-man, v. O*1 !? ch. 85 sail) -iK33 ... 'a.
S^OQ m. (513) shred of a garment.—PI. pSJWM?. Targ. sSJ IptJ J/2 m. (ip^a) [what is knoion by searching,']
6
Ps. civ, "(Ms. "pwao). innermost, true nature (corresp. to b. h. "iptn).—PL ijnpisaa.
Targ. Job XXXVII, 16 (h. text liabfia, cmp.'"ttJbB I).
fcO"QO m. (= WOba; b rejected as in fipa, fr. Hpb,
cmp/iO^Ga v. ',3b H) broom. Targ. Is. XIV, 23
fr. pD3; SrQO, SWriDH f. (WB) night-lodging. Targ. Jer.
(some '33).— Gen. R. s. 79 end b"WBK malK
ed. incorr. XIV, 8 Isome ed. Straa). Targ. Is. I, 8 '3 bd15> (ed. Wil.
'31 .pi/taj ^b (not "]" 333, -p333) wanted to say, Lend me
,>1
NfWiaa, coir, ace; RegiaWflPi33; some ed. '23, corr. ace.)
thy broom, and she said, Lend me TpttKBa [Y. Meg. II, 73 a ; the hammock for night-lodging (h. text ttSlba).
— 'a rva
bot. nsiabx ; correct etymol. s. v. Kpabst]. pa) lodging place. Targ. Gen. XLII, 27; a. e.— Targ. Jer.
IX, l nnaa (nnaa, constr.).
atrbsfan,
t - : : :
v.baba.
••-
••
&IMJD,
T T :
v. Kaaa.
tt :
fcCfcWE,
-
V. 83533.
-
T T tt:
HFlSf^DQ f. (sba) the uppermost part of the gullet.
b
Hull.43 , expl. 31Blin yVWn. "VSJtJ v. ^aaa.
S31D2Q m. (Ida I) despiser; haughty.— RlllKnqxq. Tosef. Meg. I, "rWl n^aaa what has been
5 rnasa. Lb.
Targ.Ys.LXVIII, 17.' Ib. CXXIII, 4. collected in one town. Lev. R. s. 5 d^asnb fipIS n333 pd3>
the business of collecting contributions for the mainte-
5§a ^nqCna),v.s?3. nance of students; Esth. R. to I, 4 dTosn 1135.3.
TV212, v. H53.
fcTDji/Q, &t"p3 m. (353; cmp. Syr. 8^333 coagulum,
P. Sm.*200l) [astringent,] alunt.—xb'V 'a Stb*>SH)
"V2Z1Q, v. isa. [Tosef. B. Kam. IX, 1 TWam, read ('a) (v.
92
— . Q :.
f. Assyriol., April 1894, p. 3) stumbling block. Targ. Is. Targ." Gen. XI* 4 (ed. Berl. Targ. Jud. VIII, 9 a. fr.— 'a). ;
Ill, 6 (h. text nbu»a). PL r**Vnaa, 'a*0. Targ. II Chr. XXVI, 9, sq. Targ. Ez.
XXXVlil, 20 (h. text rliaTra); a. fr. Esp. sViaa, — ym
«"»""2
m. next w.) megeg, a species of reed. Par.
(v. Magdala, v. preced. Y. Snh. II, beg. 19 d '3.1a XlVpir he
Ill, 9 ; Tosef. ib. Ill (II), 9 'a bttJ ban a rope made of m.
;
; fled to M.; Y. Hor. Ill, beg. 47 a 'al «13 pIS (read: Xlb,
Erub. 58 a . sub. Kntt"*03) to thesynagogue (and school house) of M.;
a
ib. th Xia he is in the synagogue of M. Y. Snh. 1. c. 20 ;
Y. Ber. IX, 14 a i
jp; Y. Taan. I, 64 b top; a. e.
to VII, i aaaana (transpos.).
Sabb. 127 b 'a "VB all sorts of delicacies. Iln, i5"na, v. -#.
fcvTJQ, X2, Jpl2 I ch. same, precious ware, fine 2"UQ m. (33a) m7ce, an agricultural implement with
fruit— PL ywo, S^iaa, '•6a, 'J.ia. Targ. Job IX, 26. Targ. many teeth, forming a sort of sieve to separate the grain
Y. Ex. XV, 19'. Targ. Y. Deut'. XXVIII, 23. Ib. XXXIII, from the chaff. Kel. XIII, 7 ; T'bul Yom IV, 6 ;
[Ar. s. v.
13, sq., v. "pS^a. [Targ. Y. I Num. XXII, 7 -paCHpl fHfti a sort of glove, oth. expl.: reading a^aa, fr. aa3, an im-
b
jewels of divination (?) Y. II fro* letters.']— Men. 43 ;
plement for drying the grain by winnowing].
iiaai "paiSO" ** spices 1
and choice fruits.
JHJDT (b.h.) pr. n. gent. Magog, 'al MS Gog and Magog,
fc^JQ, JPQ II f. (133), constr. tVJttfc, guidance, lead- the two allied nations, the defeat of which, it is believed,
ing string. Targ. Hos. XI, 4 (ed. Wil. riiaa); cmp. Rf^"**?. will precede the redemption of Israel (v. Ez. XXXVIII,
Eduy. 10 '31 'al '5 EJBUJa the judgment of Gog and
nTHM, v. niiaa.
sq.).
Magog
II,
Erub. 34 a laiDa 13"i**tt" 'a a turret which is not fastened ND-tfQ, v. xto**a.
(which can be let up and down). Kel. XII, 3 '"4*5 bUJ 'a b
'31 a turret (spice chest) of private people, D">S<B11 bU3 nDljR3pr. n. f. (?) MgosetJi. Yeb. VIII, 4 (79 ) 'a p
of physicians. Tosef. Sot. Ill, 10 'a itt»K the builders of one Ben M.
the Tower of Babel, v. nabsn; »• fr.—PL D"^1ia, "pbiaa, annaa a. xntp^a.
SJrJp-tf f v.
nibiaa. Y. B. Bath. IV, U' bot. ; Tosef. ib. Ill, 3 'an the
turrets (store closets) in bath-houses. Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. JlDUQ f.(B|W I), constr. nBISa 1) bung, stopper. Kel.lX, 1
— — ;;;
lb. X,3, v. brrbri. — 2) the clay used for sealing wine vessels,
{S!?UlHJ|Q f. (preced.) the magian's practices, v.
d
sealing clay. Y. Ber. IX, 13 bot. 'art mitfntt) Ts so much
rain that the sealing clay looks as if dissolving; Y. Taan.
I, 64 b top(notcptfjrrttf); a.e. — 3) an air-tight vessel. Tosef. iS IMG, A U
m. ("i]5) cutting tool, sickle, pruning
c
"p&^Da **1 they knife!— PL T*J|»3, 'a^a. Targ. II Sam. XII, 31 (h. text
'
brought the burning perfume (TOA^D) into the dining room nntta).— Y.Sabb.VlJ8 b bot. (expl. ninata, Is. II, 4) pU'vo
(on a Holy Day) in an air-tight vessel. (corr. ace.).
149
"I
b
iJD m. (b. h.; *iiai) 1) dwelling,
^ m.ch.=h.'$v,shield,protection.
D. S.a. 1. note 60 ; ed. 'SI n^Eia Kin VJN) did he burn them in the field and in the house (living in the same court).
on the very plate?; Yonia 67 b inb -rjpa 'a3 (1MN) Var. Koh. R. to VII, 26 tnuOib 'a (not Taa) a neighbor who
in Rashi a. Tosaf. (v. Rabb. D. 8. a. 1. note 9). Kel. XVI, 1 was a robber, lb. *pUa (not 'piaa) our neighbor, lb. X, 19
caan (ed. Dehr. O'Oan; Tosef. ib. B. Mets. V, 10 r\^3p). a. fr.— PI. "pT^i *fT¥$t '^- Y Peah In 17Cl to P WB - .
'
b
Y. Yonia V, beg. 42 'a D3 Kaf (Mish. V, 1) means plate, "psosia gentile neighbors. Lam. R.tol, 5 "pni^aiab . . . 'a bs
onb"i "pOiaa (not 'aa ; ed. Lag. "p^OWa) plates with morsels with thee, my neighbor! lb. s. 6; a. ir.—Pl. snp^aa. lb.
from the tables (h. text Tnns).— Lev. R. 1. c. 'iaa nab s. 9 nni^aa nb "pTast (some ed. «n. .) said her neigh- . .
'31 "ppED why are the plates carried out without having bors to'her. Ned. 2i b 'si -jniai nba? ^TVpya yiam. that
—
been tasted? 2) (=Lat. accubatio) dinner, banquet. Koh. thy neighbors will say of thy daughter &c. Y. Sabb. Ill,
R. to I, 3 nTW "Opaa 'pa31 that I came for the sake of 5' bot. [read :] 'a T^T* xbn Iinbsi (not n^vaa) provided
1
thy dinner. Lam/fi. to I, 1 ^nnn [read:] irb 1W1 mba>{* the neighbors do not know it.
NO^aa (or NPOpaa) he took him into his house and pre-
pared a dinner for him.— [Targ. Y. Ex. XXVIII, 39 "Wia, iTTJO, TH3D f.(b.h. n-naa; 1^ I) I) saw. Kel. XIII,
a
v. 61M ch.]— [Pesik. Ha'omer, ,p. 70 -jCMa, v. tai-naa.] 4. Bets. IV, 3. Hull. I, fr.— 2) plane. Tosef. B. Kam.
2; a.
XI, 15; B. Kam. 119 b , v. I^ai.— [Tosef. Kel. B.Mets.VIII, 1
nmas ed. Zuck., v. WiWal].
"PtSp^JQ, 0^12 m. (magister) a high imperial of-
ficer (v. Sm. Ant.'s*. v.). Ex. R. s. 30 'ab ?&p 31p put the
Dl")" 1
^, (D'i'nap) m. ((xaysipo;) baker, cook. Lam. R.
to III, 16'Dl^aan bus Ar., v. battle. Lev. R. s. 28; Pesik.
Magister in stocks.Lev. R. s. 28 '31 ypb* 'a "tJ^Sn jtim
R. s. 18; Yalk. Lev. 643, a. e. X3X ^D^ari (^TJ») I (the
he who used to appoint the Magister Palatii is now to
— Lord) am thy cook (ripening thy fruits); Pesik. Ha'omer,
be made a bather &c. PI. "ntsb^aa (magistri). Gen. R.
p.70 a lp^-0 (corr. ace). Ib.O^a 103 read: OTi^aas. Num.
s. 26 (expl. tratat, Deut. II, 20, v. Qptl) "'BO'Oa ^aTW3«
R. s. 4, end Y'13 b^U '33 (not ET^as, til^V) the cook of a
nanba (some ed. 03 "WTBSOj Yalk. ib. 47 XsOiaa pisaiaa)
human master. Y.Keth. I, 25 c *lt« Dl^aa bp when it was
read: W "
1
"il3&'i a"Q1 'p^ioaa mensores (camp-surveyors) and
announced that a cook (or baker) was in town (Snh. 32
b
magistri militum (chief commanders).
t^ni blp).— PI. yitfrnt, rpT?^- Lev R- s. 7 Yalk. Num. - ;
"O'HIDD'UE, Targ. II Esth. IX, 3 (Var. WBO'Wa, t>aa, 777 "pGiaa; Pesik. R. s. 16 D"Vnaa (corr. ace); Pesik. Eth
ijnaDa, tmxtVPi) read 'W'W&tyO
'
m. : pi. (magistrates) of- Korb., p. 61 a .— [Lam. R. to II, 22 WlJm Ar., v. t«D.]
ficials (h. text d^BTHOhK).
Y. Sabb. Ill, 5
d
bot., v. "«ra end.
ular Persian courts. V. Nfi'paa II. ^3D m. (b.h.; perh. contr. of bwa, v.ba.a;) l) n^p baa
n or 'a sickle, scythe, an implement with indentations. Succ.
REP2D,
-
NfrS 3E,
- v. sub 'saa.
-
t t 32 a 'ab nail Dips? a Lulab curved like a sickle. Y. ib.
•• ••
: ••
TJQ rest, v. Kfcna. Ill, 53 c bot. 'a "pa3 n^lias leaves shaped (and serried)
like a sickle; Bab. ib. 34 a 'ab nail (TV! biaa? nb«3 nb5;
tjd,s"i"Jq,
" T
(-uafcnxa,)
T " T V " T t'/
ISOT -T ••
m. o*ii
V 5
v'
.
a. e. — 2) *P baa or 'a an implement combining knife and
n"isiaa II) fellow-inhabitant, neighbor. Koh. R. to II, 20 saw. Kel. XIII, 1. Hull. I, 2. Bets. IV, 3 (used for split-
Lev. R. 8. 25 nVTOK the wife
'a*i of a neighbor (of the ting wood); a. fr.— Snh. 95 b flfflTOJ ^baa (/em.), v. ir"J3 1.
for the Temple).— PL -pbaa, ibaa. Targ. Is. II, 4; Mic them that shield (the Torah).— Midr. Till, to Ps. I, 5, v.
IV, 3; Joel IV, 10 (h. text'miafa). -,13; a. iv.—PL D^aa, tfifQO. Lam. R. introd. (R. Joh. 1)
(ref. to Is. XXII, 5) 'a ym» fVB, B"npipa TOB they . . .
33JP m. (3ba, v. Fl. to Levy Targ. Diet. II, p. 567 a ) broke down the walls of their houses and made of them
[scraper,] an instrument of torture, goad or whip. Gen. defenses. Cant. R. l. c. nain 'a niaaa ^ax "pab unto thy
R. s. 41, beg.; s. 52; Yalk. Gen. 69 nabaa; (Tanh. Lekh. 5 children I shall be many defenses. Gen. R. s. 44 bttJ 'a
avew). — PL a^abaa, fdbjxg. Ex. r. s. 14, beg. lharri -jb OPp^^lS shields of the righteous (protectors of their gener-
'a B^lBari go and give him fifty lashes. Tanh. M'tsora 4 ation by dint of Esp. Magen,
their righteousness)
a. e. ; —
'521 D^33 chains and straps; Num. R. s. 13. lb. '"2 rtiaan
the first section of the Prayer of Benedictions closing
five afflictions. lb. s. 10, beg.; Lev. R. s. 27; Cant. R. to with Dfiiax ",3a (usu. called niax, v. ax). Deut.R. s. 11,
v, 1 6, v. rvatna. beg. 'a nbrtnb ITlfi (Ber. 34 a rcxib) he must go back to
the beginning of the first section. Erub. 65 a, v. pIQ h.
K23JQ, &G5JE ch. same.
tt:-'t::- Targ.Prov.XXVI,3(Var.
° ' \ •ppaan rva, Tosef. Kil. IV, 7, v. xpaa.
JOMOT, Ms. xabaa3,
"pabaa. Lev. R.
ing. Gen. R. s.
s.
84, beg.;
corr.
15 *|bn 'a
ace;
Yalk.
Man
ib.
h. text ana).— PL X*abaa,
she saw the straps hang-
140; Yalk. Job 904 JlXa
W ),
j3P,
X2 XD ch.
&W3p m. Cj33
same, v. ftO.
you must not prepare the section of Sh'ma or of Hallel as will cure thee) without pay; ifB 'a3 'al Xt)X Ms. M.
a special volume for children; Gitt. 60 a '31 'a airsb lira, v. a. oth. (ed. incorr., v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) a physician
lab Yoma 37 b Gitt. I.e. rWVfl 'a 'a Him the Pentateuch was
; . without pay is worth as much as unpaid service can be
published in sections, opp. damn. Deut. R.s. 8 Klip fibrin expected to be, i. e. an unpaid physician is likely to be
ISO when beginning, the student reads (the Pentateuch) careless. Y. Snh. X, 29 a bot. 'a bs ^SX even if the curse
in a detached scroll, opp. 1203. —Y. Shek. V, 49 a
; Yoma has been pronounced gratuitously (without cause), cmp.
38 a ; Cant. R. to III, 6 paa(a)0 n'raa a volume containing asn nbbp s. v. 0|n.
prescriptions for frankincense
T3X rbaa, &c.,v. respect, determinants.
; a. fr. ——pom" 1
'a, D11H&
P/.niba,r.isi3a.
'a
S3 XQ m. (^aa) couch, or couch-room. —PL X*33a. Targ.II
Cant. R. 1. c. '31 ani^aa \*WQ "Ptl they handed over their
Esth. I, 9 (ed. Lag. a. oth. X^asa, corr. ace). —[Pes. 107 a
1301a, v. xaaa.]
rolls (containing the prescriptions) one to the other; (Y.
Shek. nbaan nx).—Esp. r&mfc) = max nbsa,
l. c. nxTfi
HD3D, v. X333a.
tt - - tt:
a. 1POX. Ib. 19 a 1S& tH/hpi 'a the book of
Meg. I, 1.
Esther is called a book and also a letter. Ib., sq. Xllpfi p33P, v. "paaaa.
"
'p'D^^U, v. pa^aaaaa.
SO" J%12 m. (*») decreer of exile. Y. Yoma III, 40 c
^
1 1
top "a !"iril&3 berets (Jer. XL VI, 20) means sweeper, that
n^JQ, riD" 1
f.=*aa, protection, defense. Pirke d'R.
El. ch.'XXVlil; Yalk. Gen. 76 (expl. yxo, Gen. XV, 1) "^3X
is, he who will banish (v. Deut. XXVIII, 63).
"b 'a I am a defense to thee.
SrDJQ, '^JD, constr. n'23a,n^aa ch.=h. fiba. Targ.
&-3D or D5p, v. a^aa.
Jer. XXXVI, 2; a. e.
ns^D^a, n n i2Dja,
t
31^0050, an&Jra,
t
v . SU b
t t : • •• : • •
: •
:
"IQJQ,
T ;' v. iaa«ra.
t : 'a^aa.
:
jJQ m. (b. h.; '|33) shield, defense. Pesik. Ha'omer, p. S?5P m. (533) touch, contact. Kel. 1, 1, a. fr. 'aa xaaa,
70 a b,
(ref. to a-OSa bxi, Job V, 5) *tt3 xbl 7*CJ xb not with makes unclean by contact. Toh. VI, 4 nxaia 2>aa pSD
weapon or with shield (will he prevail); Lev. R. s. 28 '31 a doubt as to having touched an unclean thing is
Pesik. R. s. 18; Yalk. Job 898.— Cant. R. to IV, 4 end (ref. judged in favor of uncleanness; Ab. Zar. 70 a a. e. 3>3a ,
—
to ItWl rbs, ib.) 'art mix . . . Ill S)bx I folded together 1133 wine touched by a gentile suspected of idolatrous
(skipped over) a thousand generations and brought unto manipulations. Ib.58 b a
—
Ib. 69 ll^an 'a another ignorant
.
;
•n«tiMfla 730 T*
man's touching things kept in levitical cleanness; a. fr.— R.s. 24.— PL XrV'B'haa. Targ. Num. IV, 14; Targ. 0. Ex.
PWJa. Y. Sabb. VII, 9 (1 hot., v.C^a.— Constr. Y. XXVII, 3 (Y. S-pnEnaa, corr. ace); a. fr. (h. text D"<3P).
PI. fjtyt.
£] yQ m. (C]fia or C]«i&) sealer of wine vessels. Y. Ab. Zar. f|"D72 m. (Cpa) 1) trowel. Y'lamd. to Gen. XI, 1, quot.
c
V, 44 a top 'a rtU)3>a ",32m yuaiTMS (not Van) the boring in Ar.s. v. Epa.— 2) shovel. Y. Shebi. Ill, 34 Y. M. Kat. ;
of which the Rabbis speak (Mish.V, 4) is the work of a I, 80 b '31 "iBmaal lbti his basket and shovel show that he
professional sealer (requiring care and time). is preparing dung.
rtDijQ, '^12 f.(b. h.^aa) [striking,] 1) wound. Makhsh. TTD1112, '"H?J2 f. (preced.) 1) spoon, ladle; trowel.
VI, 8 nnfiaa D1 the blood flowing from a woman's wound. Kel. XXIX, 8 TO bttJ 'a the ladle of the household (v.
Ker. 13\ Hull. 35 Yalk. Num. e.— Maim. a. 1.); t^T^ta btf) 'a the plasterers' trowel. Tanh.
1
2) sudden death, plague Mekh. B'shall. s.2 xbx naan 'pK Sh'moth 9 B*<B bu: the trowel for clay; Ex. R. s. 1 (some
'a the verb Can (Ex. XIV, 24) means pestilence. M. Kat. ed. Wi: btt) iB^aa, v. preced.). Kel. XIII, 4 'a ladle (v.
b
28 a 'a nnT2 a sudden death. Ber. 4 'an na'TUB, during an —
Maim. a. 1.). 2) (usu. in connection with b&) spade used
epidemic; a. fr.— [msaa, Mekh. 1. c, v. PBaa a. paao.] for digging and shovelling; shovel. Gen. R. s. 16; Sifre
b
Deut. rnfi.—Tosef. Toh. VIII, 1 3 Zeb. 99 Sabb.
6, a.e., v. ; .
HJE), Pa. "i&a, Tjng (b. h. "laa ; cmp. -na) 1)' to drag II, 1.Gen. R. s. 46, beg.; a. e.—3) magrefah, a) name of
down; to throw over. Targ. Gen. XLIX, 17 (h. text btft). a musical instrument in the Temple. Arakh.10 '; Y. Succ.
1
Targ.Ps.LXXXIX,45. Targ. Ez. XXXIX, 3. Targ.II Kings V, 55 d top. —b) name of a sort of tympanum. Tam.V, 6,
IX, 33 (h. text OWD). Targ. Is. XXII, 19 (h. text tHti); Ib. Ill, 8 ; Y. 1. c. 55 b bot.
a. e. — 2) [to scrape off,] to diminish, destroy (corresp. to b.
rnnSlJiD, v. xn^s-haa.
h. ROB a. Tl). Targ. Ps. CXIX, 139. Ib. CI, 5; 8. Ib.
'-™.
HT$S nnnjia, NfiTya, v . sub fctFTTIJO ch.same. Sabb. 147 b (Ms.M. margin Xliaa :
n
rHUfl, v. STTnaia.
Di"lj(D, v. anpBr.aa.
mJIDf Targ. Hos. XI, 4, v. 6WS^ II.
£>'R5D ch. same. Gen. R. s. 38. Lev. the Boraitha says .... we conclude that &e Ib. 15
— — ;. ' — ;
28 a vJtt?a:>.
,
rfPS'TO f. pi. (nan) l) conduct, manners. Koh. R. to
WTV2, v. KTTO. in, 18 (ref. to man, ib.) Banana Bip'Hsrni} 'a the way the
T T T T T •
righteous conduct themselves. — 2) (b. h.) conversation,
ecma,T T -
v. ww.
t T -
talk. lb. ana B'nana BWtTTB 'a the conversations which
the wicked hold. Snh. 67 b , a. fr. Tpninana r&3, v. fiVa;
NPS^E
f. (v. P. Sm. 2011) = ITOB, tribute, tax, fine. ib. 38 b , '31 bsst •fTthyvA -fil Ms. M. (ed! bsx "jlq); Hag.
Targ/Piov. XII, 24 "zb Ar. s. v. (ed. MR&). WO ua bxx -pnnana -^=='21 -£>i na nbs, v. r£a.
Num. XXIII, 1;4; a. e.— Targ. Ps. LXXXIV, 4.— ^B ipBa Sn l3"li:'lC,
:
H3"1C f. (preced.) command, strategy;
Xanana (r.^B) liquids used on the altar (wine, oil), con- scheme (b^h. niSanri). 'Targ. Prov. I, 5; XX, 18; XXIV,
trad, to N^maa ">a ipWQ liquids of the slaughtering place 6. Ib. XH, 5.
(blood, water). Pes. 17 a (ref. to Eduy.VIH, 4); Tosef. Kel.
B. Mete. V, 7 (ed. Zuck. 'BB).
8FTQTQ,
t - - : :
v. xnana.
t -: :
ruined &c. —
*Tn the generation that died in the
; a. fr. 'a wrong). Ber. IX, 5, v. next w—
Ib. 30 b '31 ana Tia^ dV»:>
wilderness. B. Bath. 73 b hot. a. fr.— Tosef. Mace. HI (II), ; man must alwajs measure himself (examine the dispos-
2 Mace. 9 b Y. ib. II, 31 d top 'aa nsa (b. h.) Bezer in the
; ;
ition of his mind; cmp.nax), if he feels that he can direct
Wilderness, on the eastern side of the Jordan. — Tosef. his mind, let him pray, if not &c.
Men. IX,13 'a a 0^003, read: fTOTl nanaa from the pasture- Nif. n?a? to be measured. B. Bath. VII, 1 T*W0 ',^»
ground of Hebron; v. Men. 87* ; Sot.34 b .— PJ.P.inana. Ber. Snas are not included in the measure. Arakh. VII, 1
IX 2. Ib. 54 b 'a "obn those travelling in the deserts; a. e. Has Binna? are included &c; a. fr.
— ::
Pi. 11a same, to stretch. Gen. R. s. 3 ; Midr. Till, to -% .iat is the nature of his power. B. Mets. 33 a n3"W 'a
Ps. XXIV, a.e. TJO^, v. nna.— [Cant. R. to VIII, 11 "pipo, 'a it is a (meritorious) way (of studying) and is not, i. e.
v. nil.] you might do better Y. Hor. Ill, 48 c top 'a n3i&<U5 'a a.
; ;
proportion. Sabb. 150a (play on FQITTD, v. preced.) ixa man); ib. 11 ni3>13 'a 3?31X four characters (tempera-
"0 xb3 Stan i&t) bring much, very much, without meas- ments); ib. 12 DiTvabt-Q 'a 3>31K four natures of students
ure. Peah VIII, 6 11 'a this proportion. Gen. R. s. 64; (with regard to receptive and retentive faculties). Y. Snh.
Esth. R. introd. (ref. to HTM, Ezra IV, 13) y^nn IT ma XI, 30 a bot. '31 'a 3>3U) bs all the seven characteristic
that is the tax from the land as measured, e. the (Roman) i. features of righteous men which
the scholars have de-
land-tax. B. Bath. VII, 3 '31 bsn3 'a I sell thee exact land- fined have been realized in Rabbi. Ned. 20 b 'a stun 133
measure by the rope. lb. 128 a 131K ma the length-measure children conceived under nine (abnormal mental) con-
of the cloak. lb. linibpUJa ma the measure of its (the ditions. R. Hash. 17 b a. fr. 'a nill» labia the thirteen
,
coins of a certain weight can be obtained from it. Hag. fr.—"pin maa) justice. Tosef. Yeb. IX, 3, a. e., v. ilpb.
12 a nbib'ai DV ma the combined length of day and night. — Esp. the divine attribute of justice, opp. D^anin 'a,
Yeb. 76 b (ref. to I Sam. XVII, 38) imaa V^a his (Saul's) v. "piII.— b) common sense, logical argument. Yoma 43 b
garments such as fitted his stature. Mikv. X, 5; Hull. 73 a rorvu "fin 'a (NM) ~p common sense dictates this; Shebu.
'a(n) Olpa 13> as far as the designed length of the handle I4 a Y. Maas. Sh. II, 53 c top "pin 'ab ('aa) itfjs -painn
.
(excluding the portion which it is intended to cut off). they regulated the laws of Sabbath limits according to
Kidd. 42 b B. Mets.56 a.e. '31 bp^a3ffi1 'a3UJ 131 objects
j
1
', common sense (not by textual interpretation). c) de- —
which are sold by measure, by weight or by the piece. cision in money matters, civil law (contrad. to ritual law).
B. Bath. 89 b '21 fTT&n 'a dbl3?b one must never keep . . . Y. Gitt. V, 46 c bot. pn "pin 'ab t)K the same principle
in one's house too small or too large a measure (smaller holds good for civil law (collection of claims, v. ni3lE3);
or larger than the legal size); a. fr. — PI. fliia, nil^a. Y. Shebi. X, 39 c bot. Ib. (last line) '31 "pin 'a 'pliabl' do
lb. 88 b 'a btt) ",115315 the divine punishment for fraudu- we apply the rules of Prosbol (v. blSTIIB) to ordinary
lent measures. Tosef. B. Mets. VI, 14 .... "pSlaa
Nb Wl claims? Y. B. Kam. V, beg. pin Kb
4 d 31in m&t "pin 'a3
'an bs xbst they (the agoranomoi in Jerusalem) were
. . (strike out ",iaa3) in civil law we are not guided by pro-
appointed not for the regulation of market prices but for babilities (v. 311; cmp. Bab. ib. 27 b ). Y. Ber. II, 5 a bot.
the superintendence of- the measures; B. Bath. 89 a v. ,
'in 'abl but in civil law (questions of possession). 4) prin- —
C^aii::*; a.fr.— Men. 18 a TriT>a msab, v. fisa— "Whence ciple, standard, consistency. Men. Ill, 4 '31 '1 maa follow-
—
• : : : ' - t t '
Middoth (measurements of the Temple), name of a treat- ing the principle of R. &c; Pes. 77 b ; Y. ib. VII, 34 c top.
ise of the Mishnah, of the order of Kodashim. 2) deal- — Shek. IV, 6 'an &W ns^K (comment, 'an ",a n3">K) this is
ing; reward or punishment; dispensation. 'a 1553 'a re- — not consistent (with a previous rule). Ib. 7 nx nimn
taliation, adequate punishment or reward. Sot. I, 7, v. ima (Y. ed. ITViia) he makes his standards even (is con-
preced. lb. 9 a 'aab the verse is to intimate that God dis- sistent). Pes. I, 7 'an &rn Wit this is not the right ar-
penses adequate punishments. Ib.8 b (ref. to ib. I, 7) y'SH gument. Ib. I5 b
ati 'ai 'a 'an &Wi n3^x i&tax why do
^23 Stb'a3 nbian'al although retribution (by the Jewish you say, it no argument? it is surely a correct argument.
is
court) has ceased, the adequate divine punishment has Y. Hag. Ill, 77 d 'Menahem went out' means NS* 'ab 'aa 1
not ceased. Lam. R. introd. (R. Alex. 2) (expl. JSWpflf, he went over from one principle to another (joined the
Lev. XXVI, 43) 'a 1533 'a punishment corresponding to opposition; Bab.ib.l6 b nsi niamb HX">).— Esp.rila rules
deed. Ned. 32 a Snh. 90 a 'a 1S33 'a . n"3pn bll? WPfiB b3 all of interpretation. Sifra introd., ch. I, end '31 'a jJ3ir...bbn
retributions of theLord are in correspondence with man's Hillel the Elder explained seven rules &c; Ab.d'R.N. ch.
doings. Ber. 48 b 'whatever the Lord thy God has given XXXVII; Tosef. Snh.VII, 11. Sifra introd., beg. (R.Yishm.
thee' rnssme ma "p3i raw 'a "p3...b33 -53111 (not ma) said) '31 'a nilT2> lubU33 the Torah is interpreted by means
he is thy judge in whatever sentence he decrees upon of thirteen rules. [Appendix to treat. B'rakhoth. 'a 3"b
thee, whether it be a good or an evil dispensation. Ib. '31 1011 '1 blU the thirty two rules of R.Jose the Galilean.]
IX, 5, v. ika. Sabb. 97 a Ib. 151 b IT 'a b3> .dbiyb at — Lev. R. s. 3, beg. 'ai PYDbfl decisions and interpretations
all times let one pray to be spared this fate (poverty); (by which the decisions were reached), v. XFibisa. Gitt. —
a. fr.— PI. as ab. Snh. 90 a , v. supra. Yoma 87 b 1i33>an 67 a '31 Vtfitm manna naiin irjWd my rules of inter-
'31 VTiiia bj? he who passes over his retaliations (who for- pretation are the selection from selections of rules by R.
bears to retaliate), his failings will be passed over (be Akiba.— Ber. 33 b 'ai 31am n"3pn bia rronsuj he WM
forgiven); Meg. 28 a . Ib. "WTO b3> TlaS ttb I never in- makes compassion the standard (or reason) of the divine
sisted on retaliation ; Kidd. 71 a vmia bs la3>a 13iSO(Rashi laws, while they are decrees (the reasons for which it
i"ara); —
manner, ways, character, nature, con-
a. fr. 3) behooves not man to discuss); Y. ib. V, 9 C bs ISTl
X11p3
dition. Ber. 40 a '31 n"3pn maa xb the nature of divine '31 'a because it he were finding fault with
sounds as if
(intellectual) affairs is not like the nature of human (ma- the ways of the Lord (as if the Lord were partial) ",ri3a ;
nature of the day (light) at night. Tanh. Balak3 ima Ha tributes of the Lord.
— —
mtt 733 na^B
&8VTB our fr.—PI. n-Htta, fHtm Ohol. XVIII, 7 dTtirn 'a; Pes. 9 a
S1"ID m. f*W) affliction. Targ. Esth. VI, 1
d"H2J"Dn 'a (v. **&&)', a. e.— Tosef. Mikv.VI, 1 ttVftfva (E.
affliction.
S. to Mikv. VIII, 1 n-nvia) the dwellings therein.— [Tosef.
i^mv.wich. Maas. 8h. I, 5 THa WOO, v. Tha.] — [Midr. Prov. ch. VI;
Yalk. ib. 939 frfta, v. rTtfva.]
bbnna,v.b^.
'"QUE, M. Kat. 12 b some ed., v. SOiana a. VtyfitV^ "lilQ, fcOllQ
T
ch. same. Targ. Ps. LXXVI, 3. Targ.
Gen. XXX, 20 a.fr.—PI.
; Tfho, IWW, Ib. VI, 16 (com-
V
THD m. (b. h.; nrj) /?ua?. Mace. 14 b ;
Nidd. 41 b IS partments of the ark); Targ. 0. ib.14. Targ. I Chr. IV, 41.
r
: XS^ir until the flux is discharged through &c. lb. Targ. Job XXXVII, 8; a. e.— Ib. XXXVIU, 40 tKtffho.—
r
rt ffioa WlTa what flows from her is subject to the [nvia, Bekh. 44b, v . ifi-ra.]
T
c<pbda '^ "in a wooden mortar that had been thrown XtS^TQ m. (v. next w.) treading; (Arab.) polishing.
'a (v. Tosaf. a. 1.) as large as the leg of a small spice "TO, ^"HE (b. h.) pr. n. Media. Shek. Ill, 4 'a diub
mortar; Y. ib. VIII, end, ll c .
— 2) a mortar- shaped seat. on behalf of "the Median Jews. B. Kam. IX, 5 tb^S*
'ab (^SS) mnx he must carry it (the unlawful property)
a
Yeb. 16 a Y. ; ib. 3 hot. Kel. XXIII, 2, v. supra.
after him even as far as Media. Kidd. 71 nbm 'a Media
b
a- dwelling that has been occupied by gentiles (in Pales- riD n ia, v. nai^ra.
93
3 1;
#
f. 710, part. Hif. of bbn.
Lev. XIX, 35) Spnp mma It this refers to land-measur-
ing. Pesik. Vayhi, p. 7 (ref. to Ex. XXVI, 6 a. 11) 1HK
;l
blD, N^IQ, fcOTO m. (compound of xa, ~x a. b)
belonging, property. 30' hot. T^psnx Y. Keth. VI, 1
, v. fib}? ; a.e. 1
bot. Y. Ned. IX, 41 c r^Via! Kin himself an' ..-"^'tever
D'OV'IQ, Pesik. Ekhah, p. 122
1
', v. "ji^. belonged to him. Lam. R. to 1, 1 va"! beg.
Y " TptKl
n n "IC, Targ. Prov. XIV, 14 ed. Wil.,
rV^ma and gave him his belongings in cl .ge. i'>. end
v. rTTC II.
"pm'al JOnlS b3) all these riches and belongings. Ib.mbm
""TO,
- T
Wl nfti.^ • T TT T -T 7
*i»,
• t'
Win.
ttt
'ai "tym "paoi Kbl (read mbla) I was afraid lest his rel-
Jtf
"Q I m. watchman's lodge, v. Nb-jax.
7H0, v. v™.
* 1m
S >"/G II m., pi. N^bla pb'n) dratcing, resorbing.
P'TO, v. ftp.
Pes. 40 a '31 Wt*»^*pa aax b= as long as the grains absorb
liquid, they do not ferment; v. tfb-ra.
"TO v. 13.
rnfcO"ID, v. next w.
£ j-E I pr.n. (b.h.) Afz'fZtan, a nomadic tribe. Targ. Ex.
II, 16; a. fr.— Num. E. s. 20, v. Ian Snh. 105 a a. fr.— ; ; T\yT)12 m'sblo (denom. of nsbl) gourd-fields.
f., pi.
Denom. ^ma^/.d^ma. Num.R.l.c.'; Tanh.Balak3;a.fr. Shebi. Il", 1 m! '531 '©pa; not
'aai niKttJpaa (ed. Y. a. Ms.
'xbia) in cucumber and gourd fields ib. 2. Y. ib. II, beg.
"£"$3 II m. (b. h.; yn) strife. PL WJWJfc T;ma. — ;
nJ '
|Q f. (b. h. ; "("n I) [jurisdiction,] district, country. iny |?Zrtce, bed-room. Targ. Job XXXIII, 15. Ib. 19 (Ms.
Maas. Sh. Ill, 4 (contrad. to Jerusalem). R. Hash. IV, 3 '-pa). Targ. Y. Gen. II, 24 'TO; a. e.
m
b:> all
the Scriptures, it means a capital, wherever m'dinah is 1fj]2, I^Q m. (=pi"a; b.h. HWWj ft?, H«/".) knot in
used, it means an hyparchia (province); a. fr. reed-matting. Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. XI, 12 'ab ^ta pQla'«r*t) 1
tt?- Tar g-
n
Is.
T
X, 13 (ed. Lag. mila). Targ. II Esth. VIII, 9. —Targ.
- -
^31^? m CW
- ohJect °f strife -
Tar g- Ps - LXXX, 7
(Ms. a. Regia !>»"ma).
Prov. XVI, 32 (h. text ITS). Targ. Y. II Num. XXIV, 24
SMI 'a Constantinople (or Rome); a.e. — Taan. 19 b
, v.
rem xrenn,
- :
-' t : • :
sn^na,
r -' . :
v. m™.
n •*
atmisa. Lam. R. to I, 1 Tffl beg. 'a 'Wfl ""b^S Sin the
gate of that city; a. fr.— PI. IJTRJ, Nn3"Ha. Targ. II Esth. ^^ m. (b. h.; ST;) intelligence. Mace. 23 a , v. -r ;. 1
S?i!p"]Q f. (JOT) clean fat (permitted to eat). Bekh. D3^TQ> i »m - (comp. of 3?la, v. preced., a. enclitic
30 a Var. in Ar., v. "JO III. a for Ka) [noticeable,] something; anything (corresp. to h.
— — ; — ;;
BWD, naWO or W). Targ. Job XXXI, 7. Targ. Gen. "1123, pi. nWlO, v. THa.
XXII, 12 (Y. LevitaO;H3a). Targ. Deut. XVII, 1; a. fr.—
liekh. 51 n-QS ttT«a "TO (Rashi a. Tosaf.) thou didst some- SrVOT)l23
1
'
f. pr. n. (-pi) Madrokhitha, name of a
thing wrong (in giving the redemption money with the peak. Targ. I Sam. XIV, 4 (h. text ri3D).
•tation of getting it refunded). Snh. 55 a S«iT!!K '»»«
doing something else (unnatural gratification) he 1*11123, 123 (in Y. Dial.) T^rMa, p*$Q m. (v. SOTa a.
'3"N»
X3K0S 'a *,a from Tft II) sloping; 'a Dlpa declivity'.'^PesA2 opp. ("liaax. B. ,l
any till'- iclean. B. Bath. 123 a 'a &6l ... K^ITO Kb (Ms. Mets. 82 b ,sq.-Y. Sabb. XI, 13 a bot.'3ia Dipan .-pnun when
M. T<fi/ > IdJoseph have been given no preference the place was sloping; Y. Erub.X, 26 a bot. OOj Y. B.Bath.
a "p-TOa.
I, end, 13 Y. Erub. I, 18 c top '21 '31a nTl (sub.
whatever?; a..e. V. "W?, 6'HU.
Dips) if there was a declivity in the middle of the alley.
T\TV2, v. nrnia. Y.Sot. IX, 23 c bot. '3a.—Tosef. Mikv. IV, 10 (expl. I ffrnu)
'to -pxan Q"a\m <V (Maim, to Mikv. V, 6 'an -,a) rain
*]123 m. (~2t; v. v]1) clap-board, trap for birds. Kel.
water that runs down a declivity.
XXIli,5.
*p23 m. (ri3) a vessel used for smoking bees out, v. 1*11123, T123 ch. same. Targ. Mic. 1, 4 (ed. Wil. 'TO
reva*. Kei. xvi, 7. h. text "rfte). Targ. Ps. LXXXIII, 14 (ed. Lag. 'ma). V.
"nan.
*]123 m. (vHJ) indirect contact by shaking, breathing
&c. (cmp. lyVTa, asrn). Esp. 'a risCMO, or 'a the unclean- — nJ n ")l23, v. w*b.
ness of an object arising from an unclean person's in-
direct contact; the object thus made unclean ; uncleanness D '123 m. (CTn) 1) treading, place trodden upon, in
a gen. basis, seat, esp. midras, levitical uncleanness arising
of a minor degree. Nidd. 4 TWltl )V0 (xa-j) 'tfl (Tosef.
Toh. IV, 4 D*na) and an object of minor uncleanness from a gonorrhoeist's immediate contact by treading, lean-
rests under it. Sifra M'tsor a, Zabim, ch. IV, Par. 3 niUTS ing against &c. Nidd. VI, 3 '£(3) Mffloh bz whatever can
'a Vnnn he makes the things under him (e. g. cushions be made unclean as a midras; expl. ib. 49 b 'ab i;m be
directly under his head) unclean as a middaf; a. e. PI. whatever is fit to be used as a seat, couch &c. Kel. XXIV,
'
itffflo laws concerning middaf. Y. Sot.V, 20 b Y. Dem. . II, 1. Par. X, 1; a. v. fr. —
In gen. fatBEtfl ax, uncleanness
23 a
top.—Y. Sabb. VII, 9 J hot. mM« 'a ina what kind of of the first degree. Hag. II, 7 a. fr. PI. ivfefl'lfi cases of
;
considered as if on a level with the lower ground ; Y. also nia in/id (from its beginning, Pro v. XI, 27) a Midrash
Sabb. XI, 13 a bot.; a. ix.—Pl. PYfeTW, **$, Tosef. Peah to the Psalms. — xa^n3Pi 'a Midrash Tanhuma, to the
I, 9. Shebi. II, 8; Tosef. ib. Ill, 4, v. fcOa.— 2) step, rank. Pentateuch.— PI. &
P hm Midrashim, esp. nian Babboth
Kidd.40 b . (a plural of nan by false analogy).
93*
— '
e. what difference does it make whether the purchased is it? Y. Sabb. I.e.
objects or their equivalent be delivered?; Y. YomaV, 43 a
bot. jme-i fa noi 'jrwa no. b. Bath. 32 b ; 3i a ib (ib) rra tfRH, v. nno.
T T T T
what motive could he have to tell a lie? lb., a. e.
"ipttJb
'31 nns OlpOD. Ipcb ib no we do not apply the principle rn^JfllQ, Y. Keth. 1, 25 b top, v.'jn. [Comment, take
Ibat we believe a defendant because he has no motive our w. as a geographical designation of coins; v. Zucker-
to he, where witnesses are on hand; a. v. fr. S]K ... Mo — mann Talm. Miinzen, p. 15.]
wbat.. .?, even so, i. e. as... so. Gitt. 23 b/ 3l C)X...Onxno
as you (Num.XVlII, 28) refers to Israelites, so must your S MPQ I m. fYTft) review, revision. B. Bath. 157
1 '
, v.
xnabs.
4 b '31 loan . . . pttJ no-rb no the case of a Y'bamah is
'31OX at all events (he has offended); if it was day-time cloth; Nidd. 56 a xnmon niboo; ib.4 a 'noinon (corr. ace).
Kel. XXIV, 17 '31 rmbattJ nnmo a threadbare shred
when the first stars (on Friday evening) were visible, it
patched on a sound one (nii"ia, v. KTB).
was day-time when the first stars (onSabbath evening) were
visible &c; Sabb. 35 b 3"aa nxon 3""n must bring a sin- Nif. nno3, xno? to be tattered, fall to pieces. Ib. XXVII,
offering at all events (whether you consider twilight a 12 ed. Dehr. xno3, Mish. ed. nno3; Talm. ed. nno3).
part of the day or a part of the night). lb. 34 a (in Chald. Hif. nnon, xnon to dissolve; to crumble, sift. Maas.
diet.) '31 ix ~pE3 no whichever side you take, if twilight Sh. V, 1 -]Bimi nnop Ar. (ed. pr. xnop; ed. nnoo) he dis-
is day &c. Erub. 10 a '31 iX 3"00 ">b nob . . . nbl"tt what solves (the lime) and pours over the spot; B.Kam.69 a
it
reason was there for saying 'large . . .'? In either case nnoo Ms. r. (ed. nn . .). Zeb. 54 a '31 xnooi ... 1i0 xino
(it is incorrect), if it be to permit the use of the larger Ar. (ed. nnooi) takes lime, molten lead and pitch and
court &c. Hull. 29 a '31 nxna iX 3"oo in either case (the mixes them and pours &c. Ohol. XVIII, 4 nnooled.Dehr.
slaughtering is ritually correct) ; you adopt the opinion
if (Ar. xnooi, ed. nn .) and crumbles (and sifts the earth).
. .
can the horn of Israel be lifted up? Sabb. II, 1 ; a. fr. must his father stand up before him? Ib. '31 masb 'o must
b) in tvhat case ? Qiniox Qi-Qn noa (abbr. X'"l3), v. lox I. one stand up &c. ?— Y. Yoma III, beg. 40 b iplio, 'o
what
—nsb wherefore? Ber. 3 a ib nob JOO-O nbnn what does bor'kay mean?— Hull. 46 a 'o
opbna how is it if the
need is there for a sign for the beginning of the first &c, v. Opb; a. v.
liver is fr. — OTTil 'o what is it you
watch ? M. Kat. 28 a '31 n3O03 'b why is the account of the might think?, i. e. you might be under the impression.
death of Miriam attached to &c.?; a. fr. nab to what?, — Arakh. 21 '31 ibim 'T 'o you might assume that he an-
''
whereto? Kidd.40 b QibfflO3 0"ip"*ra 'bwhat are the righteous nulled (the protest), therefore we are given to under-
to be compared to?— non "Qin 'b, v. no*l; a.fr.— V. nob. stand &c, v. X^urs ; a. fr.
' T T ' T T
mmnE 737 mnic
Sri^nE I same. Gen. R. f. s. 81, v. STn; Tanh. mb Vrran dilute it (the wine); Yalk.Is.258bvrox.-V.brria.
Vayishl. 8, . WT/a II.— Bets. 29 'n*l b
X3JX on an inverted
sieve. — PI. WjWtO. lb. M.Kat. ll a 'a \fWcb to plait sp^ra* v. r,brr2.
Targ. Ex. IV,' 25, sq. (0. ed. Berl. xrbrrc). Targ. Y. Gen. years; Pes. 94 b ; Y. Ber. I, 2C bot; a. fr.
XLV, 4 ; a. e.
r[>fj73 \T^JT\U) ch. same. Targ. Jonah III, 3, sq.
PI -*i"7£, 7712*7712 f. (b. h.; O^n or nan) commotion, Targ. Y. Ex. XII, 31.
brings more than the twenty four Biblical books to his "rani) debris,mounds used as burying places for executed
house, brings trouble &c; a.e. [Nidd. 4 a Tiainan, v.Hfr:.] criminals. Y. M. Kat. I, 80 c bot. *03 rWWrti in former . . .
VI, 5); Y. Snh. VI, 23 d bot 'nan (correct the entire pas-
- T " T
sage in accordance with Y. M. Kat. 1. c).
S"TO,
T
v. rra ch.
• »
pTiCrjE m. ch. same. Targ. Ps. CXL, 11 Regia (ed.
fcOlTD (fcOTID), v. vofrm. •(nana).
fcC'TC,
T " "
v. x=-rs.
» -
ji )22=-,n -jxa. Y. Shebi. IV,35 a bot'ai rTia'a(Y.Snh.
Ill, 21 b -,xa) who told thee &c.?— [Y.Erub. V, end, 23 a ,
S J*T7J2 f. (bna I) circumcision. 'a "O fit for circum-
read ^na fash "mnx.]
cision. Yeb. 71 a .
TD'TJQj v. jarn
&OD5mE m. (~?n) perverse. Targ. Prov. XVI, 28.
"PHH I m. quick, v. nna.
"1
NPffiSnE,
T T - :
v. xn:=sn3.
t t :v :
< \1Z II m. mahir, a fabulous animal of gigantic :
dimensions. Y. Ab. Zar. I, 39 d bot. [read:] b*ttb Tno TIB Hi cmp. nna) to exchange, buy. Denom. "nia.
\!2 (b. h.;
a
'=" KTRB '- ","."= X3 -/'X is it permitted to raise animals Pi. nrra (cmp. ^bn) 1) to hurry, be speedy. Sabb. 97
(in Palestine) ? SaysB.Ba,Even an animal like mahir &c; '31 scab nnnaa comes quicker than &c. B.Kam. 93 a y "?T3,3 ,
Y. Pes. 1Y, 30 d bot. (con-, ace); Y. B. Kam. VII, end, 6 a '31 p512S? he who cries for revenge will sooner be punished
(out of place). than he who is cried against. Sifre Deut. 277 "ax nnaa
135 "v"s s-iEnb I (the Lord) will sooner take revenge when
rn~Pn£? f. freral) quickness, speed. Gen. R. s. 10,
a poor man is wronged than when a rich man is a. fr. ;
~77!2 I ch. 1) same. Yeb. 71 b 5*18 xb ::"a Tfiaai and T^DTTIZ f. (b. h.; preced.) speed; 'a2 speedily, easily.
rhy did they notp-actice circumcision in the desert? Ib. Ab.V.20 twyj 'aasoon, in our life-time. Ber. 17 a "lEn'a
n»is 738 Tnrm
'"2
a male' Moabite is excluded from intermarriage but
not a female. piE^E, Y. Keth. IX, 33 b bot. 'a 'p, v. xa:::x^.
cmp. Ex. XXVII, 7) wedged stores in Zidon Y. ib. 1, 22 a bot. Wb». Tosef. 1. c. MTftia
;
TiNDriQ f. (part. Hof. of X13 ;
6 '3 rvaiSD (Ar. nai3) exactly TCB ed.Zuck. (Var. nTVWO, WHiSm; Y. 1. c. nniaa), opp.
into, exact size of. Neg. VI,
the size of a lentil ; Tosef. ib. II, 10 quot. in R. S. to Neg.
b
Y.Dem, Maasr. IV, 51 b bot. m^tis. Num. R. s. 4, beg-ris^nia.
b'yilZ, fcOIND c.same. Y.Hall. IV, end,60 ;
III,23 b
hot. *W (corr. ace). Y. Taan. I, 64 b hot. hP^J am IS'HiQ, n^llQ ch. m. same. Esth. R. to I, 4 '3 -in
nsaia Bina he put his cloak over his load. Lam. K. to c
pfl'm'a modius of denars; Y.Pes.IV.end, 31 "^TTO (read
I, 1 Tn"i, beg. "jiDip"! '"3
a load of wood ; a. ir.—Pl. ibaia. 'iima). lb. Ill, 30 a top, v. yianaia, Erub. 83
a
v. ,
w»«o.—
Ib. introd. (R. Joh. 1), v. KjWB. PI. V*1VX Y. B. Kam. IX, 6' 1
, sq. [wrra, frequ. in Talm.
max cause to flow, to make sore. Gen. R. s. 41 Prayer of Benedictions, so called from its beginning 'a
Af. to
"j^X (Ar. "p^aai "onDX (we offer thanks). Ber. V, 3 (a reader who says)
(ref. to "pato, Is. LI, 23) -jrea f aToan u
'31 '3 'a modim twice must be silenced; Meg. IV, 9 (25 ).
-"3, fr. "ttD), v. nbrfe ; ib. s. 69; Yalk. Is. 337 "pJtfl "pVw
a bot. 'a itf3 mn 12 when it comes to modim;
-"a (some ed. y^Btfl . . . "p13, corr. ace.).— V. X^la. Y. Ber.II,5
a. e.
P.Sm.2001) to be languid,
'Ithpol. Jsiarx (v. Syr. 6053,
to act like a languid person. Ab. Zar. 70
b
Kin K3b»3 ^"HIS m. (3Hi) mark, mnemotechnical sign. PI. —
ayUajnjp'l Ms. M. Var. (Dot "aatBrVNK; strike out xa^sa DiS/Hia, yy fia. Erub. 54 b
bot. (play on 5113, Prov.VII, 4)
SViarapn Xin as a tautography) he may say, I was only n-iinb 'a rittJS ed. Sonc. (ed. Di"ni3, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1.
a little lazy (and stretched myself so as to reach over to note 8) make mnemonical symbols for the study of the
the neighbor's roof ;Rashi a.l. quotes aVaODX Wl3n3h.). Law; Yalk. Prov. 940; Yalk. Jer. 315.
— ;
S~TiE m. = kVto. Targ. Prov. XXIX, 3 Ms.; ib. means, by the oath which Moses vowed, as we read (Ex.
XXVIll, 8 "TO; ib.VI, 31 '"TO Ar. (ed. everywhere ''TO; II, 21) &c; Bab. ib.lO b Dlba "lax xb 'aa TJWi if a person
n" ^"!^
1
10 b 'Tzh fO-nj 13X yi*XS we still need the Modite (for UI, 27 d top (read nniX for iniX). Bab. ib. 10 a (ref. to Ex.
interpretation). XXU, 16) '=1 Plbiran •aa m
xn-r that this (fine) be equal
to the indemnity for outraged virginity (Dent. XXU, 29),
U Modaim, Modim, Modin,
2>m"iZ2, "j"'3?"l"lI2 pr. n. pi.
and the settlement of virgins be like this (indemnity, i.
the native place of the Asmonean family. [Eds. a. Mss.
e. fifty Shekel silver); a. fr.— PI. ^"rt/va, constr. "HrTO.
vary between TftO, 'T^tva a. mplTO.] Kidd. 66 a Pes.
IX, 2. Ib. 93 b '21 tjbtfmVl 'art "p from M. to Jerusalem
.
are fifteen miles. Hag. Ill, 5; Tosef. ib. Ill, 33; a. fr.—
be right (as you say).
[r-"TV2,.Erub. 54 b v. ?*TO.] ,
"Ol-tEa).
Peah IV, 1 (ed. in;TO) that he may not see a poor man
who is his friend and cast it before him. ]I_PaJ m. pi. (preced.) exchange, adaptation of a
J
bttTPDrrra, *onb ararn'E tM». Targ .pr v. "£Hn"l£ m.pl.(used as sing.,sub. nattJ) (pln.v.Xp^n)
LYIII, 16. Targ. Ps. XVI, 5. rfQWRS constr. (Ms. trim). surety, esp. for royal taxes (X5*"S). Yeb. 46 a ; B. Mets. 73 b
Deut. XVI, 17 matTO; a. e.— PI. XITOiTO. Targ.
Farg. Y. '31 "WT1 ^rt^p-irti-a (Ms. M. 'nrtia) the surety for these
Prov.XV, 27 (some ed. sing.). Targ. Y. Deut. XVIII, 2 people lies in the archive of the king, and the king has
WVOrTO (corr. ace). ordained that he who pays no charga can be made the
servant of him who pays (for hjm). — [Erub. 62 a rtX*na
nTT\12, "HID, a disguise of rvja. Ned. I, 2 (10 a) TO ffiPltMO '^a (Eabad "Oaan-iB, v Rabb. D. 8. a. 1. note 60) .
'a2 (Mish. ed. XITOa, Bab. ed. "moa 1113; corr. ace.) if
a lease sound if made legal by sureties and (counter-
is
one says, A vow by (that of) Mohi ; Tosef. ib. I, 2 nalXri
signed) by officers. Oth. explan., v. X3a*i*iax.]
IITO "Wi nnra ed. Zuck. (Var. WTO
a. TaKTl . . . tTO, Tmo,
for "XTl) read laXTi 'a Wiltfl if one says, (Neder)Mohi,
: 'a "jTil DTD, Targ.Prov.XV, 8, some ed., a. Var. ed.Lag.,
or (.YetfVr) d'amar Mohi, the vow of M. or the vow which a corrupt, for rt'TipFTO or J"PPia?iFl.
— ;
which comes out of the pit after the oil has been taken
^miQ,
- ••
i
v. irj\
• !
out ; np*W3 xsrn 'a. Makhsli. VI,
Tosef. ib.X, 3 tsjn rvo
6 -,aiT TUB XSV 'an "pX; Tosef. 1. c. "jaittJ ^nisnx "H" (read: 1
63 b ^ '
a (^r. ap*m '2, a gloss to 'UH 'a Rashi: a /tawi- ;
'31 "OB^DT when
nezzar. Tanh. Vayishl.3 (ref.toProv.
their power shall sink before
XXV, 26) Vtb BOBM
Nebuchad-
ful of onions).
'31 when he bends (humiliates himself) before the wicked
POTO, Y. Keth. XI, 34 1
' '31 "173X 'Tftl, read: jrt3 JB»1 Gen. R. s. 75 '=1 Slab p*ni& X"X (Yalk. Gen. 130 t^vAf)
HOW (v. Asheri to Keth. 5o a ). it is impossible to the righteous to bend &c; a. e.
NSD^lD m. 1
creditor. Targ. Ps. CIX, 11 Ms. (ed. Dlxa -^-atf? (not D1X na) (Asheri DtfJ^, v. W&) a ship
(qi ;)
xEiro).
which has no staggering effect on man. Gen. R. 1. c. B^aa
'31 lass humbles himself.
aprto,
It •
v. ^».
't
-
Hithpol. aaiann, Nithpol. aaiaro to be declining; to
sink. Y. Snh. X, 27 d bot.; Yalk. (ref. to Is. LIV, Is.' 338
sbnai,
t; ' »
v.«b».
tt -
io)' '3i n-j-jianjtt n^xn ax when thou
rraair max mat
. . .
t : T T : •
XXIII seest the merit of the fathers decline and that of the
SbflTj II in. (V|X II) yarn. Midr. Sam. ch.
'31 TpjjT'ia plOB cut thy yarn and cease thy talk (a pro- mothers sink, go and cling to grace Lev. R. s. 36, end ;
verbial expression).
and deeper (into poverty). B. Mets. 71 a pOmOHa 1^033
'P^'ta TCT'^ f- pl. li. IMJKto, Wafes, Targ. 0. = (Ms. M. "pBSana) his wealth will be reduced; Yalk. Ps.
Lev. XIX, 36 (some ed. pjttKb). V. X^ia. 665 aaiana he will sink. B. Mets. 1. c. '31 'ana ibbn (Ms.
R. 2 fWBKo, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. notes 2—4) these sink and
&^3pD m. pi. same. Targ. Y. II Lev. XIX, 36 (ed.
rise again &c. ; Yalk. 1. c.
Amst. X^ona, corr. ace). Targ. Is. XL, 12; 15.
S^SrtiQ m. = V&ntei Targ. Prov. XXII, 7. Af. B^OK to balance, weigh. Pesik. B'shall., p. 82
a
nrTO, imO, Tosef. Ned. I, 2, v. nrria. Ilt^D m. (Sty 1) (it is) good, better. Tanh. B'har 1
them myself; a. fr. — 2) the better, the right conduct. Lam. 42. Targ. Hab. Ill, 6 ; a. e. (v. "^a).— 2) to become soft.
R. introd. (R. Abba 2) 'zb "prima tVfl TH»n . . the light Snh. 95 a '3*1 SOnst fr? N:3 the ground under him became
in it (the Law) would have led them hack to the right soft. — 3) (denom.of Tyia) to lag under, make a bed. Targ. Ps.
way. Snh. 101 b ; a. fr. CXXXIX, 8.— Pes. 49 a 521 ry2 -Q one who lays under
(his cloak) and lies down (at any place, a shiftless person).
PR3"1D, HU- f. (b. h.; v. oia) 1) a small barrow.
Taan. 6 b ; Ber. 59 a (prov.) "Wl -pp23 ?|fe . . . *C3 nrtKl 13
a air.— 2) nrcia Jawds a yofce;
Bets. Ill, 3 (25 v. ;>/. o/"
),
if it rains when the doors are opened (in the morning),
yoAr. Tanh. B'shall. 23 '=1 rVCDTai 'a TiTl the yokes and
—*3) balances. lay down thy bag, ass-driver, and sleep (do not export,
the chariots ran (of themselves) &c.
EJSWW 7-" OKI HOBS Ar. with the bal-
B'shall., p. 82 a 'T,'-
Pesik.
for provisions will be cheap) ; a. e. — Part ""X3, -P*JU. B.
Mets. 84 b bl rrt Vf*Q TBI (Rashi: ,
"="3; Yar. tr"0, v.
ance with which the} weighed, weighing was done to -
them). Ib. 134 b *Zt\ 1C3* '3 a dry compress or dry sponge.
1
K":_"~ v. *$am Tosef. Nidd.II, 6 '33 nusatoa insert a resorbent (to prevent
the name of a Persian festive season and fair. Ab. Zar. 1 l b — pWpO, "pSSa, v. S133.]
his hands sink, (it intimated) that Israel is destined to '';'r nTES ".bx these (vessels) are made for storage; (Ab.
sink in the knowledge of the words of the Law to Zar. 74 b CTp3> 13^333 Ms. M.).
be given through his hands; Tanh. B'shall. 27. — 2) to
CIHI2 m. (denom. of ora) revenue farmer, publican,
lower, let sink. Ib., v. supra. — Sifre Num. 90 il"3p!l "JSC
custom-collector (considered a robber in Jewish law). B.
'21 n";': rTOtfl "l"33 here the Lord lowers (his anger)
Kam. 113 a fi3".S"p IP "pWD '3 a publican who is not limited
and Moses raises (is more angry), but when the golden
by legal stipulations; 1*1 ?X3 laWl 'a a self-constituted
calf "fas made, the Lord raised, and Moses lowered (tried
collector. Ab. Zar. 39 a Bekh. 30 b hot. 'a i-cp the pub-
to soften his anger); Yalk. Num. 735 TfNaa (fr- m^).
;
there
a tax-receipt
is no family
(v. supra).
in which
the lower mountains ; a. fr.
there is a publican, whose members may not all be con-
TyiTZ ch. same, 1) to decline, sink. Targ. Y. II Ex. XII, sidered as publicans (in Jewish law) ; a. fr.
94
— ' ——
DDTO 742 •w^M
near (was caught by) a publican, and he gave him his ass
and was let off, v. Kb**!.— PL pCDia. Targ. Jud. V, 11
mbio (rry&itt ririia mpbin), Lev. b.
s. 12,7 read: Xaavba.
TIT
(ed. Lag. pOSO).— [pMTa, Ab. Zar. 14 a Ms. M., v. next w.]
JS51Q, v. tarn
D^DDDiE, 1 n pDDiQ m. pi. a species of figs. Bekh. T • t:
8 a
(inferior to truo'iron). Ab. Zar. 14 s (Ms. M. pWTO; "J 5*113 m. (cmp. b. h.rrib'ia; iVj) issue, descendant.—
Ar. pOOda). PI. a-nVia, with suffix, emphatic form V'T'Vra. Keth.72 1
',
v. iVr.
J IZj, JiU I m. (b. h.; Assyr. mala, prob. a comp. of
a a. PX, v. Del. Proleg. p. 132) 1) border, front, in sight of. "15173 m. (1^) birth-time. Sot. ll b •jfi^bia "jat their
b time of giving birth Ex. B. s. 1 "ifPT^bla (corr. ace).
Hull. 19 (expl. IB"© biaa, Lev. V, 8, iorcfer o/"Me neck, ;
the space beginning with the back of the head, opposite fiJib "ibia (or only 'a) the beginning of the first quarter
the face, and ending with the end of the neck, opposite of the moon, New-Moon. Pesik. B. s. 15 '31 f"Prt fi33bfi 'a
the throat) CpTCWl nx nxTiri 'a the edge which sees the the New-Moon took place on a Wednesday at noon-time.
'oref (but not the 'oref itself). lb. IWI 'a . . . C]T© n"31 — *2) travail. B. Bath I6 b PPjViaa fionna (not xB"nna)
X3V1 if you will say, we know not where 'oref itself is, she is relieved of her severe throes (differ, vers, in Ms.
how we know where its border is? Sifre Num. 59
can — M., v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note).
D^B nb nto (Ms. 3, a. Yalk. ib. 719 tMBI 'a) give the
'a
candlestick an edge of the front (an edge and a front), i. e. S"uiQ ch.same. Targ. I Chr. XII, 32 ; Targ. Y. I Gen.
a prominent central light towards which the lights on I, 14 XlfPD lbia=h. fimbfi 'a, v. preced.
hem on one side (of the piece which he cut out of the ^M2 mule, v. xbia II.
middle of a piece of cloth).— 2) to circumcise. Sabb. XIX, 4
'3Y*inX Via? "tfiX one child which was to be circumcised "v1!G, pi. a^bia m. (v. xb^ia) mule-drivers. Y. Yomal,
after the Sabbath &c; '31 pal fi3tt)l and by mistake he 38 c ; Y. Meg. IV, end, 75 c , T.'m^n H.
circumcised &c. Ib. 6 '31 S"lB xbl ba if he circumcised but
failed to split the prepuce &c. Ib. 5 (137 a ) pX 'pp &051D up ground, mound. B. Bath. 54 a
f. (*Va) /?#ed
pbia Ms. M. (ed. pbfiia) a sick infant must not be cir- '31 SHttJl 'a bpU) if one takes earth from the mound and
cumcised. Pesik. B. s. 25 '31 iatt)b ba ">a who circumcised throws it on the low ground; '»3 'a if one throws from
a son in honor of my name, unless I gave him a son?; mound on mound (to make them even); M. Kat. 10 b .
Lev. B. s. 27 bba (corr. ace); a. fr. Part. pass. Pia, pi. — PI. xrv«>:ia. ''XT? —V. xrvka.— [For pr. n.
Erub. 56 b , v.
Cffcte, f&VO. Yalk. Jer. 285. pi. with X^bla or Xfpba, xnba, v. respective determinants.]
Nif. PIS' 1
?, Via? to be circumcised. Sabb. XIX, 5. Lev.
B. s. 25; Gen. B. s.46 Via"? pTrff! on what part of the body
""IS" 5123,
1
Job XII, 6 first vers. '31 'a bx patl ed. Lag. (some ed.
xbiabx corr. ace; in oth. ed. our w. is omitted). ^yiD m. pi. Oba) filling. Y.Bets. II, Gl
r
top; Y.Maas.
Sh. "V 56 c top; Y. Hag. II, 78 a bot., v. KWIB^ [Hiddushe
S51Q II m. (mulus) mule. Pesik. Shub., p. 162 a (ref. Me'iri to Bets. 20 a quotes: ^XPa X^'3 xn"ilU53 a joist (to
to d-rrajru, ii Chr. xxxin, n) mure pit 'a pas Ar. (ed. be felled) requires the (wooden) handle (of an axe), i. e.
ipia) a sort of mule of bronze; Y. Snh. X, 28c hot. xVra; the teacher is beaten bj- his own pupil.]
——
anao^E 743 itfna
anite's and others. Sub. VII, 7 '31 'a£ IIDa'Vl} "W . . 'a? .
ne
he who dedicates a child to M., is not punishable until I/C1/Q m. (fxiu.o;) mimic
mime. Lam. R. to actor,
tTTOS) the Molekh worship is not included in general R. s. 80, beg.— Cant. R. to VII, 9 Ona^a JitWl (read ftfBOt^O) :
idolatry. Tosef. ib. X, 5 '31 ITlKl '"3 "IHX whether he pas- tiftaye (Dan. Ill, 2) means the actors.
ses his son through fire for M. or for any other idol, he
is equally punishable ; Snh. 1. c. Ib. b3 *a ITO "OBa
TRTin,v.wah.
. » . .
&OD T\12 '31 'a ~b pX there can be no expert more popular than
m. (Tjba) counsel Targ. Y. I Num. XXI, 29.
Moses was. Bekh. IV, 4 (28 b ) Y'db 'a a lawyer approved
V. KMWO.
by a court. Ab. Zar. 27 a top 'a XB11 a practical physician
sbbia, v. Kbbo. (that has a reputation at stake). Ib. trorb 'a nvt dx if
t : ti •
are the blemishes in consequence of which a first-born this (my desire) has been abandoned. Lev. R. % 6 (prov.)
VlSTl 'a +Tb h X3T pd right or wrong, do not run the
animal may be slaughtered (after the destruction of the . . .
Temple). Ib. 2 pbd 'a "pX a blemish in the white of the risk of an oath. Y.Ned. I, 37 a top, v. nnia; a. e.
94*
— ——
n^wia 744 psora
HEfiO m. (part. .Ho/", of *«e) 1) exchanged, v. *«.— S!2"0"]!G, nI2" \12 f. (moneta) mint; coin, coinage.
2) converted, apostate, esp. wiwnior, CM o^en opponent of Ex. R.V5. Lam.R! to I, 1 (T»5h) 'a Xin "'an look at this
Jewish laic, [Our w. interchanges with
non-conformist. coin. Esth. R.end '=1 'a "OTia -p . . . rbWl llflD'a Ha
"ftzm
TBttta in eds. a. mss.] Hull. 4 'a bifW' 'iBX even a non-
1
'
n"1 ? 111U 'ax 'in they (the gentile courts), too, in the case
and here are chains; if thou doest my will, here is a
golden necklace for thee; if not &c. Pesik. R. s. 29-30.
of there being only one witness, administer an oath to
PI. nip^Dla. Ib. (ref. to trpOS, Prov. 9) fi"dpn BttW
him (the claimant). Pes. 1 13 b Wl M. ^aiai
VTOtffitfl (Ms.
I, . .
(ed. Amst. "a) whose son? gen. brine. Keth. 60 b '31 'a H?3X1 a woman that eats
monine (during pregnancy) will &c. Snh. 49 a xn2H^1 'a '">SX
fcOTG pr. n. m. Mona; v. Xia HI. '31 (Yalk. Kings 172 'Si 'a) even brine and (Yalk.; brine
71 b bot. X^pla.
Pesik. R. s". 10.
0"DD"I3")Q ('ai:a) m.(u,ovou.a)(o;) gladiator. Y'lamd. J'i'P^D m. pi. (p.65^0;, muscus) the animal perfume
— — —
CttC>tt 745 fvwe
Kidd. I, 4 quot. in Rashi to B. Mets. 1. c. 'Idd rY0p2 (ed. 1?i£i ^"?1^ ch. same. Targ. I Sam. I, 3; 4.— M.
taken possession of by seizing the reins (or
ri"¥t3B&5) is Kat. 18 b th kirt Marian bin, v. preced. Y. Ab. Zar. I, 39 b
:hain).B.Kam.IV,9'dd..inrpif the owner tied the animal bot. "21 n^ld the day or days after a (gentile) festival.
(to a fence &c.) by the reins. Par. II, 3 'dH Tit rV<&9 bS'p PL •pir"2 K^i-id. Targ. Lev. XXIII, 2. Targ. Hos. II, 13;
,
'21 bd' '- ': ~r~ he handed him the reins of one of the
if
S~2n2 f. ch.=nnr!id liable to do damage. Targ. Prov.
camels; a. fr.
XXV, 19 V
d 8&TI (h. text tf VUVJ v. B. Kam. 1, 4 Ms. Xrsjd,
t, ;
. tfi *W are there longer e.—PI. "prBia^nBia. Ib. Deut. VI, 22. Targ. 0. Ex. IV,
and shorter years?; a. fr.— Esp. BSfl», BS*OT the smaller 21ja.fr.
thing, the lesser sphere. B. Hash. 4>>, a. fr. tt21ia MDSn
MDSn'a nt>En riOBn xb if you take hold of the larger thing, f ID
-
(cmp. ysa) to suck.— Part. p^O. SabD 13 * a **& -
'a Kb ! b^pW an infant that docs not suck. Ib. 133 b SOaiX
you may lose your hold, if of the smaller, you will hold
'a £<bl a surgeon (circumciser) that fails to suck the blood
it, i. e. where the interpretation is doubtful, select the
out of the wound.—Ab. Zar. 32 a '31 Ifib W"tfl and they
smaller number; Y. YomaII,end,40 a 'aa!"l. Sifra Vayikra,
(the earthen vessels) resorb the wine (Ms. M. ^Ual *iS
N'dab., ch. XIII, Par. XII 'aaM the least portion thereof.
'31, v. ixa).
Y. Keth. Ill, 27 d bot. 'aa ppft niB13. the disgrace of a minor
is the less grave thing; ib. 'aa 1pT51 and the indemnity he y "ID, imper. of pta.
gets, is smaller ; a. fr.
y ID m. (b.h.; -pja) [swc&ecZ owf, dry,] chaff. Midr. Till,
5 n 2TlQ, v. by\— [Meil. 14 b VWB Xpl, v. VJQr] to Ps. I, 4 '31 WpMtt) 'as laXM CK you might think 'like
1TD1Z2, Y. Ab. Zar. 40 a the chaff' in the valley in which there is yet some moisture
I, , v. 'fHfXS.
&c. Gen. B. s. 83, end '31 'am IBpill pFp the straw, the
es sEnU m.(x^Q) l) concealed, hidden; miraculous. Hag. stubble and the chaff were disputing with one another.
13 a (quot. fr. Ben Sira) '31 "|aa 'an search not into that a. e.— [Tosef. Ter. Ill, 1 7 'ari IJB ed. Zuck.
Midr. Till, to Ps. II ;
which is concealed from thee (mysteries of theosophy); from the grain before it is threshed; v., however, "i"-" '^?-] 1
a b
Naz. 62 ; a. e.—Ib. 29 paTl IB^xb "paG 'a the rule that '31 'a l"H!> *p »nbp dlpa the place was named Co-
. . .
the vow of a boy of twelve years of age is valid is merely lonia, but why does our Tanna call it Motsa? (Answ. as if
—
:
a rabbinical enactment. 2) distinguished, esp. mufla, a SOSVa) '31 pSPaiiT^fct because its inhabitants are exempt
special expert assessor at court to whom questions of law
from royal taxes, he calls it M. (v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Colonia).
are referred, instructing judge. Hor. I, 4 (if a court gave
a wrong decision) BIB Y'n blB 'a n%1 X5 in the absence of ^T\12 III m., pi. constr. \ssia (b. h.; fcB£) exit; 'a
the mufla. Ib. 4 b '31 "p-noB ina ..'a . mn ab so also, if the ra^J (abbrev. T13"ia, CS10) the night following the Sabbath;
mufla was absent, they cannot be made responsible for j"n 'a the night following a Holy Day. Tosef. Sabb. Ill,
their decision, because they ought to have informed them- a
5; Hull. 15 a. e. U3"la3. *>3i<i (or
,
IB "lab) may be eaten
selves and did not do so (therefore their judgment was after the Sabbath is past. Bets. 30 b ; Sabb. 45 a '0"T> 'a IS
not a legal act at all). Y. Snh. 1, 19 c top ",!"lb\B 'ai KIM TPtt '31 ",1ins<n not before the end of the last day of the (Suc-
'31he (the questioner) and the mufla of the court (to whom coth) festival; a. v.fr.— tWattJ "3 the period beginning
the question had been referred) went to &c. Tosef. ib ; with the end of the Sabbatical year. Shebi. IV, 2. B.
VII, 1 Tosef. Hag. II, 9 abBla ed. Zuck. (Var. absia). Sifre
; Hash. 9a ; a. fr.
— —
nnrna 747
ZHIT-,
T :
v. ansa.
t \ : ^t ^1?^' 1?^? (Mctx&fcavfflO Macedonia, esp. the
:
fcCiTlE, Cant. R. to IV, 1, read: VQftBGt, v. Kobs. yp); Gen. R. s. 37, beg.; Yoma 10 a [read:] yn 1Sai2a3 "Ha
'a IT; v. Dio'nix.
"TCWnn m. pISX) swatf, Usser.—Pl. | *'ffHU Sabb. 10 b .
'a rTVtWW .... "jlHa because its (Zoar's) settlement was fcfrj^D, ^IL^p^v.cnpa.
more recent, its sins were les^s (Yalk. Gen. 84 yaSTa).
V. N-p"'^ II.] "p0p*2 m. pi. (tip; cmp. mop a. x:a) a sort of sfafe
garments. Gen. R. s. 36 ; Cant. R. to VII, 9 ; Esth. R. to
IpuG m. (b. h. ; "p") fire-place, hearth where fire is
maintained. — 'afi rva the room (in the Temple) in which
I, 12 (expl. -bmo, Dan. Ill, 21)
ft
'
I
'
lffiUJ ; cmp. Wjbfe.
"P"iE, &np"l£ I ch. same. Targ. I Chr. II, 54.— Snh. up wood, cattle in sheds &c. Erub. II, 3; ib. 22 a lb. .
33 b '31 y\p (?"•) Tpi T^p/lalX (not Tp*j v. Rabb. D. S. X, 8. Bets. IV, 1 taM Z'Z? wood in the muktseh (stored
a. 1. Easbi '31 IS) while thy fire is burning, (go)
note ; : for the winter); a. e. — 2) store of fruits. Maasr. Ill, 2.
cut tby gourd and roast it, i. e. when listening to your Ib. I, 5 'a iT2"S"C IS until the melon is stored away. Y.
teacher give him your full attention, and you need ask Ter. II, 41 d topT1 bs in "ja bttt mil he took ten
—
no questions. iTnaaT 'a (n*a, *a) the hot spring of Ti- dry figs from the storage as tithes for ninety in the bas-
berias. Esth. R. to I, 9 "Si t3Tl "TO the waters of the hot ket (designated for immediate use, v. n';2;r); (Men. 54 b ;
spring &c; Yalk. Gen. 133 'a "m "ZZ; Gen. R. s. 79 "2 55 a Sispa). — 3) (sub. 4o) the tool specially intended (for
"0 r-r- "W the baths of &c. ; Pesik. B'shall. p. 89 b "pin cutting figs). Shebi. VIII, 6, v. ri2~r;; [Maim, the shed
~"pa (corr. ace). where figs are spread for drying.}. — 4) an animal set
'a the great Macedonian gold crown; Targ. II Esth. VI, 10 '31 MCSS'Ca 'a SOp3 when is an animal called m. (for idol-
x-:--p-a . . . »W>3. atry)? Prom the time that an act (of dedication) has
JSpTB 748 K"fitt
b
been done with it; Tern. 29* (12) lWtt) IS K5K TIBK TO *pK of *ia*). lb. I, l (7 ) dnbm nx d^-naa (Talm. ed. dnbira)
(v. Rashi's first interpret. ; second interpret. :) a m. re- can exchange what belongs to them. lb. li^pa"1 Kb 1i3an
mains forbidden only until it has been used for some ID (Talm. ed.ia *p"Paa "pK) he (the priest) cannot exchange
work (whereby its designation for the idolatrous altar is the first-born animal (although it is his as the priest's
annulled). lb. nu»a .... "iiOK 'a "pK a m. remains for- share). lb. 2 '31 bs ^n -,a d^aa you can substitute
bidden only until some act (as shearing its wool or some small cattle for large; a. fr.—V. d^ia^KlL— 2) to convert.
work) has been done with it; a. e. 4) (Sabbath law) — Yalk. Gen. 136 d3nK "Paa *3K I shall force you to abjure
muktseh, that which is not counted on for use on the Sab- your religion (Gen. R. s. 82 TailJa) ; v. laia.
bath or Holy Day (v. "jsia s. v. fOlt a. njain); forbidden Hof. "lain to be exchanged, to become sacred (without
for use or handling. Bets. 2 a KIM 'a «"3fl "armaSO ^Ka redeeming the original). Part. laia. Tem. 1,1; a. fr.,
what reason had Beth Shammai (to permit the egg laid v. supra.
on the Holy Day by a hen which is kept for laying eggs I same. Tem. 2 b "WS ^-laK
"filG ch., Af. "TCBK (Pa. "ftp)
and can, therefore, not be used for consumption on that l^aa he has also the power to exchange (v. preced.). lb.
day)? Is it not muktseh? lb. iVtt rV4 n^K 'a IT* rYWI he 10 b '31 "iB^a Kbn Kin ^W^
(Rashi "niax) he has no power
who forbids m. forbids also nolad (v. Sabb. 44 a 'a
"lb;).
to exchange, but to dedicate he has. [B. Mets. 77 a WR.
OIK^a nana not counted on (and therefore forbidden to
na^K, v. ^a.— [V. Kj-iia:*.]
handle) on account of its repulsiveness (e. g. an old clay
"11Q 11= 1aK. Y. Ber.II,5 b top "ilal p^Sa he went out
candlestick) ; "ilOiK nana
m. in consequence of a ritual
'a
and said. lb. h**Vfi1 "rial (ed. Lehm. llaKi) but say also
prohibition (e. g. a candlestick which on the entrance of
the Sabbath could not be moved because a light was what follows it.
burning on it). lb. 157 a CO yHOn nana 'a not counted "llQ, Hfo m. (b.h. TTO) myrrh. Ker. 6 a ; Y. YomalV,
;
distinguished among them (with ref. to "pSp, Jud. XI, 11; lumps of gum. Lam. R. to I, 20 (play on Tia"ran ib., as
Yalk. Num.732 d^Spa).— Fern. r1JJJWa,jpJ. niapia. Sabb. if fr. lan) 'a 'a i&ws, v. &A II.
43 b t\m 'a Km are they not muktseh (because they are
not intended for human food)?
Tta, XTfift (^TQ) ch. same. Targ. Ex. XXX, 23
(Var. Kna, Vfim, K^a, v. Berl. Targ. 0. II, p. 29). Targ.
22pm v. sispa. Prov. VII, W. Targ. Ps. XLV, 9 'TO. Targ.IIEsth. II, 5
(play on ^inSa) Vttfl K"ia ed. Lag. (oth. ed. '"<a).— Hull.
fcnplQ I m. Cipj) honor. Koh. R. to II, 20; Lev. B.
139 b (translating "rTTJ "ia, Ex.1, c.) KOI K"Ha clear (liquid)
s. 25 *31 PW^tl 'a "fin bs so much honor do you show myrrh; Meg. 10 b "Ol *"ia (Ms. 0. a. L. KOH KlTo, v. Babb.
Jew?—Ber. 28 a 'an Kt>3, v. &OJ5 ].
1
to this old D. S. a. 1. note 20).—Keth. 75 a ppffllai nnia Ar. (missing
in ed.) myrrh and musk, v. Kni'p.
fcOp"lQ II m. cmp. "rip I) [pickings,] marrow,
("ip; I,
brain\v.)XrS-Q). Targ. Job XXI, 24. Targ.Y.Deut. XXVIII, S~)"1Q I c. (b. h.; K"tJ) fear, reverence. Ab. I, 3, a. fr.
T
28'a KTDE'jal (not Klpia) which makes the brain fat (dulls D"<aiy 'a the fear of the' Lord. Ber. 28 b t^att) 'a W1HU
man's reason, v. csa). —
Hull. 93 a 'ail iS"ia"i the mem- "ll"a 'as to ib» (Ms. M. Kn^ttJ) that your fear of the Lord
brane covering the testicles and that covering the brain. be as great as the fear of man (before whom you hide
—Yalk. Gen. Ill, end; Gen. R.s.64, end n">"ipia some ed., yourselves when you want to do wrong). Kidd. 31 a D^ipn
v. K^ipa.]— V. K^p/ia II. ntsn 'ab dKn 'a n"apn the Lord (the Bible text) places
the reverence due to the mother before that due to the
tDp*Q m. compared, v. ffipJ.
father (Lev. XIX, 3). Ib. b 'a lhTW whereby is filial re-
Jl'CpiQ m.(cmp.niapa) a cucumber bed. Y.Kil.III,28 c verence shown? ; Sifra K'dosh., beg. 'a Kfl 11">K. Ab.III, 2
bot.; a. e.— PI. (fr. Kirpia) ni">irpla (Y.dial. for niKUJpla). '31 nsoia KbabKUJ but for the fear of it (the secular govern-
Ib. d 'an "pa nUJpia (not "pa) a cucumber bed between cu- ment) &c; a. fr.— Fern, form njoia, constr. niOla. Kidd.
cumber beds. 30 b Num. R. s. 15 nin 'a... It Klla this 'fear' (Koh. VIII,
.
for in Greek they call a foolish woman mora; Yalk. Zeph. called morah? *an KT*na 15>tt5ri ytX® for the hair is afraid
567 tfToa (corr. ace). Midr. Till, to Ps. IX, 21 (play on of nothing but the razor (v. XTTO); v. Midr. Sam. 1. c.
PTftD, ib.) 'a i"P3 ",3T!3 THS D53n let folly enter into
. . . . .
n" !!!!^ I
1
f. (na'n) young tree or bough.— PL Wi^'Tfto, JiniQ II m. (b. h. jrnfa; part, of WTO) rebellious.—
Succ. IV,' 5 (45 a ) MSIS Vtt) 'a (Mish. a. Ms. M. '"TO) young PL D-nia. Tanh. Huck. 9 (ref. to ffnan/Num. XX, 10)
willows; Yalk. Ps. 876. Tarn. II, 3 '"TO. D^sa"© 'an 'an ina what does this hammorim mean?
. . .
rta,
t
nia, ••
sm'a
t :
v. ^, wmto.• ' t •
v. rTTJ; Num. R. s. 19.
*|YU~nQ, Targ. Y. Lev. XIX, 36 some ed., v. JO'tia. S 1 j"173 III (jAiops, vocat. of [xojpo;, v. next art.) fool!
Pesik.' Shim'u. p. 118 b 'a ^33 snip inn PS* . . . rjV'tib like
n^iin^ f. (rdVi) perception.— PI. tyvHSJia. Num.B.
to a king who gave his son in charge of a pedagogue and
14 (some ed. 'til'TO), v. n»ann.
s.
said, never call my son fool; . . yins 'a SOlirt ft»l na
CYTia . . what does this more mean? —As in Greek they
call a fool moros; Yalk. Jer. 265; Yalk. Num. 764 "Oab...
"PID I m. (b. h.; TV) descent—PL t&tfn. Erub.56 a . plHl/Qi Targ. Ps. LV, 22, v. RrVWia.
II 1/2 II (or IJTQ) m. name of a species of locusts. Dimn m. ((JL(op6;) fool. Pesik. Shirnu, p. 118
1
', a. e.,
ToseZ Hull. Ill, 25. v. preced. art.— PL Ci-.ia, ynia. Ib. 'a ^33b . . . . V&t you
shall not call my children fools (play on d^'an, v. preced,
SP'I'TTIQ f. pi. ("n*i fo plough) furrows. Targ. Ps.
art.). Tanh. Huck. 9, v. nnia II.
CXXIX, 3 fttWlW ed. Lag. (Regia "tWWOj ed. Wil.
TTOtfTWij ed. Ven. IWttO, corr. ace). name
/ lG) l/l/J m. supposed to be the of a clean bird
S" ^ ™nO m.
1
(preced.; cmp. "im, Jon. 1, 1 3) rudder. B. with long legs and of a red color, Rashi (differ, in Ar.).
SP^T"7|Q, "*T™Q> Sp"^™lD m. (Pers. murdah mortuus, 12™nQ"m. (=zniaa; a^ia) bald-headed person. Tosef.
v.Pl.toLev.Targ.Dict.I,p. 418 1cmp. iJCrna) dead, wither- ;
Naz. 1^6 (Naz. 46 b Bmaan yp),
ed flesh. Hull. 121 a (expl, \btk, Mish. ib" IX, 1) R. J. says
KpTTO Ar. s. v. VV« (ed. a. Yalk. Job 906 KpB^ia); R.Lak. S'OIQH'IQ, T3HD pr. n. Mauretania, a district of
says, yoiO in-obsa lira (v. tA&j) [Targ. Job. XIII, 4, a gloss northwestern Africa'. Sifre Deut. 320 Yeb. 63 h (not liOcna), ;
;
Midr. Sam. ch. II '31 (n)TTO$h % tva as the word morah (expl. a^lta, II Sam. XXIV, 22), v. b^sntts.— 2) ^a^fl^e
which is used in connection with Samson (Jud. XIII, 5) (Rashi: all parts of the animal which are rough and in-
intimates that he shall be a nazarite, so also &c. (I Sam. dented).— PL as ab. Ber. 55 a Sabb. 81 a nana ^"nia the ;
I, 11); v. next w. —Num. B. s. 10 why is the razor C"l3>n) palate (or tongue &e) of an animal.
95
—
Kft^ltt 750 ponitt
Par. 1. c;
2,
Is. XLT, 15.— PI. K^-Vra. Targ. II Sam. XXIV, 22. Targ.
v. *na.
Is. XXVIII, 27 KVnn ^'n'ia (ed.Lag. W»< h. text tf«*B).-
Cant. V, 16; a. e.
does not read morekh (with 1, which may be derived from
7JP H id morigan^ a word in an incantation. Sahb. 67 a "pX and mean hope, v. TpX) but morekh (without 1) which
Ms. M. (ed. «*na). means fear, terror, despair &c (v. ?pa); Yalk. Lev. 675
(corr. ace).
jrp-]il2, 'dH HH (b. h.) Mount Moriah, the Temple
mount. Taan. II, 4, sq. '31 'an 1Tt3 n33?W Tq may He . . .
arnvmia
tt«: tt>: arprvta
arsronia, t t tjuxmx • :
i~
"*
who answered Abraham on M. M. answer your prayer cmp. nmix I) long boards, esp. the trough at the well
Targ. Y. I Gen. XXIV, 20 (ed. Amst. ni*aiia,
(h. dXirV-i).
&c. lb. 16 a Y. Ber. IV, 8C top; Cant. E. to IV, 4; Gen. E. '
Pesik. E. 40 (homiletical etymologies). corr. ace; Y. II iTaila nnnxi, corr. ace). Ib. XXX, 38;
s. 55 ; s.
41 (Y. 11 KWala, corr. ace). Targ.Y. Ex. II, 16 (ed. Amst.
n Hid,
"]i v. $*#. KTffrWBJ, corr. ace).
"Dirrmd, WwnTin
P r. n m MauHau. . .
"^DDHld, Y. Shebi. VI, end, 37 a , v. 131.
D" '
"inia "jaix 'a you may use muries prepared by a gentile sTPDHId f. (v. preced. art., cmp. jxeXia ash a. spear)
professional cook (because he puts no wine into it). Ib. spear, lance.— PI. ni*3lia. Ex. E. a. 17, end -1
^ 'a . . .33? xn
&
V f+txn SOnX a ship-load of muries. Pes. 109 a 'ai xr©p '31 it is for you my darts are prepared, which I send over
'31 a xestos measure for muries existed in Sepphoiis the waves of the sea (on your ships). Ib. '31 ">bttJ 'a my
which corresponded to the Log of the Temple; Y. Sabb. (the Lord's) darts are ready.
VIII, 1 1* bot. Y. Pes. X, 37 c bot. '=1 'El Vttp*& Kraain an
;
p-jr&l'm v. pDBWft Af. ttjiax fo a#o«p to touch. Targ. Jud. XVI, 26 yxt^HJK\
(ed. Lag. iSttJaxi, v. Xflja).
n!2 m. (OD") bruised grain, coarse bran (differ, fr.
Jp H^JIQ
b
Y. Peah VII, 20 a bot.; Keth. 112 a
m. (b. h.: 3^) seat, sitting. Y. Ber. IX, 13 a top
fQW). Y. Sot. I, 17
" ;
Ss?pH*0
mony of rising and sitting down at funerals; a. fr. aiaia —
f. (DD"i) destruction, ruins. Targ. Prov. —
trsb, v. yb. Esp.'a (nxaia) the uncleanness caused by an
XXVI, 26* (h. text IptX&a). unclean man's sitting, the unclean seat (Lev. XV, 4). Kel.
/"-=r X-3q. ;
^ v.
I, 5 tf\ 331Ua Xaaa causes uncleanness of couch and seat;
KBp 'a the anterior edge of a notch in a y_ 'Uj"lD (b. h.; r r*) protector, aid, esp. (by adopt-
knife cuts smoothly (the skin and flesh) and the posterior ing the phrase Deut. XXII, 27 ) means of saving a be-
edge tears the vital parts (D">3at3). Men. 94 b "TOS nclla trothed damsel assaulted. Snh. 73 a iai baa fib 'a By xn
tlb (Rashi KttHlO) he attache sto the shipshaped cake a yiDYl? bia^'iD but if there is aid, any means to save her
projection. ispermitted (even by the death of the assailant). Ib. C
'31 pX 'a Tib if there is another way of saving her, you
TVETW2 f. (b. h.; &P) inheritance. Snh. 59 a (ref. to
dare not kill him.
Deut. XXXIII, 4) Ettb xbl 'a our inheritance, not
lib it is
theirs. lb. '38 bttfia 'a naiH 1JW according to him who rjljlD, v. ptiia.
S7H"E f. (v. -•:), xnpijiUJ 'a a solution of pounded jDlL _ Moxoene, a town east of the upper
pr. n. pi.
myrrh-gum. Y. Ber. VI, 10 a bot. Tigris sources. Kidd. 71 b
'a 12 Babylonia extends (for
they come out last. Ib. '31 'S "On *ijn rHX (not rPlBiai) niD, rfiD (b. h.) to die. Gitt, VII, 3, a. fr. ->na DSt if I
some read n'moshoth, others mashoshoth &c. he who reads should die. Gen. R. on littr, Gen. I, 31) nam
s. 9 (play
;
wsA. calls them so, because they feel their way in walk- nia aia behold, good to die.—Kidd. 72 b '31 *1 natt53
it is
ing (old people); B. Mets. 21 b when R. died. M.Kat. 28 a D1KnS na if one dies suddenly.
6 b '31
. .
; Taan. 130
VOB 'J
pare. M. Kat. 27 b '31 xrevx "Xn Anm (v. Rabb. D. S. put him to death in the manner legally prescribed, you
a. 1. note; ed. incorr.) let that woman have her shroud in must execute judgment by whatever means you can. Ib.
readiness. B. Kam. 92 b uia *pS3& XE31X prepare a saddle 56 b "mbs fWnra n^iai acts on which a Jewish court
. . .
for thy back, v. XS31X. passes a sentence of death. Tam. 1. c.(in Chald. dict.)fia
95*
— — —
rwo 752 STE
laXS
live?
FW
..
. . .
Hof. nam to be put to death. Keth. 87b rpD3 fWW "IFfi/G, v. ina.
T "T
those put to death by the sword. Snh. 55 b rTf^'J'WU'UJ
are put to death on her account; a. fr. 111 l!Q m. (b. h.; *\ty*) remainder, surplus. Shek.IV,3
'31 iTMtt Iriia what remains over of the surplus fund of
ITnZJ ch. same, v. n^a.
&c. lb. 4. Men. 83 b nosn 'a what has not been used of
n ]Q m. (b. h.; preced.) death. Ab. II, 4 tfP T2 . .)>& the money (or the animals) dedicated for the Passover
— PI.
.
~nia do not trust thyself (that thou wilt not sin) until sacrifice; a. fr. rrhrria. Y. Yoma V, beg. 42 b ^fcOn
a"na rlT 'and behold, it was very good' (Gen. I, 31) this Mill., end QiT^irYia their remnants.
refers to the angel of death; a. fr.
"THE),
T
fcnSTC ch. 1) same. Targ. 0. Ex. XVI, 23.
DIG, SriQ a. e.—Lev. R. s.
Targ. Y. II Ex. XII, 34 (h. text -nlXUia);
I ch. same. Targ. Ex. X, 17. Targ. Jer.
XI, 19 'at KaO poison; a. fr. — Targ. Y. Gen. XXXV, 18 34,end '31 "pba iwia ... 13 when she talked a surplus of
fern.— Sabb. 88 b 'al XaD, v. supra; Yoma 72 b .— Yeb. 63 a words (more than necessai-y) on the Sabbath.— PL &t^rn"i?3,
'aa ^pn !*W|i something harder than death. M.Kat. 28 b n^^nia. Num.R. s. 11 '31 'a p^K how many days (above
v. B^Orl ; a. fr.
,
Targ. Ez. XXXIV, 13.— [Targ. Y. I Deu't. XVIII, 8 tirVra, wa^a.— P/. ninata. Lam. R. to 1, 16 nsaus nnaa isax i-n
v. bOfria.] '31 'a behold, our mother built seven altars and offered
S33rrM2
T
m. (preced.) 1) residence. — PI. "pSSnia. Targ. &s*2jD m., pi. ''Vfita (v. bat) foliage in a bag, bolster
Ex. X , 23. lb. XXXV, 3 (Y. II "vna tV±); a. fr.— 2) seat, used by the shepherd; [Ar. short pieces of matting]. Succ.
chair. —PI. as ab. Targ. II Esth. I, 2. 20 a, expl. ^3/ina, q. v. Ib. b ^3Ta Ms. M. (ed. nrbama).
Km™, T :
v. annual.
t :
&02]D, r03JI3
(some ed. X3537a).—Y. B. Mets. V, beg. 10 a 'ab
m. fist) seller. Targ. Is.
Tl
XXIV,
-pTa -inii
2
X^mij,
t: pi. wftmo.
't-j* v. xbna.
t - :
if prices rise above that, woe to the seller (on time).
Esth. R. to III, 6 mjajab ni? ill (not WfiV) woe to him
"j^PQ m. (TWO) 2, ch. IV
pestilence. Sifra B'huck. Par.
who sells it (the king's purple). Pesik. R. s.21, v. WOT II.
(ref. to nfcna, Lev. raa .... nbnaan nsa a XXVI, 16) 'a
plague which causes confusion among men, and which is &02£|£l, '5?^P same - Tar S- Ez.VII, 12, sq. (ed.
that? It is the plague of pestilence (epidemic); Yalk. Wil. 'niTa). 'Targ. II Esth. Ill, 11 ; a. e.
Lev. 673.
AVD (denom. of Ma; b. h. T^a) to mix icine icith xcater,
fcOiTID ch. same. Targ. 0. Num. XVII, 15 (Y. fem., spices &c. to temper; in gen. to the cups, to offer drink.
; fill
sub. rina). lb. XXXI, 16. Targ. Ps. LXXVIII, 50 Ms. (ed. Ab. Zar. 58 b (to one who used 136a) 13Ta xaiNI why do
tiniaa); a. fr.— Taan. 8 b v. SUED. Snh. 29 a Yeb. 114 b , ;
you not say m'zago? Ib. 1*0$ WTOttJ **"• wine which a
(prov.) '31 'a nin *p«j aia a pestilence may last seven
mixed for drinking. Ib. 59 a '31 D"n33 IflTa"! Hlan
gentile
years, yet none dies before his time, a. e. [Targ. Y. II — wine which gentiles mixed and Jews drank. Pes. X, 2
Num. xxni, io. ya-nap "pania, read 'jfi ttniaj '31 D13 lb 13Ta they (the attendants) offer him the first
Pes. VII, 13 VivA to serve the wine; a. fr. —Part. pass, a*i*a
!
'~2 like mixed wine; expl. ib. 7 '21 BhpSTI "TO two
II, 6 PI "J'2, v. next w.
thirds water &c, v. supra; Sabb. 75 a a. fr. b) combined. ; —
Num. K. s. 2, beg. paWa..n'ia lpa ,
rVO in eighteen biblical M5)I2 II or S5)2 I m. (cmp. KTTOR) crystal, glass.
passages are Moses and Aaron combined (the predicate Yoma 35 b 'an Klarb as the wine shines through a glass
being in the singular number as if they were one person). cup (be it ever so thick). PI. ^ata or ^sna. B. Bath. 73 b
Nif. 3TO3 to be mixed. Y. Ab. Zar.V, 45 a bot. ;2 ': '-£X Knam'a "nn(Bashb. tO, v. Eabb.D.S. a. 1. note 300) two
'2' 'Z~'S even if the quantity finally added to produce the cups of wine. [Y. Nidd. II, 50 b top '21 SOX "Waal, v. ata.]
required proportion was a permitted substance; Y. Orl.
II, 62 b bot. 5SiJ|U II pr.n. pi. 3fa2ya. Gen. E.s.34, end; Yalk.Gen,
Pi. art to clarify, make 61 'art... ',n rt where are you from? Said they, from
clear. Cant. B. to VII, 4 (play
on art, ib.) the Sanhedrin '21 Maa XlSlUJ which makes the Mazga. Ib. '21 'a rt D^M SOX I am a scholar from M.,
law clear for her (the congregation). and it contains no more than two stands (for students).
jpTOB rt»ha Sift X2X (not^atani) 'and like mixed WlTS m. (art) wine-mixer, butler. Targ.Y. Gen. XL,
wine', says Abba . . ., like a cup filled with mixed wine, 5; a.e. — Y. Sabb. I, 3a hot.— PI. X-lirt. Targ.Y. Gen.
seen from without (through the glass). Bab. ib. 20 a VT1 XL, 1 ; a. e.
'a - except the discharge which has the color of a mix-
ture of one third wine &c. ; a. e. — 2) temperament, dis- 71 \'\]72 or I l~"^2 f. (v. nil) travelling bag contain-
position. Gen. E. s. 28 ;i . . . . feta (not irm) the king's ing provision &c. Kel. XX, 1 Mish. ed. (Talm. ed. ITrvra,
disposition is bad (he is illiberal). Willi, corr. ace; ed. Dehr. rrnTT3,'Var. in Maim. Jllia).
Ned.55 a '2-
Tffi'ia -"in this prepared wine tastes like that '21 "HTJ l^ilia 'ai door and post were my witnesses in Egypt
prepared by &c; Erub.54 a '21 X3"rt *XH B.Mets.60 a 'a VX (ib. XII, 23) when I passed . . . and said, my servants are
ST STa TH wine which I mixed is easily distinguished the sons of Israel and not servants of servants &c. Ib.
— — ; —
NfittTtt 754 njwa
door is the tenant's duty (not the owner's). Men. 44 a fctTpSfi'TQ I f. (preced.) loan ;
'a "Hfl creditor. Targ.
'an "ja -liBB requires no m. lb. innsa 'a lb "pNIU \o he Ps. LXV1, 12." Targ.Y. Deut. XV, 2 (ed. Amsterd. Nnsiia).
who has no m. at his door. lb. 34 a nnx 'aa a^n is bound
to have one m. at the door; a. v. fr.— Y. Meg. IV, 75 c bot. SrPDTO, NrPSilH II f. (qti) threatening, rebuke,
S btiJ iW^hd n^a the case of the m. in the house of Rabbi. wrath. Targ. 0. Deut.' XXVIII, 20 'a ed. Berl. (oth. ed. a.
—Yoma 11' *TTP htWO the m. in a private house. PL as Y. 'a, 'a). Targ. Ps. XVIII, 9. Targ. Is. XXX, 17 ; a. fr.
""1"15Q a
m. (b. h.; Ill or Tit) compress. Y. Sabb. II, 5
^rin?Q ch. same, door-post; door-post inscription.
top 'a nxiDSU) he had made a compress
"raa Kb. . .'a njXlES if
Targ. Ps. CXXI, 5 '3V'a bbaa *,a ed. Lag. (missing in oth.
out of it, it would have been clean; now that he soaked
ed.) for the sake of the ni'zuzah &c. Targ.Y. Deut. XX,
it in oil, is it not the same as if he had made it a com-
5 ; a. e. —Men. 33 a 'a
*b sap fasten the m'zuzah for me.
press?
a '31
Ab. Zar. 1 l 'a Xtn saw the inscription at tbe entrance
a. e.—PL WJWW,
pJWRJ, ftWtB. Targ. Lam. 11,9 (h. text i \~T\)12 m. ch. (v. preced.) an implement for mashing
T
'n-'-Q). Targ! Deut. VI, 9; a.e.— [Targ. I Sam. I, 9 "nwo }», c
olives &c. Y. Sabb. XVII, 16 b top; Y. Bets. I, 60 , v. KT*t,
missing in ed. Lag.]
—PL "nita. Sabb. 123 a .
arrDira,
t •
:
aroto
t t
* **&** q : T ! •
. v. TTW2, 9
Kei. xx,/J
i, v. mita.
tt : *
only water and salt are not called mazon, but all other four cubits from your neighbor's spout, so that he can
food is included in mazon; Gen.R. s.94, beg. Eiub. VIII,2 put up a ladder (to repair it). lb. 22 b TOSHUa 'a an in-
a
nniSO '3 'a food for two meals. Ber. VIII, 8 'an inxb clined spout (under which people can pass). lb. 59 'a
for the after-meal (dessert). lb. 'an bs "paa he says the pa bll) a spout made of masonry. Tosef. Toh. IX, 15 'an '
grace after meal. lb. 5 '21 'ai 13 the benediction for the '31 hPVflD nn^nia a spout which an unclean person broke
light, then for the meal, then for the spices &c; Pes. 103 a . apart while it was receiving and discharging liquids;
—'an roia, v. ^a.—
Ber. VI, 8 isiTa aim and this was a. fr.
his meal.— Y. Yeb. XV, 14 d bot. nisahl ftVHft "a the ali-
"'TQ pr. n. pi. Mazi, near Tyre (v. Hildesh. Beitr., p. 27,
mentation of wife and daughters (after a man's death).
note 192). Y. Dem. II, 22 (1
top ; Tosef. Shebi. IV, 7 ywta
lb. VII, 8 a bot. 'j'f+tima ni;an 'a the obligation to support
ed. Zuck. (Var. f^tq, b^ta).
the daughters from a man's estate is a Rabbinical enact-
ment; a. fr. —
PL ni:iTa. Ber. ^na SOia (abbrev. 35 b 'a
#yi2, Wl]T2, fcOpQ m. collect, noun (XT, cmp. Ktia;
a"aa) (Blessed be he) who created various kinds of food. T
Syr. pi. Kta, p .Sm. 2064) Vtair. Targ.Y. Deut. XXI, 12.—
Keth. IV, 6 ma 'aa a^n bound to support his daughter.
Naz. 39 a '31 'a Tan (Rashi WO'a) does hair grow from
lb. XI, 2 'a n? "pX she cannot claim alimentation. lb. 3
beneath or from above?—Meg. 18 a n^taa "jsna nin was
"
ni2a 'ab I have sold (a portion of my widowhood) for
i
husband supports her, and they (the heirs) must give her
loosened her hair. lb. to^nab ftfy V**} he cut your hair
the equivalent of her support; a. fr.
off (shaved you all over). Yeb.ll6 b Tpta "nnD loosen thy
Sabb. VIII, 1 0l3n rA5/*ia "''is as much wine as is required '31 nsUJ 'a bill not the day's planet, but the constellation
for a cup (of benediction) to be mixed with water. Keth. of the hour (of birth) has influence. Ib. '31 B^sna *a the
61 a VQtl '3 offering the wine cup (by the wife). Tosef. planet (of birth) makes wise, rich &c. Ib. bxiHT? 'a "pX
Sot. I, 2 Oirn 'a ">13 as much time as is required for pre- Israel is not dependent on nativity; a. v. fr.
Sabb. 53 b , a. fr. 'a tvb I"PiO BIX man has a guardian angel
E*j v. 'jo. (chance of recovery from a disease fatal to beasts). Taan.
29 b frt*9 y*l his luck is shaky (bad), opp. tvfatQ 8013.
~"~'Y2 m.pl. ($11) frightening demons. Targ. Y. Num. Koh. B. to VII, 15, a. e. 'a sneip, v. 3>BB; a. v. fr. — PI.
VI, 24.'
X"*5$a, xrtta. Targ.Y. Num. VH, 84. Targ. Is. XLVII, —
13 TOW (constr.; ed. Ven. I nibja h. form).— Targ. Koh.
DVQ'TD, Yalk. Prov. 935, '
v. Jpffn.
t
VII, 15. Ib. IX, 2; a.fr.— Sabb.l46 a lin Wrt*q pH^jJO)
: •
. . .
dwelling in Abbayi's school house. PI. X^p"1*^, "pjahjc, if the forked head of the soup-ladle is broken off, v.
-p-fr. Targ. Job V, 7. Targ. Ps. LXXXIX^ 33 (ed. Lag. yhBO^ail Tosef. ib. B. Mets. Ill, 6.— Sabb. XVII, 2 (122 b ),
;
'tia); a. e.— Hull. 105 b 'a TTOWl tflWH because demons v. ta'~a.
frequent there ; a. e.
fctm"TQ, Targ.Y. II Ex. XIV, 25, v. BtrtWJ.
Itf ?P"J2 f. (v. xp^t H) irrigating channel (h. nssn).
Targ. I Kings XVIII, 32; 35 (ed. Wil. Xn£ . . . ). Targ. "i"— 12J2 m. pi. (='Btata, transpos. of mat, v. *T**Bls
H Kings XVIII, 17 ; Targ. Is. VU, 3. cmp. S»W for asttS ; as to Bt for tt cmp. X^C*?, X^BtltS)
music, siceet melodies. Targ. Job XXXVI, 11 (Ms. X^^02;
apTft], v. M^ija. h. text Diaisa). — Hebr. constr. iBiata. Hag. I4 b *
(
nn 'a
M?31 the musical entertainments at a wedding (Y. ib. II,
2l2 m. (b.h. ;?T3,cmp. Arab. wa«2i^hospitium)[sf afion
77 a bot. -jp.n twb ftfWP ~r"- "-33).
o/ £Ae stars,] constellation of the Zodiac; in gen. planet.
Gen. E. s. 10 '31 131?n laiatt) 'a Br there is a planet that "112)2 m. (b. h.; "iat) soh#, ^saJm. Lev. B. s. 10 'an
finishes its circuit in thirty days . ., in twelve months &c. '31 Bnx htn psalm (Ps. XCH) was composed by Adam.
this
Ib. '31 '-2 . . . rYlVra S"1 TDbna n513 the Venus passes the
'
Midr.Till. toPs. IV; a. fr.— PI. niniata, Cniata, "plat a.
twelve constellations in ten months, requiring for each Y. Ber. IV, 7 d bot.; Y. Taan. II, 65 c top '31 '3 ir* 1333
station twenty
days; a. fr. PI. rtWO. Ib. Ber. 32 b
five corresponding to the eighteen psalms &c. Y. Sabb. XVI,
'31 have created twelve stations in the
'a "ICS f^ffi I
15 c Treat. Sof'rim ch. XVI, 11 'a nxa one hundred . . .
;
heavens, and for each station I have appointed thirty and forty seven psalms (Pss. I and II, IX and X, XLII
legions (of stars), v. SOOCa. Tosef. ib. VII (VI), 6 . . nxiin and XLIII forming severally one psalm). Lev.B. s.4 nX3
["f ~cr] 'an rxi he who sees the sun, the moon and the '31 lax 'a Cflffil (notQ^llUSl) one hundred and two psalms
stars and planets in their original position (at the end had David composed (up to Ps. CIV, counting Ps. I and
of a lunisolar period). Sabb. 75 a '31 rMftlptl SlWtl the cal- II, Ps. XLH and XLIII severally one psalm, v. Ber. 9
b
culation of periods and constellations. Gen. B.s. 25; Y. Pes. bot., a. Var. in Ms. M. in Babb. D. S. a. 1., a. Yalk. Ps.
b
1, 27 top 'SI 'an Iffiao X? the planets did no service during fr.
862); a.
the year of the flood a.fr.-'ai tSKXSP& T3.1S (abbrev. C"l3r);
idolater, v. ~cr, a. i~nl33\ —Trnsf. (astrology) constellation 5$"112J2 ch. same. Lev.B. s. 34 'a"! X3^3S nVl31 and
at one's birth, planet, destiny; guardian angel, angel of the entire' contents of the psalm (CIX). — P/."p*llata. Koh.
destiny. Gen. B. "p "f^
s. 10 -1 'a 15 f»6WJ .... 3T3? jib E. to VII, 8 '31 '3 "piax T&W the ones recited psalms,
there is not an herb which has not a planet in heaven the others alphabetic acrostics; Buth. B. to III, 13; Yalk.
that strikes it and says, Growl Sabb. 156 a D'P ?$a XP — Koh. 974 IBPWBU.
—
wra 756 awrn:
of )l) 'Bh "wan a jpZate urcift mowy partitions (each of ling is' done. Yoma IV, 3 '31 '»3 33p received the blood
which, if separated, may be a receptacle). Kel.XVI, 1. in the bowl. Num. R. s. 13 ntt)3Vi 1533 'a the bowl is
™)$I3 (sec. r. of *», 151) /o ^isf yarn. Sot. VI, 1 IS jugular veins. Hull. 93 b ; Pes. 74 b *tm Ib. (used as a
n™llD m. (b. h.; nit) winnowing fan. Kel. XIII, 7; nSlHQ (nna) protest to prevent the claim of un-
f.
T'bul Yom IV, 6. TosefcKel. B. Bath. VII, 3. SifraB'huck. disturbed possession (v. nptn). B. Bath. 38
a a. e. K?W 'a
,
'Q '•fe from Carthagene eastward. Tam. I, 3 'an "pi '31 "pXI diStt) ^SSS a protest is valid, if made in the presence
in an eastern direction. lb. 4 11533 3113 inita? east of the of two witnesses, nor is it necessary to say, Write; i. e.
bridge. Ib. II, 4 nnita facing east, lb. Ill, 2 ; Yoma III, 1 they may write a document to that effect without being
'an 33 i3B, v. IlKl. — Sabb. 156 b
(Chald. diet.) Waplai especially authorized; a. fr.
a 113^
. ^nnjQ m. (preced.) eastern. Tam.VI, 1 'an the eastern- &c. Nidd.IV, 7. Tosef. Yeb. XII, 4; Yeb. 99 'a3 . .
.
most light on the candle-stick; a. fr. PI. BfsrtWtt. lb. gave birth to two children (each to one child) in a hiding
; —
«am2 757 ruttiirna
hidden olives are knocked down (Maim.); [the working n nriD, Targ.Y. II Num. XXXIV, 6, v. Ktfria.
men searching after the hidden olives (other comment.)].
Peah VII, 2 'an -|bni»a (Bart. KianaTl Ms. M. -fbnniUa) ;
mo, T T
v. ina.
from the time the mahdbe is gone; Y. ib. 20 a hot. nsbn
'an (ed. Ven. SiV*l); expl. 13"cn ns TWVV (v. ia"tt2) ^lllE, v. anna.
-
T - : t :
*nSi3naiI,i»i.D' SiDrrQ m. 1
(homiletic trans-
SrVOTlnQ f. (preced.) indication; 'a la the officer
pos. of *naa, asif from n35) bursting forth, idle talk. Men.
of a community who indicates the boundaries ofproperties;
topographical engineer. B. Bath. 68 a sq. (Var. in Mss.
63 a (play on nana) tiZti ^anais SW^n it atones for the ,
S ^ UnZQ m. (aan) stick for beating cumin &c. Targ. > iMaJ m.(b.h.; tin, ttn,cmp. tsu,evo:, templum; Assyr.
Is. XXVIlf; 27. mahaza town, Del. Hebr. Langu. p. 62) harbor, market-
place (cmp. Ber. 57 a identifying Ttt with Tina, Ps. CVII,
30), esp. Mahoz, prob. a coast district. Arakh. Ill, 2;
tn'habbalta (v. ban 1), because she is pledged in the hands a. v. fr.
of death (with ref. to Ex. XXII. 25). Gen. E. s. 60, v.
KtY^n II. ncSnllQ m. (preced.) 1) belonging to harbors or trad-
ing places.— PI. "Wina. Targ. II Esth. VIII, 13.— 2) of
fOriD f. tfWSrt) pan. Men. V, 8 fa 'an
(b. h., v.
Mahoza, v. nxDtina.
FftiS nV the mahdbath has no lid '31 nBS 'a the m. is ;
n
flat, and what is baked in it is a thick mass (contrad. to ]pHQ m. (preced. wds.) of Mahoz. Mekh. B'shall. s. 3
nirn-a); Sifra Vayikra, N'dab., Par. 10, ch. XII; Lev.E. Abba Jose 'an of Mahoz.
s. 3; a. e.
!SrP]nnQ
T
f. woman of Mahoza.— PI. KrWina.
ch. a
l-inD m. rope around the neck of the animal
("ttn) the
Kidd. 72 b 'a -ona xnnx aas^ab Asheri (ed.'a xnnst Eashi
tied to the ivagon (Hai G. a. oth.) [the pin fastening the marry one of those Mahoza women.
; 'aa xnnx) to
yoke to the pole to prevent the wagon from vacillating
(being ISn), Maim.]. Kel. XIV, 4. nSDJIriQm. (preced.) of Mahoza. Erub. 57 a Yalk. ;
96
— —
•nms 758 TDHfc
"R FlQ m. pi. (tfin) idolatrous oracles. Targ. Hos. Ill, 4 "Hire, Y. Ab. Zar. I, 39 c , v. T*)*ia.
Lag,
II, 3.-2) blotted out. Yeb. 24 a
(ref. to Deut. XXV, 6) taifi
v. xnna.]
'a lattJUJ D^DS excluding the eunuch whose name is any-
how blotted out; Y. ib. IV, 5 C top 'a lOWtt) nt NS^ (not fcCntlQ, v. anna, a. fcttina.
- -' -: -
TT : t l t
"dp d"i3b 'a nor does the law concerning the planting of ^fri!0, M^D m. pi. (used as sing.; ijn) appearance.
the mahol apply to a small vineyard. Ib. 'a 1? tt5^ the law Targ.O. Lev. XIII, 3; a. e. (some ed. 'a). — With suffix
does apply to it. Ib. 'ail ba^D (prob. to be read bad) it ^niina, SSntna. Ib. 4; ib. 20 (some ed. fro); a. fr.
p"ini2, PflQ
m. (pna 2) strike, an instrument for
VII, 1 KabSH hWtna )M*X "jinxi and you shall be the ad-
miration of the world.
levelling a measure of grain &c. Kel. XVII, 16; Tosef.
ib. B. Mets. VII, 9 '31 lintt) 'an the strike which has a fcOpinD, Ned. 10 b ,read: iOptaa.
(secret) receptacle for a piece of metal (to increase its
pressure fraudulently); Koh. R. to IX, 13 pnan. B. Bath.
"iTjna, v. ^itna.
89 b Yalk. Lev. 618 '51 ttS>Vl bltf 'an "pttJW f« the strike nPljQ, nriD, tr Tie
v nna,
;
.
- t - 1
must not be made : "
not make the strike thick on one side and thin on the ^b ffrpPft) to snuff, trim with a pin. Bets. 32 b "p^Wa;
other; a. e.—Pl. d^pina. Y. Yoma I, 38 c bot. Lev. R. s. 21 '31 nK you may trim the wick expl. ib. X3U3in ^IIS to ;
Cp3 btt) *,nipina the strikes sent with the measures were remove the charred top; Y. ib. IV, 62 c bot.— Sabb. 90 a ;
of silver. Men. 107 a '31 nd "j^amaUJ Ar., Rashi a. Ms. M. Men. (ed.
7
ftSDlTO) it was used for trimming the wicks and cleansing the occupant's presence? —Keth. ll a
tirnra she protested
the snouts of the candlestick. — [rcrtia, v. EH".] against her conversion in childhood. Pes.88 a nifiab t&tLi
she has the privilege of protesting (declaring her pref-
"— ijE f. (Oil I) 1) weed/?, jh'h. Sabb. VI, 1 nrxtt) "Q erence); a. fr. — 2) (with z\ or TO. of the person) to fore-
r; -
r: a mohat without a hole, i. e. a dress or hair-pin; warn, interfere, try to prevent. Sabb. 55 b bot. tVWO "CBa
ib. 3 napan '- XIT X5
a needle, lb. I, 3 '=1 iorraa Br*T*l *« xbl -:sm . . . lb (not Wlb,
Eabb. D. 8. a. 1. note) v.
the tailor must not go out with his needle near Sabbath it was for Ph. to forewarn Hofni, and he did not. Ib. a
eve; ib. ll b '31 rcrrn '~~ with his needle stuck in his dm ftap* xb tna vt*a dxid (Ms. m. ibap irvo) that . . .
garment; Tosef. ib. I, 8. Sabb. XVII, 2 J* 'B a small f if they warned them, they would not have heeded them.
(sewing) needle, O'Xpc ~ - the sack-needle (for loose and Pes. IV, 8, a. e. BTQ 1FQ xb they did not prohibit their
coarse webs); Kel. XIII, 5. Y.M.Kat.I, 80 d bot. Orl.I,4,v. doing so; a. fr.— Cant. R. to IV, 12 bs 9Ta(l) nl33.ri 1T03
r_'--z a. fr.— 2) stitch. Y. B. Kam. X, end,7 c '2 xba the length
; 'Z' JQ3CP the daughters (in their father's absence) entered
of a stitch which those of . . . interpreted to mean C""';=:: a protest concerning themselves and gave themselves
•a x;~: double the length of a stitch; Bar K. used the away to husbands (Pesik. B'shall., p. 82 a , a. e. ipO?P3
expression Ol '~~ TZ'L" xv~ as much as is required for TOXP3).
making a stitch (carrying the needle), which E. J. inter- Hif. nrran 1) to dissolve, dilute. Y. Pes. Ill, beg. 29 d
preted "an r;-r.: (D'wbSD) double &c; Bab. ib. H9 b xVs pann nx Tl if (by boiling) he made a mush of the leavened
t3 X; -= '-':
Vim "2 the length of a stitch and besides it matter (made it unrecognizable). Hull. 120 a ; Y. Maas. Sh.
a thread the length of a stitch (Bashi: the length of a II,beg.53 b ,a.e., v.X^S; a. fr. (interchanging with nrran).—
needle).— PI. tram, "pona (m.). Y. Kidd. I, 58 c bot.; Y. Tosef. Par. IX (VIII),8 11X3 ^jOTl (not "**&) if he thawed
Shebu. VI, beg. 36 d "2 "SO two needles (or pins).
96 b
Sabb. the frozen water by artificial heat. — [Midi*. Till. to Ps.VI,7
'Z'
y nuT Bj Tptn . . . "nUHI the embroiderers of curtains Ttnach, read noaai, v. nos.]— 2) to rub off, cleanse, polish.
threw their spools (v. rwvr?) one to the other; a. fr. B. Bath. V, 10 TnlppttJa tttvoq cleanses his weights. Lev.
R. s. 7 (play on DTTT3, Ps. LXVI, 15)m5pa nrraa Bttlflfl rT13
S'»H « ch. same, 1) needle, pin. Targ.Y. Ex. XXI, 6;
like him who wipes a dish (licks the remnants up); Pesik.
Deut. XV, 17 (h. text r:rra).— 2) stitching. Targ. Y. Ex.
Eth Korb., p. 61
a
; Pesik. R. s.16; a. e—Pirke d'R. El. ch.
XXVI, 36, a. fr. "a ITO stitched embroidery (h. text cp"i). XVII by rubbing her
!"PS32 nrrs"? she produces a sound
— Ber. 63 a WYPuUtl '- stitching in lines or furrows (quilt-
hands sympathy with the mourners). 3) (denom. of
(in —
ing).— PI. pOTTO. Y. Yeb.XII, 12 d bot.— Y. Ber.IV,7 d top; n~-:r2) to recognize as an authority; in gen. to autlwrize;
Y. Taan.IV,67 d "2 TOS making needles.— X*:;r:*2. Targ.Is.
to appoint. Snh. 23 a nmbs n">3.n iningrp "CaTi bs xb . . .
Sabb. 32 a "H"; 13 TO xr^X WTO «T«n (Ar.Var. K03ITO) washed away, v. "i?X. Tosef. Par. 1. c. WWa (fr. WTO)
let the maid continue her rebellion, it will all go under the water was thawed up. Gen. R. s. 28 -pyarraOX '"X . .
one rod (in her hour of need a woman's sins are remem-
'3. .even the millstone was washed away. Ib. ima" ! R33Q1 1
"TO, HTO ,(nn?2) (b.h.; v. nrra) tortib, wipe out; ^tyZy Sn^2 I, (nni2 J ch. same, 1) to dissolve, mash
tow ear out, destroy. [In Talm. mostly prr:.] Erub.l3 a Sot. ; (by stirring &c.j. Pes. 40 b Wra IT& VVQ XE'i X3n Ms. M.
n, 4 b
) (ref to nrrai, Num. V, 23) rvirrak brro z\rz (Mish.
( 1 . (insert XITp) for R. himself they made a mush with flour
pr^n?) a writing which one can wash off. Gen. R. s. 23 of parched grains (v. XD^pn); ed. 'SI rib Tra..X21 (read
(play on 5X",r^, Gen. IV, 18) '=1 ^:X jTffe I shall wipe rvb) R. himself had a mush made for himself &c. Ib.
them out of the world; a. e. — V. ^fTa T
'21 X-Pip n-?^:b Ms. M. (ed. rin-c^b) to make a mush &c.
Pi. ii'n'rz [to strike out, annul,] 1) to protest against. (corresp. to h. V?13). V. xn^p. —
2) to wipe off, blot out. —
B. Bath. 38 b D"0)B ".ZZ '"2 if he entered a protest against Targ. Is. XXV, 8. Targ. Ex. XXXII, 32; a. fr.—3) to pro-
the illegitimate occupation of his property in the presence test, v. infra.
of two (v. i-isr-;). Ib. '31 r+.-i- oi must he protest in Pa. ^rra, Af. "rr;x l) to protest, forewarn, interfere.
96*
^ffiO 760 nsTna
a
Targ. Koh. VIII, 4.— B. Bath. 38 **tnA rtfy ">»:m he ought ation. Y.Pes.VII,34 a bot., expl.mna (Lev. XIII, 24)nmTt
to have entered a protest. Ib.39 ^>TraP 0;Tia>), v. Kn^ma.
b nmTi K?1 it is and is not healed up (has only a thin cover-
Keth. ll a N^Ttaa she may protest (against her conversion ing). Neg. I, 5. Sifra Thazr., Neg., ch. II, Par. 2 nmrra
b
in childhood'). T, B. Bath. II, 18 hot. '31 flTO?, v. &&Rl$i OT33 if the half-healed part of it is as large as a bean,
a
to mna?, Prov. xxxi, 3) '3i m*na . . . nntn be on thy
fctrranx, corr. ace.) weak vinegar. Gitt. 69 nam:* 'ffl'an^
guard against those things which are (the cause of) the
(some ed. n for n) it (the liver) is dissolved. — 3) to be
enervation of kings.
declared approved (nnaia). Sabb. 1. c. &033 'N the person
has become an approved physician 35*>ap 'X the amulet
; Nb nn niD, Gen. R. s. 77 pOpB'Wl 'a ( Ar. some ed. fc&rna),
is considered approved. lb. 61* snap anaai &033 btJOO*l 15 a corrupt., prob. for ttfjSna a mat (bale) of silk ;
(Cant.
early ed. (later ed. nnaiai . . .nnaiai, read '"ra Ms. 0. ; R. to HI, 6 trta 3U) nVan).
Trams, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 1) until both, the person
&trpna, P i. of anna.
and the amulet, have been approved; a. e.
smite, wouM<£-Targ.Ex.VII,20. Targ. IIEsth. 11,21 nttf riTPlD f. (Tra) pardon. Yoma VII, 1 ; Sot. VII, 7 J»S
SOTi the serpent will bite him; a.v.fr. —Part. Tra, RTlOj y&t\ nbTra'the benediction offering praise for forgiveness
pi. fjtVO, y*1lP. lb. XXI, 19 (Y. tP^rlO, corr. ace). Targ. of guilt. Y. B. Kam. VIII, end, 6 C mablS 'a 1? ffk will
Is. X, 15. Targ.Y. Gen. e.— Part. pass. pi. Tra
Ill, 15; a. never be forgiven. Snh. 44 b ; a. fr.
'31 TraT when thou strikest a child, thou must strike it ^^THD I m.= h. V^n, a wall of loosely piled stones.
only with a shoe-strap. M. Kat. 17 a ^113 133^ Tra r+tfTi Targ. Ez.'xiII, 10, sq. (ed. Lag. KSMno, R e gia Sana).
was striking a grown up son. Gen. R. s.4l, a. e. PilOS "pit XTnn II, wenm
t . : '
v.
t i • l
BWTTQ Tja as soon as thou sayest, 'strike', I shall strike.
Snh. 109 b '31 Knmx? Tidl (v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) when n^riQ I f. (ytya) striking, wounding. Snh. 91 b (ref.
a person struck his neighbor's wife, and she miscarried to Deut. XXXII, 39) '31 TlKd nsiSII 'a na as striking and
&c. ; a. fr.—V. NITra. healing refer to the same person, so do death and life
Ithpe. Trans to be smitten. Targ. II Sam. XI, 15. Targ. refer to the same person; Yalk. Deut, 946 "^na (corr. ace).
Esth. VII, 9 TllbS Tram mpff (Ezra VI, 11) and hanging
PI2TTO II f. (pm
B.Bath.2 b or y$n) 1) division.
thereon he shall be flogged (to death). means a
smiPS 'a sa^K may I not say, m'hitsah (ib. I, 1)
[Targ. Is. LIX, 5 Btjfia ed. Wil., read &Ona, or with ed. Ib. 3 a v. R^ft; a. e.— Esp. (in Sabbath law) a partition
,
Lag. mna.]— Denom. ten handbreadths high, to mark a space off as private
ground pTlTl niim). Erub. VIII.7 '31 r\b IB* 3"i<K naS . .
thing to live on (a permanent source of income). Sifre rusalem) for consuming (the second tithes) aipp? 'a the ;
Num. 159; Yalk. Num. 787 'an mdl tPpVM markets and limit for protecting it (as having once entered the sacred
a provision store (v. KniTj). — 2) [healing,] light cicatriz- precinct). Lev. R. s. 26 T3£Ta3 iOS 'with me' (I Sam.
- ;
XXVIII, 19) in my division (in heaven). lb. rVRBI "•b f» ness to a neighbor, and then remits the debt, it stands
atXTtTOi C32"b I am not permitted to enter thy compart- remitted (and the buyer of the note must settle with the
ment. Num. B. s. 20 *,rS""Ta their compartment. Gen. — creditor). Ib. inbrra she remitted it. Y. B. Mets. VI, end,
B. 8. 98 (play on OTBI, Gen. XLIX, 23) irrr-a ib«J his ll a **C3ia C!~tb ibnail) to whom custom officers remitted
camp-fellows (brothers); a. fr a
PI. l fijftltil. Erub. 89 'S3 — '
the fine. Ib. wbrra "Olbs ttt)b we remitted (the fine) for
tVTO"tfl when the partitions (between one house and the this man's sake (individually). Ber. 12 b ba b3S lb "."bnia
other) are distinguishable on the roof. Num. B. s. 7 13P3 '31 all his sins are forgiven to him. Ib. 32 a "15 ... . "O^X
"2 2"ar~ the scholars fixed camps (for sacred law); Sifre 'SI ttlb nbonl binaCTB I will not leave thee until thou
Num. 1 'ob D"a3fi 13a (v. Kel. I, 9); a. fr. — 'pi'Tra /au-s forgivest and pardonest &c. Sabb. 30 a '31 b*J *b birra for-—
concerning partitions for Sabbath purposes, v. supra. give me that particular sin (the seduction of Bathsheba)
Erub. 4 a ; Succ. 5 b . -jb bifiathou art forgiven a. v. fr. 1*11333 bs 'a to forego
; —
the honor due to one's self. Kidd. 32 a bina 1113= 'air 3XS"i . .
STISrnC ch. same, partition. Targ. Y. Num. XVII, if a father allows a son to omit the acts of reverence due
13. —Erub. 89% next w. v.
to him, his honor is remitted (the son may avail himself
of the permission) '31 'OTD 3"iil but
NKTnE (fcC^rrK) f.same, 1) partition, division.
mission &c; a. fr.
;
note once given and paid off you cannot raise a loan
'3 1331!) . . . nail) on a
X^" 1 )"":) compartment, wing, extension (cmp. ("Mr*). Targ.
again, because the security which it contains (v. PTirjX)
I Kings VI, 6 (not 'rVT3; h. text &>&, sbs). Targ.Ez.XLI,5,
a.fr.— PI. Xr:J-na, X";2VTa. Ib.6,sq. Targ. I Kings
has once been cancelled. Yoma 88 a bna'b *"m*JO (his sins)
8, sq.;
lie ready to be forgiven. Taan. 7 b '21 ibra" 3"XX unless
1. c. lb. 15, sq.; a. fr.
Israel's sins are forgiven. B. Kam.VIII, 7
""113 Xlilll) S"5X
p"H2, V. pTTQ.
'31 lb1 "pX although he pays (the fine for insulting a
neighbor), he is not forgiven (by the Lord), until he asks
np"ni2 f. (prra) 1) rubbing, blotting out. Erub. 13 b pardon a. fr. V. rib":-;.
; —
S'fl "2 flTH iT^EJSJ its preparation consists in washing (the
writing) off (Num. V, 23). Y. Sot. II, 18 a bot. ftim 'ob is 5tjEl, ^llQ ch. same. Keth. 86 a . . . brrcPrri b".pn
intended to be blotted out. Bab. ib. 18 a ; a. e. — 2) scrap- nrbrva Asheri (nnb-Tix . . . fibmn), v. binli ch.— Y. ib.
ing. Y. Sabb. VII, 10 c bot. '=1 ML'rtl 'a "*tta what scraping XIII, 35 d "? VrjO Xin he might have remitted my debt.
was done in the preparation of the Tabernacle? Kidd. 32 a rrnpib mb bTio=T*i33 bs bna, v. preced.
5>rj>*rR2 f, pj. (prra) a load counted by stricken S^H^, M?*PIE ch. =next w., cavity. — PL "pbra,
measures. B. Mets. 80 b (oth. opin.: reduced in weight by "•na. Targ. Y. fbeat. XXXII, 18 (Y. II "pbna, read : 'bra';
being icorm-eaten). v. next w.). Targ. Is. II, 19.
. ',
Sr"n)G f. (-na) web. Pes. 42 a 'a x"in(3) mVo isx 1125"ipn* the caves under the Temple have not been con-
TlTTta wilt thou weave all these things in one web secrated. Keth. lll a *"J1 niBS3 'a underground passages
(bring under one category)?; Hull. 58 b 1"l3""iria(corr. ace.); are made for them (v. blabs,). Ib. 'ab xb xavfl per- rw
Ber. 24 a W TyiU WTTttJ Ms.M. (ed. xnna,corr. ace.) ; Sabb. haps he will not be privileged to pass underground.
148 a S-irVTT3 (v. Eabb. D. S. a. 1. note). Gen. B. s. 96; a. e.—PI. m-D^-Tia, y^na. Pesik. E. s.31.
Gen. B.s. 1, beg. '31 'a 'a TOS mxtil man's body is made
NP'ra,
tt -
v. xnrra.
-: t
:
with many channels and cavities; Yalk. Ps. 835. Sifre
?jnD (sec. verb of "in II) to laugh. Shebu.34 b Bets. ; Deut. 319 (play on "bbna, Deut. 'XXXII, 18) 'a TpKWtt
14 a, a. e. '31 fibs nana they laughed at it &c. 'a who made thee full of cavities; Num. B. s. 9, beg.
'31 tfV9 I built you with many
ibx 'a 'a . . cavities, that
S'DnS, Targ. Is. Ill, 22, read HfWB^ v. XUrra. means the hearts and the kidneys.
debt): to forgive, pardon, to forego, renounce. Keth. 85 b s. 1 (re f. to Ex. XV, 26) 'SI 'a D"13 "fX DX (Xri) if there is to
WHJ ibJTOl "ftF.1 . . . "Clan if one sells a note of indebted- be no sickness among them, what healing will they need?
: ;
762 an^iioiTa
B. Mets. 107 b ; B. Kam. 92 b nna it 'a 'the sickness' means 'ab ed. (Ms. M. X^bsnab, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 80) the
(affection of) the bile &c, v. nbn. statues became smooth (effaced) and they were used as
slabs for rolling machines.
nplvtlQ r^lTO; pbn) division; separation;
f. (b. h.
'an nx"Q3 aVTO why are not the words 'that it was
.
rDnQ pr. n.
. .
Ber. 37 a 'an *p3 TYO 12 how long wilt thou put thy
. . . Targ. Y. Gen. XXIII, 8. lb. XLI, 21. Targ. Y. Deut, IV,
head between contending parties, i. e. why dost thou de- 6; a. e.
b n^DUJ 'an this
viate from the established rule? lb. 38
has been taught under a controversy of opinion. Y. Peah Vl2ty2 m., &C%$HD '
f. (sap) that which is leavened.
I, 16 a 'a ifcsa people who create strife. Y. Snh. 1, 19 c top Targ. Ex. XII, 19, sq".
halafim . . means the slaughtering knives. and further). Ib. yHX 'a the camp of the Ark in the desert
(=rr>lb 'a); Y. Sot. VIII, 22 b bot.; a. fr— PI. m'Dpa. Sifre
Y^T7I2 m., du. tpxbna, pi. "psbna (pbn, cmp. p^bn) a 1. c. "pi 'a \ubttJ there are three camps of graded sacred-
sort of windlass, loops of a rope attached to a heavy slab ness (=ni:rna).
for rolling over plastered roofing &c, v. nb"VSSa. Mace. 9'
ma ixbna oaicm) ns Var. in Ar. s. v. bsna (ed. lbxna) £<DTO m. (Gin) mercy. Targ. Is. LXIII, 9. V. pfTtt,
until the entire ramming machine slips out of his hands
(opp. to pOS3 the breaking of the rope); Y. ib. II, beg. 31
c rPQIDriQ f.(ocn II) polish,glaze. Tosef. Kel.B. Mets.
pxbnan b= nx TWIT IS (read b^BTB or WlTO) until he I, 3 '31 *,a Indiana (some
ed. 'aiOtt; R. S. to Kel. XI, 4
lets go all the loops (expl. =bnnn pDSD). Ib. **1 la*i na inappn, expl. the steel-edge of an axe) its glaze is of an
'an nenaea (not psbnan) what R. J. says ('until he drops unclean material.
the whole rope') refers to the slipping of the machine;
"fiDHO m. (b. h.j -iGn) need. Cant. R. to VII, 2 bsb
Tosef. ib. II, 3 ed. Zuck. vna pbsnan \>2 ViSniB *® (read
n^iona 1*13 . . . n^la to each body according to its need
'sbnan VtffiB). M. Kat. 1, 10 (n ) xb bnx nx *psia ri
.
Ber. 29 b
. . . .
.
over cracks in the roof, or roll them over with a (small) llDnD ch. (preced.) defect, shortcoming. Targ. Y.
roller, using the hands or the feet, but not with the Num. XI, 23.
windlass, v. Y. ib. 81 a top.
lect. "buna rests — [The Var.
upon a popular from ppa. The inter-
transposition, as if
^"^!"toOP f - Pi- (preced.) defects (of sight). Bekh.
44 a xb'a b3X but mere defective eye-sight does not dis-
pretation of bsna by commentators as trowel does not
qualify (opp. perfect blindness). Ib. pia 'a the disquali-
fit the context]
fication from defective eye-sight is derived from p" (Lev.
S^^prizO m. pi., ch. same. M. Kat. 25 b lini . . ISntiJiX XXI, 20).
— — —
K'dTE 763 pntt
Nv"^, 'a xra pr.xx.yl. Matha M'hasia (or Mahseia, were clean. Hull.28 b 3.113 'abs 'a half (of the vital organ)
cut and half uncut is considered as if the larger portion
v. Jer. XXXII, 12), prob. a suburb of Sura (v. Berl.Beitr.
z. Geogr., sq). Keth. 4*. Ber. 17 b "31 'a 'a "03 the
were cut. Lev. R. s. 10 'a na51S roViSn repentance effects
p. 45,
half (the atonement) ; a. fr.
(gentile) inhabitants of M.M. a'e obstinate. Kidd. 33 a . B.
Kam. b b
119 Snh. Hor. 3b
. 7 ; .
bsnn,
T-t--'1
rf.D' bsnz2,
T -
,
' —.
rbsna
IT —• "1
v. f**
It-:-
" OljQ, r\12 adv. (Vcr) complete measure. Targ.
SbXTIQ
T -
f., v. vsbxrva.
t - -
I Kings VII, 26, a. e. (h. text Vo*). : : ' : :
II, 9 (ed. Wil. ^Sr-;) salt-mines. Targ. Ez. XLVII, 11. rD^ijS f. (v. nbsin) matting used for partition, cover-
ing &c, in gen. mat. Succ. I, 11 vnp 'a a reed mat. Tosef.
rH"l£l"iD f. (n£n) 1) mine. Keth. 79 b ?p->S Ptt 'a an
alum-mine.— 2) product of the mine. Ah. Zar. 33 b (expl.
ib. 1, 10 XSirPE V» 'a ; Succ. 20 a WC a mat of bul-
VtJ 'a
rushes. Bets. 36 a 'si 5"? 'a "p&TtB you may spread a mat
TUB ";-) 7"1S bwa *»?3 vessels made of alum crystals.
over bricks &c; a.fr. Pl.rrbxrrz. Succ.l.c.(expl.r.l;:£"n)
3) (v. <~~'Z~ II) fruits obtained by digging, bulbous vege-
m/m
•r it 'a real mats. Y. ib. II, end, 52 c X131X ttfaPTO mattings
tables. Tosef. Maasr. I, 6 C btt '2 storaged vegetables
ofUsha.— Y. Erub. VII, 24 c top nfr femtt - (not TV**> . . .).
(some ed. "'hisr:*; pi.).
Num. E. s. 21 rfisbtrib: a. fr.
) EM/2, a mnemonical abbreviation for fityb penalty
of death, tthtfin fine of one fifth, "jV^fe not redeemable, and
KPDXnS,
- -'
r
Sb^lD
t
:
ch.
: : :
same. Gen. E. s. 33 . . Nan
z'-' forbidden to non-priests. Yeb. 73 b . 'a X*in3 . . saw a poor man w rapped r
in a mat; Yalk. Ps.
t
727. — PI. "iVSTTO, S'V-Sna. Y. Sabb. VII, 10 c top. Y. Ab.
^1?H^ (or rnDTO) {.(^sn) afield ichieh is cleared Zar. Ill, 42 c top 'a Kftffptt ',i5n they covered the statues
of trees.— PI. rYhwra. Tosef. Shebi'. Ill, 18 ed. Zuck. (Var. with matting ;Koh.E.toIX,10 [read:] 'a BBtfipKi'fcK'pWn.
r""-a).
XTSIIIS m. (= "VLSftM, v. "tssn) trumpeter.— PL
&*- m C ?" H) owe causing shame. S^-^na. TaVg. II Chr. V, 13. ["p^sna, part, pi., v. ixsn.]
f-JyQ -
1
Targ. Prov.
XIX, 26.
'
;
'31
sec. r. of -pin) fo split, strike.
trtWYm nx
Talk. Deut. 946. Snh. 91 b .
m I struck
Pirke d'E.
Jerusalem
V\ a"S pnian he who rubs out in order to write over
the erasure. Sot. 18 a '31 'al nna niX 3D3 if he wrote (the
adjuration of the Sotah) by writing and washing off letter
by letter. Ib. '31 "jlni "JprTDI and washed them off in one
"fri2 m. (yxn, v. Jud. V, 11) [distributor, cmp. rffs,] cup. Sabb. 75 b np-HJ mx'a if he erased one large letter. Ib.
Zad7e for filling vessels out of the well, or the wine- or 'SI pnia3iain ntin this case he who erases, is more severely
oil-pit. Par. V, 5 'an "brr the sides of a broken ladle. Ab. dealt with than he who writes (on the Sabbath); a.fr.
Zar. 74 b ;
T. ib. V, end, 45 b Tosef. ib. VIII (IX), 1. Toh.
; Part. pass. p^na. Ab. IV, 20 'a *P"3 erased papyrus (pal-
X, 7 'a t]3l. n-n SX if he emptied the pit by using a ladle impsest). — 2) to scrape, smooth. Sabb. VII, 2 (73 a ) -cran
(to pour into the vessels).— PI. "psna. Tosef. Kel. B. Kam. "ipniam . . ipnaam) he who tans its
Mish. a.Y. ed. (Bab.
VII, 15.— [Fl. to Levy Talm. Diet. Ill, 309 a yna, fr. "ra : skin, and he who scrapes it. Y. ib. 10 c bot. E113a zV^Ti
to stir, cmp. Ps. LXVIII, 24.] pnia is guilty of an act coming under the category of
scraping. Ib. 10 a npnian he who planes the beam; a.
fr.— 3) to level, striked B. Bath.V, 11 pina V pinab, v. . .
D^nI2 m. (asn) quarry, mine. Shebi. J-:. Sabb. 153 b ; Tosef. ib. I, 17 nxD JplTO they made the
Ill, 5. Ib. 6
'"2
p«0 r.'.ns if a stone fence is less than ten handbreadths measure (of laws passed) just even (so that anything
high, comes under the category of a quarry. Y. ib. 34 c
it added would make it overflow), opp. BS^tt; Y. ib. I, 3 C a. ;
they filled the quarry before him with gold Denars. Esth. juration of the Sotah) has been washed off. B. Bath. 164 a
E. to I, 6 'SI ntn 'an this (marble) quarry had not been lav "p '2 an erasure of one day's standing, EflCfl "WB *p '3
revealed to any man before &c. an erasure two days old a. e. ;
n^TO f. (b. h.; nsn) division, half. Shek. VII, 1 'a pMw, pv^] ch. same, 1) to blot out, wash off, erase.
'ab at an equal distance from each. Hull.29 a Pes. 79 a ; 'a Targ. Num. V, 23. — B. Bath. 164 a 'si
rrt pTia Kap^ he
Slls 'a *53 half to half (if the nation is equally divided may erase it and write over it what he may choose. Ib.
between clean and unclean), we treat it as if the majority "vs'tvji pVTDT) let one erase (some writing) and compare;
—— P — —
pnr 764 antra
the signature of witnesses written over an erasure, lb. fctfnnD, TPfi'i 'a pr. n. pi. ("Wl) M'hirta d'Yattir
164 a a.fr.-P/. "ppna. Ib. 161 b '31
;
-p*l2*. 'an b3 all erasures [the Cave Region ofY., v. Hildesh. Beitr., p. 25), in Upper
written over must be ratified (on the margin). Galilee. Y. Shebi. VI, 36°; Tosef. ib. IV, U MmnO; Sifre
nr*ny.
the erasure (written over) of one paper cannot be com-
pared to that of another paper. Ib. 'a bs &0n3irt we . . . riDt^riQ f- (b. h.; a^Tj) 1) thought, plan. Ber. 6P
witnesses have signed our names over an erasure; a. e. '31 'ad nbs'nbnnd was the original plan to create &c.
it
2) papyrus. Meg. 19 a top (explaining h"*$). Kidd. 40 a ""IB nUTOU) 'a an intention which bears fruit
(is carried out). Ib. '31 nB*i2Sa naiB 'a the merit of a good
&$pnO m. (pha 2) stricken measure. Targ. Y. Lev. intention does the Lord (in rewarding) add to that of a
xix, 35", o'pp. KHraJm good deed; Y. Peah I, 16 b top; a. fr. — 2) troubled mind,
care, apprehension. Snh. 26 b '31 nbsia 'a trouble (about
n\12 m. (b. h.; = infc*a; inx) weatf day, future day.
sustenance) affects the memory even for the words of
Mekh.Bo. 18 '31 VQ&90 'a ID'* there is a mahar which means (makes one forget one's learning). PL rYOiaqa.
the Law
wow (the next day), and there is a mahar which means b
Ib. 19 , v. b?3. Ib. 26 b (ref. to Ps. XI, 3) '31 r-PidlBrl-O lb*-!*
some future time; Yalk. Ex. 225.— Ber. 28 a nPNl "OK 'ab
if this wicked man's plans be not frustrated, what will
'31 to-morrow I and you &c. Sot. 48 b b31N Ha . *»a bs
the righteous man do?
. .
'31 'ab he who has bread in his basket and says, what
shall I have to eat to-morrow? &c. Y. Gitt. II, 44 a bot. — rQl^riD f. (b. h.; preced.) design, art.— 'a P3xba a
'31 'ab son nb^b Kin it makes no difference whether the
productive work (with a direct purpose). Bets. 13 '; Hag.
1
n*irra f., constr. n*jna. Men. 65 b u"i*» 'a rdu>n 'aa 'the
the Sabbath) productive work (by which you affect the
morrow of the Sabbath' (Lev. XXIII, 11) means the day property of an object, not mere changing of position,
after the first day of the Festival (Passover). Ib. WW IN
planless efforts &c).
rWDifO Pdtf" 'ab Stbx may it not mean the morrow after
the regular weekly Sabbath ? ; a. e. — d*;ri*ina day after SPD^riQ ch. (preced. wds.) \)plan; art. Targ. Jer.
to-morroio. Midr. Till, to Ps. XII '31 -jbs 'abl and the day XLIX^ 20. Targ.IIChr. XXVI, 15; a. fr. — PI. K^-"5,
after to-morrow we shall go &c. *,31*ina. Targ. Is. LV, 8, sq. Targ. Ez. XXXVIII, a. fr.—
10 ;
b
2) trouble. Erub. 29 'a *>blidai and drive trouble away.
"1HQ, SnPlD
T
ch. same. Targ. Ex. XVII, 9. Targ.
Prov. XXVII, fr.— Lev. R. s.34 K3n ton n*<b 'ab
1 ''a^"1; a. dimness
"P^riiO m. (Tj^n) darkening, -pa^^S? "jr^n-a
to-morrow she (the soul) is no more here. Y. Gitt. II, Targ.Y. Deut. XXVIII, 65 'a! (not 'at; h.
of eye-sight.
44 b top ina*i K"ina the day after to-morrow; a. e.
text wv -,rb3).
mj"nnD f.pl. (TO) strings (of meat, fish &c). Tosef. nnjQ, riHD, part. act. a. pass. Af. of nnp.
Shek. Ill, 10 'a if the meat found was on strings; Y. ib.
VII, beg. 50 c 'a Vtt dN.—B. Mets, II, 1 d*>5.*l blU 'a fish on XETIQ f. (preced.) declivity.— PI. fttna. Lev.R.s.18,
strings. Tosef. ib. II, 1 niai*l*lp buJ 'a axes strung to- v. Krwina.
gether; a. e.
SPHD, ^rPj/2 f. Ona II) 1) deficiency. Targ. Prov.
?|1"lnQ" m. (Tpn) singe, burn (wound). Targ. Y. Ex. X, 20 (h/text aras).— 2) defect. Targ. Cant. IV, 7 (h. text
XXI, 25.' dia).— 3) stroke, plague, slaughter (corresp. to h. nsa; v.
npnr 765 ncfc
WTO ]I).— Targ. Josh. X, 10. Targ. Y.Ex. IX, 27 (ed. Amst.
fctrfenMSE,
T-' HmaiSn,
TT v. xr-_:
BWto). lb. xxiii, 25 rra (nna), v. wnno; a. ft.—PL T T T - X :- -
fc
fljoj KMTO. Targ. 0. Deut. XXVIII, 59 (Y. yWTO)j a. fr.— 5^ ,!lp;2T2Q m. pi. (v. next w.), 'O ^3 (n^2) slaughter-
Targ. Y. Lev. XXYI, 18 xrxrxa. — Targ. Prov. XX, 30 ing place (in the Temple). Eduy. VIII, 4, a. e.—Kel. XV,
n~-r,-2 (ed. Lag. KTilrTO, Var. ''BltTO, corr. ace); Targ. Y. 6; Tosef. ib. B. Mets. V, 7, v. rtaTO.
Deut. XXIX, 21 WTniTO (fr. KWB).-[V. XVna,]
DTjS^C m. pi. (n33) slaughtering ; 'an PFO, slaughter-
nrjIl/G nr^) 1) coal-pan. Kel.
f. (b. h.; II, 3 iWifi 'a ing place (in the Temple). Midd. Ill, 5 (Mish. ed.D^nrva).
a coal-pan the rims of which are broken off (having a Ab. V, 5 (Strack a. other pointed ed. read a^rEKa).
flat plate only), opp. ib. 7 nab'3 '32. Yoraa V, 1; a. e —
2) smiff-dish.—Pl. niniro. Men. 88 b iPT/Ettu/ rrtlpte 7X" l
""t-"' "Z'2'C c. (r=-jH) l) coin, medal (v. X'^STO).
-::n TO the tongs and the snuff-dishes of the candlestick B. Earn. 97 u sq. 'an nbO£:i 'rn bv ... mban if one loans
were not made out of the Kikkar of gold; Yalk. Ex. money and that coin was afterwards
in a certain coin,
*
369; a. e. repealed, '31 ni3 he must pay him in the
X21V1 'a lb (
one loans &c, and the coin was in the meantime made
. . .
*---- B. Mets. 45 b,
nwtd, T¥TP-> v -
larger (heavier), '31 FltXTtl 'a lb )T\M. sq.,
law allowing to kill one breaking in (Ex. XXII, 1)? Snh. — '31 bl23
great &c. ;
Moses introduced as a type of prayer, O God, the
a. fr.
72 b '31 :; 'a xbx "b 'px the text speaks only of breaking
in, whence can be proven that the thief found on one's
it
fcOZ"!!^ch. same, coin, medal. Targ. II Esth. m, 9
roof &c. may be killed? Ib. 'SI IT 17— rna his breaking — workers in the mint. Targ. Esth. IX, 4 n^saca
'a "ni3'
in serves the place of forewarning (he knew what he might
his medal (h. text tfaffl); cmp. attpiia.
expect). Ib. 103 a (ref. to -""!, II Chr. XXXTTT, 13, v. 8.
Baer, Liber Chron., p. 126, a. Rabb. D. S. to Snh. 1. c. note
rrao, V. "KT2.
200) '" - r -= nn"pn lb ns5;r the Lord made for him an
'
b
infra). Hag. II, 1 (ll ) 'ab tVff\ hbyabfia what is above
bltDQ, byU12 I (btt, ^B, v. bto^X; cmp. f») on ac-
(in heaven) and what
below (in the nether woi'ld,Rashi is
count of for the sake of. Targ.Y. I Num. XXV, 8 "p^bx 'a
','
b 'a bffl
•JOO. Y. Yoma VII, 44 ',bya b\15 ni1H»3 as the
service in heaven, so is
. .
s. 21, end
t^M II (b^lffi l)m.(bbu) moving, march(=h.2tt).
Targ. 0. beut. X, 11 (ed. Berl. ;aa), v. KiVBa II.
(not rvmiD). Y. E. Hash. II, 58 b *»btt5 Y'a the court on
earth; a. fr.
b^DlI 'm.h. (bas) handkerchief— PI. ytyiak. Yalk.
Gen. 7 Yalk. Ps. 848 'aai and by waving handkerchiefs
rHnTOQ CUTO) water pipe of a bath, gutter. Mikv.
f.
;
-
JtfFplTOO f. 1) booth, v. w^baa.— 2) (with suff. of
me£, plumb-line. Kel. XII, 8 'Bla'a Ar. a. Mish. (some ed. personal pronoun) on account of, v. b^aa.
rV&Bteaj ed. Dehr. nfijoioa; Talm. ed. nb'oblBa); Tosef.
ib.B. Bath. VII, 12 nibabBa. Kil. VI, 9 '31 mibh 'a ibifcO , v. Mia I.
(Ms. M. 'biaa) as if a plumb-line were suspended on it
(take the vertical line). — 2) stem with foliage attached to N&"©1B52, v. msbtvd.
a fruit.—PI. hftofeo (cmp. RrYllbBto). Y. Ab. Zar. 1, 39'1
,
riibl2iMaa K pine cones with their attachments
i
)"
1
bai153S' 1
Mtffi3Q,T.«a.
"ir?"
(so that they can be used for the thyrsus, v. Sm. Ant. s.
SHED or StlO? m. (MB I, v. Targ. Y. Gen. XV, 6)
v. Thyrsus). —
3) (cmp. rvbaa) a pad or cushion made of
rebellion, reproach. Targ. Job I, 22 'a "»bia Ar. s. v. IIB 2
pieces of cloth. Sabb.V, 3 'aa ba5 KS"» nb the camel must
(ed. iana, iBMa, fr. Nan II, sinful words ; h. text nbsr).
not be taken out (on the Sabbath) with the pad on his
back; expl.Y.ib. 7 b bot.,v.i<n3i35. Bab.ib.54 a !-milJpn 'aa KEl^HED, v. wnrnm
T T T - : t : - :
133ta the pad tied only to his tail (hence liable to slide
down); Tosef. ib. IV (V), 3 '31 rT*fcrYl 'an with the pad |N-2I3 m. Ojna) grinding mill for olives. Ex. R. s.
hanging (loosely lying) on his hump to let the air strike 36, beg."
through; ib. [read:] 13313 lb mifflpri 'aa KIM XUli b3S<
'31 iniisnai.— Tarn. V, 4 '31 'a 'pas there was on the top SST1T20 f. (Mail; cmp. MI-id Ps. LI, 8) kidney, loin.
Gitt. 69 b 'Sl'nipiraa'W-lX (Ar. ed.
'
of the lid (of the coal pan) a sort of pad (with which to Koh. Knnaa, some ed.
handle it). Tosef. Sabb. VI (VII), 1 '31 'a TOph he who fctrxnaa) on this (his) loin and ... on the other loin.
2 —
SEE 767 Xibt2tt
iltana, v. ibm Ithpe. "oanx to repair to. Targ. 0. Num. XXIII, 15;
a. fr.
"T2I2S, C^S)
pr.n.(=V"-~--, redupl. of 133, v.
x~33) [Chief of the Service,] Mattatron (Mittatron), name 8&BBJQ,
T - : :
v. Mxna.
t : •
ref. to Ex. XXIII, 21, cmp. Eashi a. L). Hag. 15 a tJ» XTn gave an earnest money on silk. Lev. E. s. 34 information
2* Ms.M.(ed. repeatedly " "3) saw M. to whom permission
1
was brought against them 'a 'pin3...l3 that they dealt
.riven to be seated while writing down &c. Ab. Zar. Sm. Ant. s. v. Sericum). B. Kam. 117 b XMn
in silks (v.
': -X "'inxi one informed (the royal officers) of the silk
'
Joh. 1) W
htm 'z X3 M. came and fell upon his face. Sifre Esth. I, "IB).— Gen! E. s. 40 BVP X3X 'al I am
6 (h. text
Deut. 338 [read:] '=* nKIB '" rrr, ""Z^XB with his (Moses') willing to pay the duty on silk goods. Y. B. Kam. VI,
finger Melatron pointed out to Moses &c. Talk. ib. 949 end, 5 C xba Wl 'a it (the bag) contained silk goods. Gen.
(v.
—
j-j-;j. [Gen. E. s. 5, v. lioo^a]
;
in the chain of tradition up to 'in the name of E.J. the 5^5 h3/Q m. (z\i: I) shade, cover. Targ.Y. Num. XIV, 14.
Galilean' (an editorial gloss). Y.Ber.HI,6 a top,a. tTTOO fr.
c:-X an accident (mourning) befell him. Y. PeahVHI, end, "]1503 m. (bb-j, v. bzb-J; cmp. Jer. XXII, 26) exile,
- "T'j-nand so it happened to him (as he had wished). place of banishment. Num. E. s. 7 ' t t M3 bttJ 'a the place '
f
Ib. '31 b*3"B 'z xbl and he had no chance to dine with him. of exile for those condemned to banishment. Deut. E. s.
Y. Snh. VI, 23 c Y. Hag. II, 77 d bot. xbl X^a tQO TO
; 2; ib. s. 6, v. 1~-J.
'z wanted to fetch water but could not. Ib. 78 s top bs
z- --:-. v. x:-t. [Ib. '31 TOSi *» b3, read: ptO in bs 71 'J i"I2u f. (diminutive of n^baa) a small patch. —
•tfl let each of us do &c] Y. Keth. IV, 28 b top nns^BB PL ttt*ytbf3Q, v. r'b-jz.
'z- -:x~ -xnb thou hast found that which E... said; ib.
VXWnm.— Hag. 5 a Xlp ^xnb 'a 'z when he came to this Sr"^"^Q f. f>») l) javelin, v. b'ja.— 2) thrusting.—
verse. Snh. 100 a *y\ 735" ~'~z ~z when (in preparing wrap- *,i33X mhzi-z stoning to death,v. xrsibisx. Targ.Y. Ex. XXXI,
pers for the scrolls) they came to the roll of Esther; a. 15; a. e.
and plucked those which were not. Hull. 112 a XBB !"!Xmn
'31 'al a slave is chattel, and chattel (in E. Mei^s opinion)
rpb'JD, Lam. R. to III, 7, v. HtyfO. TMT2Q, 'UPD m. (aaa) jfce/inc, t*se of the root aia.
Tosef. B. Mets. VI, 18 (ref. to tStffi, p 8 XV,
. 5) '31 ntn 'art
SSTlwIDP f. (bVj) protection, shade. Targ. O. Lev. (ed. Zuck. aia^an) we know not in what sense this 'de-
XXIII, 43 Ms. (v. Bed. Targ. 0. II, p. 37), v. M$baa. cline' is meant; Y. ib. V, end, 10 d 'aa^an; [Yalk. Ps. 665
'31 ais'rt this yimmot &c.].
I"pbnG f. (nVj) patch, strip; lining. Kel. XXVII, 12
'31 niyin 'a S]S even a new piece of that stuff. Y.Meg. I,71 d "pQIQQ chamber, treasury; treas-
m. (b.h. ; "jaw) secret
top 'an "pbial and mended by underlining a patch. Gen.
is
ure.— PI. eroia-ja. Num.R. s. 9 'an -pnb . . . lb^nrn the
K. s. 4, beg. S">p*lb 'a niW let there be made a lining to
1
inhabitants of the city began to put their gold and silver
the firmament (be made stronger). Kel. XXVI, 2 T*bs> nba in the secret chambers of the fortress; Tanh.Naso5. Lev.
nfeCfflh nx (R. S. nibaa) if he underlined the bag. Tosef.
R. s. 1 'an "bin he goes (to her) through secret walks
OhoLXIV, 6 Zeb. 94 a a. fr.— Trnsf. a strip of land. Lam.
; ;
(of the palace), v. next w. Cant. R. to I, 1, v. iZJSn; a. e.
R, to III, 7 (ref. to "H2>n mi, ib.) '31 bU3 'a It (not il^CJa)
that means the Samaritan enclave (between Galilee and rPjlQDEl f. (preced.) secrecy— PI. rTV^iaaa. Tosef.
Judaea).— PI. ni^aa. Ib. introd., end 'a 'a nnix yisnm Dem. II, 9 'an . .mn (Var. ni3laaan, rWfraooa, corr. ace.)
they planted the land by strips (not the whole at a time); if they repent in secret, opp. fcOCmsn; Ab. Zar.7 a Bekh. ;
Y. Keth. XII, 35 b top nsnu» nn^n 'a 'a the land was burn- 31 a .—Lam. R., introd. (R. Josh.l)'an "jm!* "piniS TVl (some
a
ed up strip-wise; Y. Kil. IX, 32 c Pesik. Dibre, p. 114 ; ; ed. FYTOaiian) they worshipped idols in secret; Yalk. Ez.
(Yalk. Dan. 1066 rYP3boa). Lam. R. introd. (R. Abbahu 3, 348.— Gen. R. s. 52 'an "bin he goes to her in secret; ib.
ref. to Ez. XXIV, 6) Qibia ltl 'a 'a they were exiled by s. 74 (v. preced.). Ib. s. 17 'an nab why did he do it se-
districts (not all at once); Yalk. Ez. 362.—Dimin. rv^aa, cretly (while Adam was asleep)? —Pesik. R. s. 8 whatever
rv^Vja; pi. WDib-ja.'baa. Sabb. I25 a 'pwB 'a (Ar.
'3i ",nn a man does '31 "jttjnn 'an in secret, in the dark or openly
ni^aa) strips of less than three square handbreadths Yalk. Prov. 959. Pesik. R. 1. c. rYV'OaaanO whatever is
Succ. 16 a ; B. Bath. 20 a ; a. e. — Yalk. Dan. 1066, v. supra. hidden in the secret chambers (of the heart) a. e. ;
#yyj!2, STJD m. f>te I) shelter, hut, booth. Targ. rD"lQt2D f. (preced.) treasure in charge. Snh. 100 b
Ps. X^ 9 (Ms. KVfva).— Y. Succ. Ill, beg. 53° &6&B rVfc T&S (quot. fr. Ben Sira) SOU) 'a n^njrtb nn a daughter is to her
'31put up a festive booth for himself in the street. PI. father a false treasure (causing anxiety). PI. rii's 3iaaa.
X'baa (N^aa). Targ. 0. Lev. XXIII, 42 (ed. Amst. rYjbaa, Midr. Till, to Ps. CXIX, 17.—V. preced.
corr. ace). Targ. II Sam. XI, 11; a. fr.
asfinog, v. *&$.
RTubUD, NDbtQQ f. same. Targ. Is. I, 8. Targ.
Jon. iV, 5. Targ. Y.Lev. XXIII, 42 ; a. e. — Constr. nb'Ja fcCV^lEIGQ, Y. B. Bath. VI, end, 15 c , v. Htf^OOq.
(nVaa). Targ. 0. ib. 43 rfsoa (Ms. I n^Vja, III t^tttt
pi.). Targ. Is. IV, 6. — Esp. festive booth, Succah. Succ. fctH'OGiQ
T
m. fiaa) 1) hiding place. Targ. Is. XXXII,
3" 'bbaal xaiSN Ms. M. (ed. anbiaa, anbaa, v. Rabb. D. 14.— 2) hidden object.— PI. "piaiSO. Targ. Ob. 6; Targ.
Jer. XLIX, 10 (some ed. '"laaa).
S. a. 1. note) at the entrance of the Succah. Ib. 28 b 'an in
the Succah, 'aa in without the Succah (in the house &c).
Y. M. Kat. Ill, 82 a '31 rr*$B0 PWl if his (the mourner's)
^r^HIQTDQ f. (preced.) hiding place, hidden place.
Succah is small; a. fr. — [Treat. S'mah. ch. XI, end Xribaa Targ. "is. XXII, 8 (h. text ~0a).— PI. Kn^iaaa. Targ.
Xa*i3*l the watchman's hut in the vineyard —a mistaken I Sam. XXIII, 23 (not "niaja; h. text d^nna). Targ.
gloss to ^^IIX, which found its way into the text; v. Jud. VI, 2 (not "niaaa h. text niinsa). ;
SHOES, v. ffniaaa.
bands used for tying up the instruments &c). lb.
'31 ">b33
H2I20, rC?t2Df. 1) same. Gen.E. s. 15, beg.; Midr. opag, bgqo, v. pa.
Till, to Ps. CIV, 16 yr&on pSKattn they (the cedars) shall
enjoy their transplantation. Gen. R. s. 30 Q"m-0 KPtta SCp"—
T»: - :
sz7/c,
'
v. Kbaaa.
t - : :
v. II Sam. ch. XXI), and did not worry about it &c. Tanh. ed. Bub., B'shall. 20 '31 TWaa. *Y*n I let rain
; Yalk.
Ps. 765 bV*U (corr. ace). bread &c.
NPO^EO, Mr} • .
. f. (nrj) exhilarating effect of HOO ch., Af. lasx same. Targ. Y. Gen. II, 5. Targ.
the wine. Y. Gitt. Ill, end, 45 lj
"2»1tl UWo (the distinc- 0. ib. XIX, 24.
';
S T ^.EO f- (
n ?3) [leading astray,] prostitute. Targ. Bekh. 55 M) VOtXfca hi that rain fell in the West
Lev. XXI,(some ed. &t*3»a). Targ. Y. I Gen.
7 XXXIV, 31 (Palestine), the Euphrates is the great witness (when the
fci^DO.—K, v. next w.' Euphrates rises, it indicates that Palestine has had rain).
Taan. 6 a '31 nb?3 "a, v. K53S; a. fr— PI. •plaa,"'}?. Targ. Y.
Nr n 2oof- same> Targ- Y Gen XXXVIII) 21) sq Gen. XIX, 24. Targ. Ps. LXV, 10 Ms. (ed. sing.).— Taan. 9 b
Targ. Y. Deut. XXIII, 19.— PI. KrY*SBa. Targ. Y. Num. STWia''a ilplUa their rains are faithless (the signs of rain
XXIV, 14. Targ. Y. Gen. XLII, 9 (not'^-JO). lb. 12 W^^Oa are deceptive). fp'JBU, f+ffQ womb, v. f*TB*Ta]
constr. (not '>..).
inrTBoa his apron; Hag. II, 7. Kel.XXIV, 14 S^T ^('"2) 'aa maid, opp. n^SJls a negress (slave). In gen. lady.
towel, EHISG b» bands for scrolls; "pisri SwJS bands around Num. R. s.16 (not an-cna^); a % e.— PL nraiiaa. Y.Ned.
shrouds; fft «3 "^33 bttl and the wraps of the musical Ill, end, 38 b '31 nWTOO ^tib b'^3 (not "Vdb) this is to
instruments of the Levites (Maim.) (oth. vers. TW&n S>ttJ ; be compared to two ladies meeting one another (in car-
.;
;
riages). Ex. R. s. 19 niaYl nisi'isa TUB ed. Wil. (oth. ed. rniapX) service, post, watch, guard. Targ. 0. Num. Ill, 36
nTO . . .) two ladies apparently of equal rank. Sifre Deut. 1-Ja, v. "IBja. Targ. Is. XXI, 8. Targ. II Kings XI, 5. Targ.
317 (ref. to Deut. XXXII, 14 'with the fat of &c.) 'a &* I Chr. XVIII, 17. Targ. 0. Deut. XVIII, 8 the division on
CfiblB this alludes to their (the Roman) ladies (living in duty (h. text msaa). Targ. Ex. XIV, 24 (Bxt. WWJB; h.
fr.—Lam. R. introd. (R. Abba 2)'a C*l the chief of the city
,
b.
XiTi'
1
J nPJ3 oh. same. Hull. 105 Ned. 50 a hot. |tfl guard.— PI. tfn'TOa, W}intt8, "J^-ja, 'J'ltta. Targ. I Chr.
'a and (he hecame rich) through a husiness affair with IX, 22. Targ. II Kings XI, 18. TaVg. Ps.LXIII, 7 (ed.Wil.
M matron (v. comment.). Kidd.40
a
; a. e.— PI. ar^SVVJa. sing.; h. text nilaiTN); a. e.— V. "jinatfa. 2) safe, leather —
Targ. Esth. 11,14 (not"<3...; h. text d^UJSbS). Targ. II Chr. bag.—PI. «rhog V«yinW3. Ab.Zar.lO b t
'aB ..IT'S "TO rTtfl
XXXV, 25 (h. text tthtf !). 'si (Rashi in early ed». KriK'jKtfa, wyiwsa, v. Rabb. D. S.
a. 1. note 80) he sent him gold dust in bags and wheat on
T\T\T£D t v. mjga. IX, 1 '31 naa "va he who (if one) died and left &c. lb.
VI, 7 '31 TYl rirVrlTB "a he through whose field there is a
*THT3Q m. rtn») funnel. Tosef. Kel. B.Mets.III, 12 public passage. lb. 6 '31 na^J lb WttJ "<a he who has a
Zuck. a funnel which is broken
'31 plB3ttj''a (ed. 1*1B3tt3)
garden &c. a. v. fr— (Chald.) Ab. Zar. 41 b irVwn "HST" ^a
;
pbwreau v. rpisn-jrp. I had a scholar before me, and I would &c. ; a. fr. — 3) [ts
J$DT£Dm. = XB*pI, leaf.— PI constr. iFiaa. Targ. how is it? can the first cut be combined with the second
Y. Gen.*IlI,*7. to effect &c? Naz.flirt "a . 32 b pTWO
iVw if one had . .
l^bTC^nQ, v. •ppiB'h'ja.— [Midr. Till, to Ps. XXXVI, did they know when? lb. '31 TlB "pST! ^a did they know
v. aiJBiVap.] on what day? —
Pes. 14 b a. fr. "al ^a (sub. Nr6 Nfi) is ,
p» there can be
of the Arabs the head (sting) of which is taken off. lb. no surer protest than this; a. v. fr.— PI. tr31K">a, "p31^a.
77 a 'al SOClDa KaVn Ar. a. Ms. M. 2 M.l 'a"l; ed.
(Ms. b
Ib. 'a "'"CiD (Yeb. 107 "Jl^a BJS) letters of protest. Yeb.
Vp&TStS, corr. ace.) perhaps yahef (II Sam. XV, 30) means 108 a rT»3«IKta ",n *Jl rTMBTr^p her betrothal (to another
without horse and whip? man) serves as a declaration of protest. Snh. I, 3; a. fr.
S^Hffi, '03» fcPlSDf. (n-js) l) (=h. rvnatja, twja, 0*]fc rO,(& l2$E)
i
;
m. (DXa) repulsiveness, creating
—;
(and therefore forbidden on the Sabbath, v. nxpia). Cl^a, coit. ace.) anything however bitter.
XC WC, nC"S)Q
ch. same. Y. Maas. Sh. II, 53
b
SOOTO v. K»m -
T t
XIV, 14 c '2 *T«a 3KO what is the prac- •
: : : :
bot.; Y. Sabb.
tical difference between them? It lies in the applicability
iTO, V. 15. '21 nroa 'a at all events it says 'loaves of T'rumah'; a.
dtq v. Dw. HiT'El = ftto. Targ. I Sam. XXV, 34; 36, a. e- ed.
Lag., v. 1P3.
"HJPE, Targ. Y. Ex. XV, 19 some ed., read: •**•«, v.
nrrc, v. wm
fcCT^, ^-" r. (b. h.) pr. n. pi. Mecleba, a town on Out — (not a...) m. (|xa'iouu,a;, 8., majuma) May-
the Eastern side of Jordan. Mikv. XII, 1. day; largess a kind of mock sea-fight (in
(to soldiers);
ibcj 'ab but when he (the King) goes out to celebrate his
ever it may be,] something, anything. Targ. Job VI, 6 (sec.
vers.). Targ. II Esth. I, 9.— Gitt. 56 b 'Z1 "2 -x:- - tR3 ask majuma; Yalk. Sam. 160 (Pesik. E. s. 21 DTSb; Ex. E. s.
something of me that I may grant thee. Hor. 13
b
.Xab"H .
29 rn-axll; Sifre Num. 102 mb'J3).-[P/. ttWttbrOi Lev.
"2 XI—;" " X=^X..(Ms. M. xrbi-2) is perhaps something E. s. 5 Ms. M. (ed. rrWtJWl).]
a
(a conspiracy against me) going on at college? Snh. 38 r
13 HVl "" axp
"~ xbl and they did not speak at all. Gitt. —^ i !!2
-
(2 l -)
;
whatever is connected with enjoyment. Erub. 103 b lrfl JTlTH f. pi. (homiletically=r"'x -) hundreds, (at least)
"2 xb and there is nothing more to be said against it; a. v.
fooo hutidred. Num. E. s. 13 (play on nVOWlp, Lev. XXVI,
fr.— Gen. B. s. 91 XC=^1 "'rr.z lb ""Z *x (ed.Wil. fTCO
. . .
;
13) 'a boa height of hundreds (Tanh. B'resh. 6;
rrfflp
read : T*J3Q) if we find that he argues with us about an
ed. Bub. 18 rrsx nxa). Num.E. 1. c. 2TX": t'---2 nx : z'~
-
TTC,
- STITC,
t : •
v. b^a, xb--.
• t • : •
^VD, v. wtti
; ;;
772 ©^73
nr*?
Amah, s.2.— PI. pra lh'>a, Tia. Ned. 41 a BMOh "^ina (those
!
bWl2, v.toaalll.
its hot water; (oth. explan.) '31 IhS^StiJ 'an a boiler which
has been l-emoved from the stove Y. ib. Ill, beg. 5 C "VCBttl
;
"PHI^/O f. (|j.T)Tpa, jxYiTpyj, accus.) womb, uterus. Pesik.
'an r,X when he has removed the boiler. Pes. VII, 13 'an
Zakh., p'. 23 a h^UJ 'a ~nh he severed her womb (in birth)
SSa^a the boiler for mixing the wine is placed between Tanh. Ki Thetse 4 ed. Bub. (ed. 'prVO, corr. ace); Yalk.
the two parties. Kel. XIV, 1 Tosef. ib. B. Mets. IV, 1 'an ;
Gen. R. Ip^S
Ps. 868 p*0">a3 -|Sn (corr. ace). s. 47, a. e.
"psbD bapb i*o a boiler (when defective) is susceptible of
'a ovary (Yeb. 64 b ibl tVO), v. t£& ; Pesik. R. s. 42 "ptea
uncleanness as long as it can be used for keeping coins
a. fr.
in it; a. fr.
nn
£, v. i«a.
"Dfra, v. Tana.
T : t • :
WD, V. Btt.
OW'Q, Gen. R. s. 45, beg. Ar., v. dan.
Kani. 7" (ref. to Ex. XXII, 4) pffl b® IrVlffl 'a it means the Targ.'d. Gen. XXVI, 19 (Y. ">ia). Targ. Gen. I, 2; a. fr.—
highest assessment of damage of the property of the in- Constr. TO, Ttf^, Targ. 0. Ex. XV, 19. Ib.VII, 19; a. fr.—
jured party p*fiB ba IhTttJ 'a the best property of the Targ. 0. Deut. XXIX, 10 ^33 ed. Berl (Var. Tjapa, Tp^a,
injurer is
;
fc<V SO^nst must he pay only in the best value (as property, iJOra, hiOn?. Gen. R. s. 70 '31 'a 5«lS"t)1X having
v.
TV2PT2,
""ra, v.^xi.
v. ntsa.
T T •
"
29 b .— P/. ft^a fruits oftJie mayish. Gen. R. s. 72, beg. (not nba-a). Yalk. Koh. 971 fn 99, read -,baa or "ib-aa,
(expl. rrx-v-). v. xb-2a.
piOTD, v. rt=-2.
Ber. IX, 13 a hot. one in distress T1 1& xb riTCF xb cries SDD'TZj v. xa=a. [Snh. 44 b 'o JWJ3, read: Xpaia.]
not to M. nor to Gabriel, but &c. Num. E. s. 2; Pesik. R. — ^22
s. 46 'a — r. bx= "pKl -poa "a Michael is a combination
m. (an adapt, of mille, sub. passuum) 1) mil (mile)
of MS (Ex. XV, 11) and kael (Deut. XXXIII, 26); a. fr.
= 2000 cubits. Yoma VI, 4 '"2 bab llXSiUI nraa: seven and
a half Ris for each mile. Y. Shebi. VI, 36 c top '"a 3'*i
f D
— I (b. h.) pr. n. m. Micah, 1) ML, the owner of bR'HU r>:na2 twelve mil, corresponding to the encamp-
1
an idolatrous temple (Jud. XVII). Esth. R. to III, 7 ab:i ment of the Israelites (ref. to Num. XXXIII, 8); a. fr.
'a; Snh. 103 b "2 btt "ba-: the image put up by M.; ib. jJD5
l
Fl. "b"2. Tosef. Yoma IV (III), 13. Yoma VI, 8; a. fr.—
"2 ::: the smoke rising from the sacrifices to the image 2) milestone. — PI. as ab. Yalk. Deut. 907 J-PH xb'a fib^a
&c— Ib. 101 b v. , ^BDU Shebu. 35 b Vfll "03 PTRMB br 'a na a road on which there were no milestones.
all divine names mentioned in connection with M. (Jud.
c.) are profane (not names of the Lord). Pes. 117 a 'zz't
STQ I ch. same. Hull. 139 b , v. TTB.—PL f&Q. Targ.
1.
fctr™"^.
'"•2 WMJOl "ara -"a SWW1 rara (Num. in that section
f. (te» I) food, meal. Targ. Prov. XXIII, 3.
X^tt 774 #*
and the recipient of the letter pours over it untanned ink 26) we learn that the act of circumcision is a complicated
'a fiOWl said Hanina to me, These are (idle) words; 'a Num.777 n^aiiba Wo; Pesik. R. s. 16 B^slE^a (corr. ace;
Pesik. Eth. Korb., p. 58 a nilp ^S).
'an aWN Kbs< T'O you cannot mean that this is an un-
"
truth ? But say, it was done through words (of charm, ir l
?rb^,s^a,s3Db^,^nsTa,sri^nsb^,
"It ,- t t t ,
t t : • ' : • : • : :
v. Tpa, '3i=a.
'nl 'a you may do on the Sabbath whatever is necessary
in connection with circumcision (of a child on his eighth ^b"Q m. (bVal) broken down.—PI. *,"^a. Snh. 66 a ,
day). Ib. 24 b
, a. fr. nsan &6lB 'a a circumcision not tak- v. ^«S.
ing place on the eighth day. Ib. 118
b ^» 'an at my
membrum; Y. Meg. I, 72 b bot. lTlV«3; a. v. fr.— [Targ.
Sbb^, v. Ktta.
i&m 775 T*
B. s. 1 '31 "" -bp" '" to carry this 'pen and ink' for my the Law says not to do, done &e, v. *V%. Shebu. 34 b
if ,
favor he does the court; a. v. fr. '"2 Xii x:a = "ibia VttSO, —
*j*i;S>*D, 2!C m. (u.t;Xo7C£ku>v) an apple-shaped
v. xbrsH. Hull. 10
b a. fr.— Esp. 'a Tor
(euphem., sub. ;
(v. Sm. Ant.
melon, cucumber-melon, prob. the fruit sgitasA
xniT3X*i) to let blood; to be bled. Taan. 2l b TOS nm "O
s. v.). *» 'am rmopn (Ms. m. yttlmr n rwpn)
Kii. i, 2
'a when he (the surgeon) bled a person. Hull. Ill 3 KLiTCJ
cucumbers and melopepons are not forbidden as mingled
seeds (ttt*V») ; Ter. II, 6. Y. Kil. I, 27 a bot. .'. .
p msb
'a W) on the day he was bled (Rashi: VI KtfPO). Sabb.
":""
129 a sq.; a. e.— PL xrW?, v. xb/all.
'3 M9V4Q . . . (not X""') therefore (because it is a
hybrid product of apple [jatjXov] and pepon [stxoa re-
D 12 m. pi. (b. h.; cmp. Sina) water, fluid; secretion;
rcov] they call
(missing in ed.
it Greek melopepon. Tosef. Shebi.V, 3
in
Zuck.) ","££5 -~ ip^r (Var. "poabsit) the
solution. Constr. ^pl. ftVBf^O, constr. Wa Snh. 108 a
b5bi
'a? nalTsyWl the eye-ball which (in restlessness) resemb-
real fruit melopepon (contrad.to leaves). Tosef. Ukts. II. 10
les water, v. babs. Par. VIH, 9 '31 3">3iari 'art smitten
ftha (Var. "pEba; corr. ace.). lb. 14 'pEBba. Tosef. Toh.
waters (springs or lakes formed through a catastrophe,
v, 4 ymfoar-H tn ib u pjiBBb-a, ^a Tosef. m ''
, Kii.1,1.
v. Snh. L e). Ib. tiKBBtin 'on, v. 2T3; a. v. fr.— D'O'raJfcn 'a,
e.—Yalk. Koh. 968 *2F\ ftfttfa
Ter. VIII, 6; a. . . . '"EX
3""rr:i< '" &e, v. respective determinants. rYTf* "*a juice —
even melopepons in Nisan were not absent from Solo-
of fruits (wine, date-honey, &e). Pes. 35 a sq. a. fr. ""a , ;
—
mon's table Tanh. Yithro 7 'pBBd&U ; ed. Bub. 5 "plEE^n
Cfbsn urin. Ker. 6 a a. fr.— 'an tV3 urinary. Meg. in, 2
;
;
(corr. ace).
Y. Ber. II, 4 C bot,—Hag. 3 a ",*rnaj "OX ?ftt we drink thy
&0"5£T .,
'"- ch.same. Snh.llO a 'a ^3 125 \bffVQn water, i. e.we depend on thy teaching; B. Mets. 84 b
t • :
PL MMVBfiba. Targ.Y.I Num. XI, 5 (Y. II HTgsVo, corr. all the waters of the world ; a. fr.
nVB,nfef.oafc, »st=l 1
m'QTQ, ''D' ^, v. tem.
Sifre
fr. —WV&, xna'rpb, v. "tax.
Deut. 122 rfaa xbx LfWTi "X the slave's ear must be
D"12"22, Cant. E. to vn, 9, v. Dia^ia.
bored through in the lap only Bech.37 b Kidd. 21 b xnVva3; ; ;
n>'" 2,
,
ST""D ch. same (interch. with xb"<a) l)/?ne 1^12 H
m. (b. h. cmp. y>, ",xa) kind, genus, species.
;
tcooZ, alsoa cloak of fine wool. Targ. Ez. XXVII, 18 (v. Peah n, 5 1TIX 'a one kind of seed. Ter. H, 4 poTfltl -,-x
x:"33). Targ. O.Gen.XLIX, 11, v. xbial; a. e.— Snh. 44*; a*^ a^XE bs 'aa you must not separate T'rumah from one
M. Kat. 28 b v. xbaOX.—P/. fri^P Targ.Esth.I, . 6. Targ. species to redeem fruits of another species. Ib.6 ..r"-"p-
,
Lam. n, 20 ed. Lag. (ed. ll't&UJl read: n*rb"3). — xrb"*a. *TTIX 'a cucumbers and melopepons are considered as the
Sabb. 10 b . v. 2J3b. — 2) ear-lap. Kidd. 21 b , v. preced. same species. Bice HI, 10 "U^aa 'a D-H'33n nBDin what
you add to the legally required quantity of first fruits
^r*5*!!2, Si*T2 f.=xb/an, word; thing, affair &c. must be of the same species; what is used for decorating
Targ. Prov. XXV,' 15. Targ.Y. Num. XXXI, 8 "paopl 'a the first fruits, ':"a ir'xra '- must be of a different kind.
(notxnba) some sorcery; a.fr.— Bets. 38 a baprrwa XaW —Hull. 100 a a.fr.
, b^iS xb irai f^ v. bas. Eo. 97 b , a. fr.
that I may say something acceptable. — Gitt. 23 a 'a ixb ""•- ""N'rz '
- a heterogeneous mixture (of forbidden and
'SI "HOSTl XVI what I said that..., was nothing (was not permitted things) a. v. fr.—PL D" ?'ia, fS^O, constr. "VV.
;
,
correct). — Tern. 4b , a. fr. "31 Taxi 'a 53 anything that Peah 1. c. 'a "»30 n51t if he planted on it two different
98*
— — — ;
r» 776 Wrc
seeds, lb. t^un i>TQ two kinds of wheat. Naz. VI,
**3"D, "*2Q m. (nsa) appointment
"flffi 1
to office, onfo'-
'=1 pTOSK 'a niabu? three kinds of prohibitions exist
nation. Y. Snh. I, 18 c bot. (ref. to Ez. XIII, 9 ma 3ns31
with reference to the nazarite. '"tin riSQttJ the seven
'SI) 'an nT that means tbe ordination (of teachers). Ib. 19 a
products of Palestine (Deut. VIII, 8). Bice. I, 3 ; a. fr.
bot. [read:] 'a 1i12ia its (his) appointment is valid. Y.
'an ruuan the five species of grain (wbeat, barley, rye,
R. Hash. II, 58 b top 'an mx "psbin "VD^Sfc to proclaim
oat and spelt). Ned. VII, 2; a. fr.— pblbniU) % tXfSn» the an intercalation we go by tbe dates of ordination (tbe
four species of the festive wreath, v. 3blb. Men. 111,6; a.
oldest graduate voting first); Y. Snh. I, 18 c "p^an (corr.
fr. —pas something like, in the shape of, of the nature of.
ace.).— Y. Hor. Ill, end, 48 c 'si iJO 'ab bsx but in or-
Ker. 5 b 1T3 'as drawing the shape of a crown; "O 'as
dination 'those seeing the face of tbe King (the Nasi)
W, v. "O. lb. 'si f**B inttJ 'as two drops of oil looking
are those seated first in office' (an adaptation of Esth.
l)
like pearls. Taan. 8 ; a. v. fr.
1, 14), i. e. the scholars of Tiberias, as the seat of the Nasi,
have the preference to those of the South; Esth. R. to
j
D III
m, (preced.) [a peculiar person,] sectarian,
I,14 'ias D13. Num. R. s. 15, end Di3pT,1 'a the appoint-
infidel. Ab. Zar. 65 a niaiKSLU) 'as SOil "'tl he is legally
treated like an infidel of the gentiles, i.e. like a gentile that
ment of the elders; a. fr.
has rejected the gods of his people/ Esp. Min, a Jewish — MS, *nrC, mSn ch. same. Targ. II Chr.
infidel, mostly applied to Jew- Christians (and in editions aT
XXXI, 13.— Y. Snh. ',an there (inI, 19 bot."'Sl 'ab -,1"ip
controlled by censors, often substituted by ipllUpms&c).
Babylonia) they call the ordination s'mihhutha (v. MISiaD);
Hor. ll a 'a MT iin b^srfj Ms. M. (ed. fpWfi if he eats
a.e.— P^.pilJia. Y. Taan. IV, 68 a 'a p"in iJaa ordain- nm
forbidden fat in a defiant manner (v. b?3), he is a Min;
ed only two (each year) ; Koh. R. to VII, 7 piOa (read
ib.(another opin.) V'S tSX/tn bs 'a VflTW who is a Min?
piisa).
(A Jew) who worships idols. Gitt. 45 b 'a isnsti) n"D a —
book of the Law written by a Min, contrad. to i1S3; a. *fSFty t. 13131a,
fr.— PI. ens/a, ftyva. Y. Ber. IX, i2 d bot. 'si nx i^ffl'an
the Minin asked R. Simlai &c. Tosef. B. Mets. II, 33 'an pl3]D, N|3lM, "^H m. (p?i) child, boy. Targ. Y. II
nmoam fiilaittJani the Minin, the apostates and the in- Num. XI, 12^1 N|5i3ia).—Y. Sabb. XIV, 14 d pi3iial nxiH
formers; Ab. Zar. 26 b (Rashi: idolatrous priests, Jews or mSTQi dry excrements of a child. Y. M. Kat. Ill, 81 d bot.
gentiles) ; a. fr. — Tan J"C13 the (twelfth) section inserted 'Si 'a inb nan she saw a teacher strike a child too
. . .
in the Prayer of Benedictions and containing an im- severely. Gen. R. s. 87; Yalk. ib. 145, v. K?M>I. Y.Sabb.
b
precation against the Minim. Ber. 28 b sq. (ed. diplixn) ,
I, 3 npiVa his child; a. fr.— PL Nipira, ' ipisia, '11a.
nasi 'a the species to which its (the mule's) mother be-
longs. Ib. 1W9 'a Sin lhVe all of them are considered MrplD^X? f. (preced.) girl—PI. Kn^l'S^a. Pesik. R.
one species (independent of their parentage). Ib. 66 a ni3ial s. 3, beg. 'al KliSD Xins (not pn...) like the ball of the
that which is of the same kind, rW»1 ixbl that which is girls (= h. ni33 bffl 1113, v. 1113).
'a "Q, ed. Lehm. NnjiX, read JOiX, v. Fr. ib. p. 125 b .] ^"O^D, Y. Snh. I, 18 c top 'aa, read: M^yTOO,
VXTD, v.
^ t
k;. ]^3TQ,^|TQ, v.^ah.
JPUTa,
t : •
MH^y
TT:t v. sub. -nsa.
11 trard,
,t: ticpyv,
tt: «
ipyiri
t • , : •
lib^o
Tt:
v •'
. SU b '13a.
*:•
— —
nygni 777 SVtt
I, 49 a bot.; "]? rrn 'a how many courses had you? —Y'lamd. to Num.
ib. c top nr"" - :"
-
: :" the time during which she nurses; I, quot. in Ar. X~"'i )TOD (corr. ace).
Bab. ib. 36 a ; 10
,J
; a. fr. — [Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. IV, 5, v.
r -:-;.] Hratra, ""'^w':, v . sub '--.
T^l"2, v. rp:-a.
m
srp-r^v.p?';. p"D 12, v. p"^-2.
semissis, v. C"a"~'-.
JtfpIj'C, ^Q
m. name of an undergarment (perh. lp
m
12, Y. Gitt. I, 43 b a corrupt., prob. for
, "jCS? (Gr2)
a corrupt, of manica = tunica manicata). Targ. Esth. hot-tempered. [Comment.: = X^X physician, — does not
VIII. 15 (some ed. HtyfcQ). fit the context.]
m
$T~pl j2 f. ch.=h. Wp^ia. Lam. B. to I, 1 TBI pSO^D, v. p&zz.
(*NKQ -- 6) 'z TIT ymsy twenty-four months of
nursing. pO*E> pS'r m. (pB?) rising, (sun-) rise. Targ. Ps.
XXII, 5. Targ. Cant. HI, 6, a. e., v. xnipT^.
n
rp""^, np DS (b. h.; p3^) 1) a woman giving
suck, wet-nurse, v. p:~.
f.
B. Mets. IV, 5
*"jiP"
;
_x-, v.i"-;•:.]— PI. r'-p-;"z, ':z. Tosef. Zeb. 1, 12 'ar. -~z bot. 'TW8 (corr. ace); v. "aix I.
ed. Zuck. (ed. r.^p'ZZ) or when he made the libation out fcTWD, H^TtfC, v. sub *&a
of tubes.—v. rrfyara.
t:: r •
: : • » :
0*D"IT,D*E, v. orotaem,
rf>TT2, ^l"n 'E (read R1Ttor«*1Tt)lL (pi^) [sucfrer
of animals,] hedge-hog. Targ. Y. Lev. XI, 30, v. &6">\ "^""C, — ">£ m. (rra) 1) reduction of size, the space
(Mish. ed. xr'zri, corr. ace; Var. in R. S.a.l. xr~X q. v.). far as the reduction extends. — 2) minority. Y. Pes. VII,
Y. Dem. II, 22 c bot. 34 e bot. 'ar IX ZVTZ (not 'ar 'rr*,r) do we treat the case as if
SO'E, V. X£a. ita minority. Y. Kidd. I, 59 b top. Yeb. 119 a rfl:*2a 'a a
minority of women miscarry; a. e. 3) the least of. B. —
fc$0"7-, Y'lamd. to Num. I, quoted in Ar., v. ftBfla<
Hash. ll a ; Yeb. 42 a ; Nidd. 38 b (ref. to I Sam. I, 20) '"Z
2Z'*2, ZZ'^Zj 2C12, 2*012 m. (355) fafct'na, «/7i«0 *ZV\ rWlpn the least of fkufoth (plural number) is two
<
a=h.D Q& >
X"--, partiality. Targ. Y. Ex. XXIII, (seasons, of three months each), the least of yamin is
«/>.—TP*»
3: a. e. — Targ. Y. I Gen. IV, 8 (not TWl). Targ. Prov. two days; a. e. — 4) narrowing qualification, limitation.
XXVIII. 21 -2X2 'z (read: ««).—fWWN *U taking and giv- Yoma 43 a ; B. Kam. 86°, a. fr. * T» '
- pXI 'a nnx 'a "*n
widening and narrowing the limits of the respective laws. Tanh. Mick. 10 (ref. to X'sa, Ps. XXXII, 6) 'a b3> bbfitv
Y.Sabb.VII, 10 b '31'aibx ^H K"*1 "|K akh and hu (Ex. XII, 'Dti let him pray that he may be spared the agony of
16, are limiting qualifications intimating that you must death. —dWi 'a [the pressing through of the day,] sunrise
not cut, grind &c. (on the Holy Day). Y. Ber. IX, 14 b and sunset. Gen. B. s. 92 (ref. to Ps. 1. c.) dlTi 'a nsb at
b
bot., v. "XI; a. fir. evening-time; Y. Ber. IV, 7 bot. dV bllJ l^BWB rcb (pi.)
a. fr. 'ab ttJ^n takes into consideration the minority (the 3^*72, £2
:
m. (3>3£a) middle, midst. Targ. Job VII,
possibility of the rarer cases). Yeb. 119 b , a. e. xb 'al 'a 12 (Ms. 'MlttO). Targ. Y.Deut. XXIII, 11.
XDTPlD'"'^ (a feigned part. Ithp. of th&, denomin. of 99TQi XSQFQ, 'SQ dm*** Targ.Y.Num.XVII,
VMS, a substitute of fPIS which again is a substitute of 12, sq. (ed. Amst. 3*0). Targ. Y. I, ib. XXII, 24. Targ.Y.
•TO, v. ^^d) JwiW 6e a #aA£z. Ned. 10 b ixa 'a how is I Ex. XIV, 27; a. fr. — B. Mets. 108 a [read:] !T>d32"i »aa
it, if one says mipp'hazna (for mipp'zihna) ? (Eashi: isya ">S) in the centre of his (the seller's) land).
stasia,
T - : •
v. x^-osa.
t : : •
fcCETH, N22TQ m. (=Mpsa) central, middle, be-
?[D^,v.^x.
tween extremes. Targ. Y. Lev. XIV, 17, v. X^a.— Ned.
31 b top 'a X3"dT (R. N. XS^Sa) middle goods (holding the
mean between goods which the seller is anxious to get
rid of, and such as are sought after eagerly), v. XB^n.
SpD"a, SJ5BQ m.(pB3) 1)«b#, end. Targ.Ex.XXXIV, PI. T*S2^a, i?2">a. Targ. II Chr. VI, 18 (ed. Lag. a) . W^i
"
22 (ed. Berl. *pE"«a; cod. 7 RjSttOjoth. XpT Ba, npBa; v.Berl. —Ber.l8 b
. Ker.6 b/ adin between (the other ingredients).
Targ. O.H, p. 31); ib. XXIII, 16.— P£ ^B^' 'W?- Y Ter- -
B. Mets. 108 a , v. preced.— Naz. 56 b
"jS'nax xb 'a those
VIII, 46 b
bot., sq. xraiiu 'as = h. roia ^xsia, v. xsia m. intermediate in the chain of tradition need not be men-
—2) going out, v. xbsa. tioned (only the first and the last). V. X^Sa.
I
fcrcra, nsnyu v . SUb >**.
2S>* D> v. xssa.
n
p Q, Pa. ptao, v. pw.
i \H*12 f. ("pa) [that which is squeezed in,] the joint
or collar of reeds, stalks &c. Kel. IX, 8 fSf^O bttJ ST31B 'a ^j?E> 'pTO, v %?i ^p. - — [Y. Dem. HI, beg. 26 a
the second joint of a stem of oats ; M3p bui . . . 'a of reeds. ilDba *D, read : bpa.]
"i.SZ "D, H12 m. («"isa) 1) squeezing, tvringing out (of Dp1 ^, DpD m. (d«ip) standing. Targ. Josh. IV, 3 *inx
the blood of the sacrifice). Zeb. 52 a. Ib. 65 a
; a. fr.— 'a (h. text nsa).
2) (cmp. "Wfa) exact measure. Bets. Ill, 8 "OSa . . . bind. C]X
rvnart 'a in week-days he did the same (filled the meas-
nap n a, v. xapa.
T 't 1
tXTVll v. Ktm Levi.—Y. Sabb. I, 2 C top.— Y. Naz, IX, 57 d bot. M., son of
R. Jeremiah.— Y. Pes. IV, 30 d top 'a "« members of the
rrPC Yalk. Zeph. 567, v. WTWIL Mesha family.
127 a '- '~z~—^ ""Si your words require polishing (are 'as Y1 ^" JTiaTT all forbidden connections appear to him like
incomplete).—Euphem. sexual gratification attended with a common (to which all have access). lb. "02...zbv~ 72
effusion of semen. Yeb. 55 b. the entire world appears to him like a common (he dis-
m regards other people's rights); Num. R. s. 10 "jmst WIS
p HT'12 } Tosef. Dem. IV, 13, v. ynq. 'as IpSM he considers all sins free like a common. lb.
n I L m. ("Ha) embittering, hard labor (with ref. to 'as EFPra . . . "pKJ'BCJ they (the oppressors) carry off all
Ex. I, 14). Num. R. s. 3 the family was called M'rari, 73 that belongs to them (the Jews), and their houses are
'- ftitO) an allusion to their bitter task (of carrying the left levelled like a common. Tanh. R'eh 3 fin'pnn ttttH
wooden material of tbe Tabernacle). Pesik. R. s. 15 d"H*2 '31 'a ftnbnn rtWfl 'a nsiDI D^Sp one road full of thorns
'" Miriam intimates the bitterness (of slavery); in the beginning but level in the end, and one level in
V'-3 . . .
D"i!2""] £ m. (a--2) a bird that has lost its feathers. anis-a, irrcrn, awlspp, v. snb 1^0,
Y. Meg. I, 72 b .
«Di^n ptfu Mrnstfo,
t
v. sub -sm.
-,
J
IPs HD 12 (jxupt-jxupiaos;) tfew thousand
: • I t : .' t : :
times ten thousand'. Pesik. Bahod., p. 107 b ; Yalk. Ps. 796 Db^"/2,v.arr;.
"
(corr. ace); v., however, ,
? >, 3.
CS«J '! I pr. n. pi. (v. next w.) Mesha, 1) a place in of squares, MYT3). Y. ib. II, 28 a top. Y. Erub. IV, 21 d
northern Galilee (v. Hildesh., Beitr. p. 38). Tosef. Shebi, bot. a telescope (v. nieisa) 'aa tv& na tWJt rrrrc the
IV, 11 ed. Zuck. note (Var. xr--a).— 2) M. in Babylonia, horizontal range of which he had tested before (v. Bab.
in the district of Mesene, v. fXfta. Y. Yeb. I, 3 b
; Y. Kidd. ib. 43 b).— Y. ib. V, 22 d top [read:] . . "CttJai niElsa SOaa
IV, 65 d top. Gen. R. s. 37 treHO (identified with Kflja, Gen. 'si 'aa he takes a telescope and tests its horizontal
^w"2 II, Stj""_D (StfZTXa, fiWJKTo) pr. n. m. Mesha SHOT, Vntift2, 'til2l ch. same, 1) bed.-Pl.
(= XJTOa, v. Nold. Mand. Gr., p. 64), name of several ""^-2, lyKBQ. Kidd. 39 a "2 ilea . . . 5*lT Ar. (ed. 'X'ra)
persons. Erub. 13 b x;:"a s6x . . . TSttJ *i X; Ms. M. (ed. planted the garden of the school-house in beds (of various
nmrn, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note), v. f»a PeahIL 6 X-"- plants), v. preced.— 2) plain, valley. Targ. Gen. XII, 6 (h.
— ——
*n«i£ 780 "133*
text "jibx). lb. O. XXXV, 8 (h. text fflNg). Targ. Deut. XI, Sot. 8 b '31 'a 3>3*1X fh the divine judgment taking the
30 (h. text TVSTS). lb. Ill, 10 (h. text rfohft; a. fr.— Lev. place of the four forms of capital punishment (which the
R. s. 12, beg. '0 hVra TQS Xim C]10 finally he (the drunk- Jewish courts can no longer decree) has not ceased; a. fr.
ard) will make his house a level (v. liura). Sabb. 110 b
TTOI "TB"<b 2n (sub. **1 HWITPOO) give me of what grows \]W\ '12, v\12 m. (nna) stretching, drawing tight. Y.
in the waste places of the valley (or bed) of leek. PI. M. Kat. I, 80 bot. 'a b» ana a pin used in weaving or
fl —
K**?^ T3^9 C^P)- Targ. 0. Num. XXII, 1 (Y. X*'"]UJa, embroidery to draw the thread tight, spool. Kel. XIII, 5
corr. ace). Targ. O. Deut. XI, 30; a. e. Gen. R. s. 42 — (Talm. ed. ',ima). Ib. 'ab ns^pnn (ed. Dehr. xn^ab, v.
(transl. Wj, Gen. XIV, 6) plttfl Hr*fl». lb. end (ref. to Xmall a. K$mo). Ib. 8; Yeb.43 a *zb IX lib (Kel. ed. Dehr.
"Oft*, ib. 13) Xlaai 'a.— Sabb. 1. c. "nfflitfl (Rashi KrVWJa, xmab) made for snuffing the light (v. BJT0) or as a spool.
BntiTQ'IIi *ntj"t) camp, T.^tio. 'a btf) ana (Ms. M. y*Va), v. preced.
n
p H.in" D, 1
rTQ I ch.=h. rvra to die, 6e dead. Imperf. nw, WW*. (corr. ace).
Af. max to cause death, slay. Targ. O. Gen. V, 24 mas 'a 13 the son of the decceased person.
ed. Berl. (o'th. ed. max, 'SK), Ib. XXXVIII, 7 h"W3» ed.
CS.iP/U m. (Xnx) bringing home, drawing towards one's
Berl. Targ. I Sam. XIV, 1 3 maa (ed. Lag. mnaa Polel) ; a. fr. T
Sabb. 102 a \. XFisb; [Rashi: Xira rope].— [Ukts. I,
rPQ II m., NETO, NHS
corpse. Targ. Deut. XIV, 1.
I, NM
Targ. O.
c.
Num. XIX,
(preced.) dead;
11 (ed.
self.
2 Ximan, v. xnpa.]
,
who rise before the dead (being carried to burial); a. fr. SD^^Q ( a feigned part. Ithp. of WM, as a dialectic
PI. X*ma, tf«m Targ. Num. XVII, 13; a. fr.—Y. Kidd. I,
substitute of tp", denom. of l^pi, a substitute of p" ^, 1
itself
61 c bot. 'a bs "ja^p -pWrTn 13 (not yvB+p) when they stand a substitute of 'VIS) Jw;^/ 6e a wo'iz. Ned. 10 a • v. XS'rrV ^. 1
ItfrPD, SHG II m. (infin. of Xnx) coming. Targ. Num. R.s.l2, end. Yalk. Ex. 374; a.e.— [Tanh.KiThetse 4
I SamT XVI, 4 ^a ed. Lag. (ed. Wil.Y^na); a. fr.— Gen. plrVa, read: "plp^a.]
R. s. 60 (ref. to X3a X3, Gen. XXIV, 62) '31 'aa xnx he
came from coming? Where did he go to? PI. X*ma ^Dl^a,
T - : •
v. xsina.
t - : :
tf3£TO, v. xana.
man is called makh, because he is lowly before every-
T : • t : •
the stem of 'the hroom' of the palm-tree; Tosef. ib.I, 4 ments), a treatise of the Mishnah, Tosefta, Talmud Babli
mass. Tanh. Mas'e 13 (ref. to TtXtfl, Is. VIII, 23) p"dan a. Y'rushalmi, of the Order of N'zikin.
'333 he swept them off as with a broom; Num. R. s. 23,
—12 f. (b. h.; rvr) burnt spot on the skin, burn. Neg.
• i
w 2j -, v. oasr. I ww
pr. n. Mikhvar, Makhvar, a district of
"}-'—>
Peraea. [The situation of Machaerus forbids its identi-
SrrZr^ f.ch. (*,33)=h. n:"-, brooch, buckle. Sabb.
fication with our w.] Targ. Y. I, II Num. XXXII, 1 ib. ;
"fiDDj TDD, v.
— =•:. SHKBrO, II nnzmVa; h. text rVBSft 1ir).-Y.E. Hash. II,
(not tWCdS .
(Talm. ed.30 b "H3); Yoma 39 b "1333 "«lh (Ms.O. TrOa; Ms.
M. ni"m; Ms. M 2 "rtttOB).
EDZQu ;
m.("i 3S)e/of/ies-|)ress;screJt',me. Tosef. Sabb.
XVI (XVII), 5 =-"" -';"-
bO '3 (ed. Zuck. BW3 for
. . . CM, p^lD!2 m. pi. faz, V?3; cmp. n'312)
"
curtain, cover.
corr. ace.) a domestic clothes-press which has been un- Targ.II Kings XXHI, 7 (Ar. '^zz).
screwed to take out clothes. Sabb. XX, 5 '21 p""-r"3. .. - ' 1^
UU m. defined place; plan; residence.
you may unscrew a domestic clothes-press but not screw T (b. h.;
"i'MTIBJ Y. ed. (Bab. a. Mish. tt&Q) the wound inflicted by Tr^212, v. nrvoa.
T : t • ;
ib.19 a '=-, r.-^v •-•: KTIO rr,'z'~ -the plague of the Phar-
isees' is he who advises heirs to evade paying aliment-
ation to the widow. Ib. "3 tPX IT (collect, pi.) the %%
Pharisean plague has struck her; ib. 13 "";: 'S '3 n* his
wl»!C I m. ('liz:) hoe, spud; digging with the spud. B.
friends under the pretext of benevolence have deprived
Bath. 54 a '31 1HX *B H3 HTOPTD fTO
(Ms. R. n2 'CZ'.Zl) as
him Peah VIII, 21*
of the benefit of the poor-law; Y.
soon as he has inserted the spud once, he has taken posses-
bot. —
Sot. I0 b (play on 3r=3. v. -":) 3" rtori -rz~ rfftiB
sion of the entire field. Ib. 13^3 "3, "r"3 Z'~z only the
;
punishment (lashes, v. P**33=) must be decreed by a court CE2 II m. (TOB3, v. 3J33S) 1) clapper of a bell. Midr.
of three. Ib. 10 a X&nttb nrnst-- 4a a number of lashes Till, to Ps. VII, 10 '31 ?« todai -,1332b H 3T1 like a
which is divisible by three (39); a. £r. Maccoth (Ptmish- golden bell whose clapper is inade'of a jewel*. 2)Jiaiumer,
99
; ,
ttlStt 782 w
striking with the hammer. Ab. Zar. 19 "jllhx 'a the last 1
'
Zow/y, // umble. Targ. Lev. XIII, 20, nq. —Targ. Pi o v. XVII I
stroke (driving the nail in).— [Tosef. Mikv. VI (VII), 17 14 (ed.Wil.xn.33a). Ib.XVII, 27; a.fr.— PL T^aa, X*3i3?.
B'ttrPCm ed. Zuck., read D^aiaan, v. lU3a.]
, : Targ. Is. LVII, 15. Targ. Job V, 11 ; a. fr. — Cant. E. to
IV, 4, v. preced. [—2) bolster, cushion, v. X33a.]
tfteq, Ktf&Di, m^bo C h. »>», tom^ ;
E.s.74, end (play onnnaa, Ps.LX.l) niani msni humility the show-bread in the Temple. PI. Stn/s-ca. Targ. Ex. —
(of David) and innocence Yalk. Sam. 147 irb niani ID.
;
XXV, 29 (h. textrvnpaa); a. e.— 3) (cmp.ma) a collection
a
of rules of interpretation, treatise, tract. Gitt. 44 "p" ? 1
CS^ njQ f. (Assyr. makua, v. Frankel Zeitschr. fur As- Tjirip^aa read it up in thy collection (Boraitha). Pes. 48 a
syriol. Ill, p. 53; Proceed. Soc. forBibl. Archaeol. 1887, '31 'aa m^ linxi and his reply is recorded in another
p. 103) a certain kind of boat,(low boat?). Keth.69 b X"npOX collection.—Y. Ab. Zar. IV, 44 b top 'a . . p^EX E.Y. pro-
Tm ;
(Taan. 21 a xnS^Bbl, Eabb. D. S. a. 1. note 300), v.
v. duced the M'khilta (v. infra ; v. Mekh. Mishp. s. 20, ed.
X^ipOX; [Eashi: sail]. B.Bath. 161 b 'a (^2£) drew a Weiss, p. 107, note 100). — PL "jX^sa. Lev. E. s. 3, beg.
ship in place of his name (Eashb. mast); Gitt. 36 a ; 87 b 'a 13 . . . be called a man mastering
mniai he likes to
(Eashi: sail-yard). many Mekhiltas; Koh. E.to IV, 6 'a MB (some ed. xb'^a,
TflSE f. (n=?) a bite. Koh. E. to VI, 11 [read:] Xin IX
"X^sia, v.xbsiall). Esp. M'khilta, or M. d'be R.Yish- —
mael, a Halakhic and Midrashic book on Exodus from
'a, v. •itfpy?.
ch. XII, to XXXV.
" IMwD, "n jD m. (bna) staff used for painting the T3D, v. 133.
eye. Kel. XIII, 2 cpfi ^3© 'a a painting staff the spoon-
shaped side of which is broken off; Tosef. ib. B. Mets. "TOQ, Pirke d'E. El. ch. XXXVIII, read XV3a, v.
Ithpe.
(corr. ace).
*aanx to be bent down, depressed. Targ. Ps.
Gen. E. s. 99 'a Xlil W yw^ Pirke d'E. El. ch. XXXVIII
xxxvm, 9 n^aanx (ed. Wil. maanx; h. text trail).
tWl a*ir& D^X-ilp bWW (read: X^3a). Gen. E. s. 88
'31 13M5 'a X13ip (combine into one word: xovSo[j.dy£ipa,v.
Ib. CVI, 43. Targ.' Job XXIV, 24 (Ms. to^anx).
S. compounds of xovto) they put short daggers in to their
"OEI m ., #°012, n*DQ f. '(preced.) 1) bent, cowed, shoes. Lev. E. s. 33, beg. "pT^ia (corr. ace), v. brtBHWJi
timid. Lev. E. 8. 13 [read:] X^il xa^ ",a Xp^O "tt xntTl Xlfi
'31 'a Ar. (ed. X"Oaa) an animal coming on land from the
"DlBSraD, v. ^rvmn.
water is timid, coming out of the forest, it is not; Cant. HttS^a, v. xniiaal.
T -
E. to III, 4 (corr. ace.).— 2) low. PI. X^3a. Gen. E. s. — • r
32 XVI 'a pa ix if it is one of the low mounts; (Cant. E. JJDQ (v. T^a), Eif. ^n ^o &en(7, fott'er. Tosef. Naz.
to IV, 4 X»3^aa, v. next w.). IV, 7 '31 nx ^nqa^ri I bent my head.
Nif. T)"?; fo 6e crushed. Sifre Deut, 290 13a3, v. Van.
fga WED mJ&aO, NFD'Dn umiyftm Nithpa. ~aar,2, v. Jja^a,
— —
$M3 783 C212
.->%-
:|» J ch, same, to lower, level; to humiliate. Targ. Y. ?JDDD (v. ^30) to crush.
Ex. XII, 37 'Z' trgrrcfc to level mountains. Targ. Ps. XXXV, Nithpalp. -patttrt fo &e o-usAc(7. Snh. 10 l b (Ar. ed. pr.
15 (h. text O-a:). Part. pass.: "^On, pLyvoa laid under, tgRTO); cmp. ?J»D.
bolstered. Targ. Ez. XXIII, 41, v. next w.
Pa. Tie"? same. Targ. Y. Num. XIV, 14. Targ. Prov. U u JlZ, v. next w.
XXII, 22.— Targ. Lam. Ill, 3-4. Targ. Ps. CXLVII, 6 [read :]
--""?", v. -X":; a. e.-Yoma 84 b "WW ""*? Kashi a. Ms. DDDQ pr. n. pi. (b. h. 'i»»33) Mikhmas in Benjamin.
Men. VIII, 1 (Bab. ed. 83 b 0^33a, corr. ace; v. Eabb. D.
0. (ed. TpSUU
Eabb. D. 8. a. 1. note 9; Ms. L. fOBB
, v.
"="0, v. ~rO) he subdues the flame (and produces a coal S. a. 1.); Tosef. ib. IX, 2 Dasa ed. Zuck. (Var. Oa .). .
NFD3a, v. re-..
*]I}Q, v. 1X3.
n5D!C, '"Q f. (b. h.: rtbSD) perfection.—PI. nftra, "O; OjDD m. (033) 1) storing up, laid-in stock. Y. Kil.
aw 'a (vessels) made of pure gold. Men. 29 a (expl. ant '"3, II, beg. 27 c 'a "jTT in the way of storing up (for home
II Chr.IV,21) '=1 aw 3=3 ir.b^'U it used up all the locked consumption). Gen. E. s. 31 iojra an, v. tfaaft. Y. Dem.
up gold of Solomon. IDT, 22 c top btKWW 1033a 311 'the larger portion of his
storage comes from Jews. — 2) 'a ma the lower side of the
n>0^2 m. (n*33) Destroyer, name of an angel of judg- shovel, v. Oris. Y. B. Mets. IX, beg. 12 a.
ment. Deut. E. s. 3, v. iaOTt
D".p3DD, D^.P??^ m. du. (b.h.; 033) [clothes of
Sr""^-,
T : ••
v. xr'.'ar-a.
t : - retirement,'] undergarment, drawers. Yoma VLT, 5. Ib.
23 b th Dip -an Utt* X31B that there must be no garment
553Dj
t : •
v. 333.
* :
put on before (under) the drawers; a. fr.
H55DO, Cant. E. to LT, 15, v. irrnb& "PJDUD, 212 ch. same. Targ. 0. Lev. VI, 3; a. e.
Y. ib.62 a top. Yeb. 121 a yiflPDU Tosef. ib.XIV, 6 WTUDO ; to raise toll on them. Ib. 13 a "an nx 13 mfi to him shall
(Var.nwmaaBi readr-x--:;-;. fr.r" VBfg. Kel.XXLU, 5. the toll be remitted. Tanh. Lekh 5 "pan *3» 'a 133 collect
Makhsh. V, 7. Pirke d'E. El. ch. LI LHWlT IULUJU p&lW the duty as if it were wheat; a.fr.— PI. niXD3?. Ab. d'E.
will be caught in the nets laid for them ; a. e. N. ch. XXVIII.
99*
— — ;
Ithpa. "japan:* to be chastised. Targ. Job XXXIII, 19. n*l"lDl3 f. pi. 1) (13a) sales, trnsf. m. (cmp. ninip?)
_
seller. Gen.R.s.98 (ref. to Gen.XLIX, 6 n'i33) for whom
SDDDQ
T
m. ("j33) chastiser.— PL "naDSe. Targ. Prov.
are those weapons fit? WjrT^lfilSO!) to their seller, to Esau
XXIV, 25 (ed. Lag. '^33X3, Ms. ^3X033).
who sold the birth-right (to their father). -2) (=nilba, fr.
&CVDDDQ f. (preced.) chastisement, rebuke. Targ. Ps. 133, cmp. 13a) friendship, neighborhood, neighbors. Tanh.
L, 17. lb.XXXIX, 12 (some ed. '=03, corr. ace); a. e. Vayhi 9; Gen. R. s. 99 (ref. to Gen. I. c.) X"1 WTWOa
PL xn^333a (v. next w.). lb. XXXVIII, 15. Targ. Job '31 3rT ni1ia3(ed. Wil. '1133) and some say m'kherothehem,
i
XXIII, i RWttto a ed. Lag. (corr. '113D33 or ^SSM; oth. means their neighborhoods (ed. Wil.: and some say, read
ed. sing.). it m'khorothehen) as we read (Ez. XVI, 3) &c— V. TT3-2.
fcO^D&pQ same. Targ. Job XXXI, 23 tT*SB3a Ms. 'j'HDQ, Y. Hall. I, 58 a top 'a WW (ed. Krot. "pan)
(ed. Lag. "E^Da; ed. Wil. '""SBa). prob. to be read "pisia, the dough prepared by sellers
H550D f. (b. h.; ?B3) doubling, coupling. Erub. 53 a 5l£p/Q m. (b. h. ; bti») hindrance. Succ. 62* tWW
'3 la^^n that is the reason whj it is called 'double cave'.
r 'a ixip Isaiah called the evil inclination 'hindrance' (Is.
lb. '3 iX3 why is it called &c.?— Gen. R. s. 98 im®** 9VW LVII, 14).
a
cept that which is specified as excluded; '3 i"l"~i *p^3'3 he act (to be performed on the Sabbath, v. nni). Sabb. 136
sells only that which is specified as sold. Ib. IV, 1 . . .1313(1 nbia '3 requirements for circumcision. Tosef. Pes. V, 1
'31 '3 8*b if one sells . .he has not implicitly sold &c.
., Y.Sabb.XIX, 17* top; a.fr.— 2) Makhshirin (things which
Sot. HI, 8 '31 rWia rTOJtfl 'px a woman cannot sell her make an object fit for levitical uncleanness), name of a
;
treatise of the Mishnah and Tosefta, of the Order of Targ. Prov. XXVII, 22, combining massoretic vers, with
Toharoth. one from which LXX. a. Pesh. are translated, v. ~"~"X.]
rj3r 2 m. ,
(b. h.; CJK3) sorcerer. Snh. VII, 4. lb. 11 Wl nSrD^ f. (preced.) 1) mortar. B. Bath. IV, 3 'Oh
tXBSSn".':" a sorcerer, that is, he who performs a real act hS'Opn the stationary mortar in the house. lb.65 b Tosaf. ;
of sorcery; a. ir. —
Pl. BOMBIX Tanh. Vaera 3. Snh. 67 b ib. Ill, 1 npipp; "2h a mortar hewn out of a rock in the
law against sorcerers ; a. fr. Nidd. 61 a rvmrr hfi6o "Q a hole in the ground full of
bones.
nS'^C' r f. (b. h.; preced.) sorceress. 8nh. 67 a ^rx "z
';• r"X~ by the expression 'sorceress' (Ex. XXII,
17) both JH, v. *;••:.
Kel. XUI, 2; Tosef. ib. B. Mets. Ill, 4 '=1 3rYOh fcO« "0 signatures of relatives; Gitt. 87 b Hor. ll b tnpO xb"" .
the stylus of which the pointed end is broken off, v. -~"~ : iTtii Tr.'QX he was filling his ancestors' place, was a direct
Y. Taan. VI, 69 a top "X "V™ '~- (not tftTttKO) with '='
Eithpa. x'rarh, Nithpa. «5raW to be filled. Ber. 3 b ;
these our pencils we shall march out and stab them Lam. ;
59 a '21 K^OTO "*On fS*. v. »rt*T L Y. Succ. Ill, end, 54 a
R. to II, 2 ; to III, 49. Opt B^BOPnW T9 until he has a full beard. Y. Ber. IX, 13 d
_
bot. ahl "-:"! x'--;rri be full of gold denars hKkgro httyn ;
SZrr
t -
- ch. : :
same. Ab. Zar. 22 b '
v. kta*.
tt - and it became filied with &c. Gen. R. s. 33 *&M OTOTfl «6?hh
"*;X ';? be merciful to one another. Ib. 'TsAsKtp. .VTVp
O —T »
T
J :
Jj
•
V. 2" - t : •
ch.
~""n~ "?? I saw her in distress and was filled with pity
for her a. fr.
:::::, v . woo.
;
noun, v. rtSJib^.]
timates that the Lord opened to him a spring from between
his (the ass') teeth (taking "2 as jaw). 4) an instrument — BSD h., ^b"!2 ch., v. xi=2.
t :
Di"03 bUJ 'al and the goods (in the store) belong to gen- tion, angeldom. Gen. R. s. 50; Yalk. ib. 84 'a l©ab they
Tosef.ib.I(Il), 17 bsniu^ b© 'San if the goods belong
tiles. put on the appearance of angels.
to an Israelite. Pes.53 b '31CP3b'abi;:an b3 one who throws
the profits of merchandise into the purse of scholars, i. ^V JM (°- h Pr - n. m. Malachi, the prophet. Meg.
e., gives scholars an opportunity of gaining a livelihood.— 15 a!WI8 m 'a M. means Mordecai, '31 'a la© SOp3 nabl
Sabb. 56 a DW ^M
bs lV*n T3 they (the sons of Samuel) and why is he called M. (minister)? Because he was vice-
forced goods on private people (abused their station by roy. Ib.iaiU'a the prophet's real name was M. Ib. m&rasa
making people their mercantile agents or their customers); 'a in the prophetic book of M. —Ex. R. s. 28; a. e.
XIV, 6; ib. 5; a. e.
Tosef. Sot.
PDSba, v. nsNba.
n
M>D II m. husk, glume, v. 3>ba.
Sri^ J!2 f. ch.=h. ntoba, (the priestly gift from) the
"'fcOD m. ch. C^tl) helve of an axe. Y. Bets. II, 6F fruits laid in store. Targ. 0. Num. XVIH, 27 ed. Berl.
xmba, t;:- Y. Nmbai
*••:' Iixn^ba;
top, quot. in Hiddushe Me'iri, v. *^8. (oth. ed. NntrtbajMs.I snan).
tt"i' tt: - j '
:|NvQ m.
(b. h.; "js<b to tPWft, cmp. nab) messenger, ID^JD m. (b. h. ©ab) dress, cover. Shek. V, 1 'an b'J,
never performs two missions. Snh. 96 a '31 "jaTTJ© 'a miK ftfon. Sabb. ii3 a ^©iaba #n «b©
'31 -j©iabaa na© bttJ
the name of the angel that came to Abraham was Night. that thy Sabbath dress be not the same as thy week-
Gen. E. s. 9 fi^n ^xba angel of life. Ib., a. fr. man 'a day dress.
(abbrev. a"na) angel of death fr.— PL DTSKba. Ib. ; a. v.
Gen.R. s.
b
istering angels. Sabb. 55 n"a"i j«n the teacher who said tfaig, v. ©ab.
(ib. top) that the angels asked the Lord &c. Ned. 20* "i
v.nsab)
<~t"a ib mo final four things did the ministering angels "j?<P> T?<^ m.(b.h.; ",ab I, 1) press, frame,
?jS>22, fcOfcOQ ch. same. Targ. Y. I Ex. IV, 25 ; nana b© the frame (bottom) of a bedstead. Tosef. Erub.
a.
fr—PI. N*3itba, "psxba, "cxba. Targ. Gen. X1X,1; a.fr.— XI (VIII), 17 JtnbpBfi bus 'a a window frame. Tosef. B.
24 b , v. xnba;a. fr.
©ab. Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. I, 8 bTWl -ifia b© 'a the frame
of a large saw. Neg. XIII, 3 '31 *8an 'a a casing to pro-
njS^u, IijJS^d f. (b. h.; preced.) work, trade, vo- tect that portion of the beam which rests on the wall.—
cation; task. Ab. 1,10 'an na 3inx love trade, opp. to Gen. R. s. 38; Yalk. Prov. 961 (ref. to Prov. XXVH, 22)
HWl, office. Ned. 49 b , v. bins. Ber. 17 a "TOa TfiS(|a ^3N 'aa .... Kin© nt3 like one undertaking to crush barley
my work (study) is done in town, "31 m©a IPCXba KtTI in a frame; a. fr. PL d^saba, "piaba, niuaba, "fflba. Neg.
and his, in the field &c, v. *n*. Ab. II, 14 ?|Pda6a bi>a 1, c. B. Bath. 69* DTirB b© 'a door frames; ni3lbn b© .'a
thy employer (the Lord). Ib. 15 nana 'am TOp'.&Wl the window frames; n-jan 13>13 b© 'a sockets for the legs
day (life) is short, and the task great. Ab. d'R. N. ch. XI of a bedstead. ^a ">3aba stands for
Kel. XVIII, 3 *fc
na©3 'a IS 1©51 (not n©?1) and they made him work on the musical instruments of the Levites Tosef. ib. B. ;
on several successive Sabbaths. Ib. 2, v. ax: a. v. fr. breadths in width).— PL as ab. Peah III, 1. Ib.4 Dibxan'a
"p^il "pa© plots of onions between vegetables. Ib. VH, 2
n^jN Ju f. (b.h.; denom. of Tjfctba) messenger's func- 'a 15© b© nil© "i, three rows at a distance of two mal-
—
benim (six hand-breadths) from one another ; Tosef. ib. (Ar. nxib"2), v. Err 2. Ohol. XIV, 2 ix^SE; Tosef. ib. XIV. 7
Ill, 10. Ter. IV, 8 '-ii (sub. $Qft) figs pressed in quad- ix^b'ES the extent of the hole which the carpenter's
full
rangular moulds, opp. E^blXP. borer is capable of making, opp. XT':." ~z np'D X3"3, v.
rr^p-:. Ib.4, a.e.— PJ. E-xr'r;, '" - (b. h.)[filling one's hands,']
S-^^2 quadrangular piece. B.Mets.ll6 b
ch. same, a investment, inauguration. Lev. E. s. 11, a. fr.
" , "2" KF3HD
x _..- /„
a w cemented bricks of a fallen wall
j(j e pi ece f '*3n the seven days of the inauguration of the priests (Lev.
(Ms. F. WJYFl x:"b a brick wider than the usual size, v. VUI). Y. Yoma I, 38 b bot. tt\ ITO '? of what nature were
Bashi a. 1.). the sacrifices at the inauguration?; a. e. Milluim, name
of the first division of Sifra Sh'mini.
Sr.i.^"2, J — ^"2 f. (preced. wds.) quadrangular
frame* Targ. Y. Num. XXXIII, 20 [prob. to be read:] X\J2i m. (5b/3, v. ibr) [plucking,] usufruct. — '? "^zS
"-:--! BttJ^bo (pi.) building moulds. ("033) a wife's estate of which the husband has the fruition
without responsibility for loss or deterioration, con trad,
sr wi~~, v. x-r". to bl-r. 'pet, v. b\-z. Yeb. VII, 1; Tosef. ib. IX, 1. Keth.
79 b '"3 ncTO a domestic animal belonging to the wife &c.
aTZ (cmp. Syr. ;bE, P. Sm. 2131) to pluck, to strip (of
as you say, 'pluck, pluck'); Y. Yeb. VII, 8 a bot. nX"i IT33 rn2Jj"*I2 any
fcC2J5">!C c. (jAaXa-jfjAa) emollient,
lAaa ;-b"3 - -X corr. ace).
plaster, poultice. Sifra B'har ch. I (ref. to Lev. XXV, 6)
'"3 ~:""3
PfflDSb xbl but not to use (the fruits of the Sab-
fijvZj m.(transpos. of -b'"?) pitch-fork; the cook's fork.
batical year) for a poultice; Succ. 40 b ; B. Kam. 102 a .
3*:r3 KpWB sVoa '^ where a word is worth a Sela, Ps. 675 ; Lev. E. s. 12 WblE, Tb-2 (corr. ace.)
silence is worth two; Meg. 18 a (v. Eabb. D. S. a. 1. note 1).
—PI. ••'", " Cant. E. to IV, 4, v. 22p; a. e. — Ch. rite;
nS2Ji1>!2 m. of M'loga (supposed to be a Baby-
lonian place), '*3 XEp name of a particular Kab measure.
t. xr--.]
Pes. 48 a '"3 XEp (Ar. a. Ms. M. 2 rtxrib:"? of Magla, v.
S"^^": 2, ,
v. x :r v?
.
exedra which is (on one side) entirely open towards the to trust). Kidd. 6 b , a. e. '31 '?Z I'-pST. if one betroths
public road. Ib. bot. "bT be "ixib'SE as far as the bucket a woman to himself by remitting her indebtedness to him,
is let down into the water (for filling it). Hull. II, 3 EX she is not betrothed (there being no consideration offered
"a<""J xbo "f :CZ -~ if the slaughtering knife has the length to her at the time); '- rx:~Z offering as a consideration
of the width of the neck. Kidd. 33 a TVXC '"3 as far as his the benefit of the loan (by extension). Ib. 47 b ,a. fr. b" 'a
eye can reach. Sabb. 30 a , a. e. X"3": "33 as much as a hair's !~!2 a verbal loan, "lE'i'E '"3 against a note. Ib. 46 a, a. e.
breadth. Sifre Num. 160 (expl. T "px, Num. XXXV, 17) tz woman with remitt-
'
iTBTSrl ,i'~p"3ii if one betroths a
T> as large as the grasp of the hand
'~2 — [Tosef. ; a. fr. ance of a loan and the offer of a P'rutah besides. Bekh. —
Ohol. XVII, 3 BWB "3. v. tWiobj 48 a ; a. e. ri~ira fQt"!!
an obligation arising from a
'"3
^12,
:
v. "too.
in salt is good ; '31 'a Wlttffl meat in salt is not. — Ib. "nS"^
'a fowls in salt ; a. fr.— V. Kn^a.
Ithpe. nsanx, nsKPX to be strewn icith salt, be salted.
£>i "'P/U f. Oba) 2>/rtcc /or drawing water, well. Lev.
Targ. Ez. XVI, 4.— Hull. 112 b
Ib. 97 b '31 in^a-'X were
R. s. 21S012J3T "inrniba ?S rT*b av^l sat down by the place
.
';
in; a. fr.
Yalk. Lev. 571 "jinrfca; (Keth. 62 b KTTWl VtVQSH).
^r"ib!G, v. aniiiba.
TOJ2 II, Pa. n^C (denom. of n|a) to row; to bal-
ance. Keth. 85 a "Wia n!baa (not rta^a) rowed the boat
^^j m. Malluch, an Amora. Hull. 49 a
(b. h.) pr. n. (as an act of possession). B. Kam. 117 b WWU in rt*& 'a
'31 nMI" 'a you quote M. the Arabian, but he said &c. (Alf.) one of them tried to keep the boat in balance (against
lb. 'a '-n iT-inx the home of R. M. (in Arabia). Y. Succ. the ass that threatened to upset it); [ed. &nan? rT^s 'a
Ill, beg. 53 c . Y. B. Bath. 16 a top; a. fr. (Var. StVa, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 90) he tried to counter-
balance the ass].
fcoiba,
T T
v. r*u;
t • :
rulership, he is in the hands of the Lord ; Yalk. ib. 959. the salt it has absorbed. Keth. 66 b (prov.) ion "jiaa 'a
Sabb. 56 b 'an pi» lp?n*< shall divide the rulership between "idn -"SO the salt(means of preservation) of wealth is its
themselves. Num. R. s. 3 'a i?3>a rulers; a. e. diminution (by charitable deeds), and some say hesed
(benevolence). Gen. R. s. 51 'aa nxsn she (Lot's Avife)
v. sub 'k>**a.
sinned through salt ; 'a 'a i? "un To -in she went to all her . .
my
. . p*f*
lodg- nba,nba, ^tlba, X1 4
salt for
ing place ; Hull. 91 b , v. nvb. Midr. Prov. ch. IX saasu; nVa constr. ed. Berl. ( Var. 'a, 'a, v. Berl. Targ. 0. H, p. 32 ; Y.
'31 aid 'a "|? a beautiful lodging has been offered thee 'a). Targ.IIChr.XHI,5. Targ.Y. Gen. XIX, 26 (v. Gen. R.s.
in the hour of thy death ; a. fr. 51 quot.inpreced.);a.fr.—Kidd.62 a ; Hull. 113 a ,v. Nr-;V;r..
Bekh. 8 b '31 "no ^3 'a when salt becomes unsavory, where-
SDfev.^a. with do they salt it? B. Bath. 74 b i?3>a nnba (differ, vers,
VHjU m. (25«ft) kneading trough. Y. Gitt. VIII, 49 b bot. in Ms. M., v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) as to the female (Be-
hemoth), its brine is more savory. Yeb. 63 a ,v. n^snll;
M.272 denom. of nVa) to salt, brine; esp. (in
(b. h.;
a. fr.— PI. t6a, 'T2. Pes. 8 s 'a 13 salt-store. Ab. Zar. 33 a
ritual law) to streio salt on raw meat to resorb its blood.
Midd.V,3 '3iniT© ffrfcia vr\ they put salt on the hides of
bxmr^n 'a W
xnan NnuJ poured wine into a Jew's salt-
store (Rashi : a vessel filled with salt).
sacrifices.— Hull. 11 a '31 rttJi hm inbia 3"X NtX unless one
salts it carefully and washes it thoroughly. Ib. n;iai n"Ha l>/2 m. (b. h.; cmp. meaning of aX; a. n;a) mariner,
'31 one must first wash the meat, then salt it and again sailor. Koh. H. to IX, 8.
— — ;;
boatmen who brought sand and loaded the ships. i — ^.») v. next w.
2) dealer in sailors' outfits. Y. B. Mets. IV, end, 9 d , v.
«>Lm. (denom. of 332, fr. 2*'; or 223 fo wrap, cover;
cmp. Syr. aba P. Sm. 2136) frame or casing around the
XI""!"-, v. r'33
"
ch. beam-rest in the wall (corresp. to *|23a). PI. paaba. B.
t : •
''
Hildesh. Beitr. p. 9; Neub. Lag. MfrtCO, cler. error). Targ. I Chr. XIY, 1.
R. Jose, prob. in Galilee (v.
Geogr.
R. s. 26.
p. 269). Y. Ab. Zar. II, 41' top.
'3/D
H^H* r f. (b. h.; drib II) war, contest. Sot. VIII, 1,
lb. 7 r-'l"~- ntonVu (Bab. ed. 44 b pi.) secular (political) Ill, 15; a. fr.;* v. next art. Ab. Zar. 28 a JtnVn =133 xb"J,
,
warfare; "":£*: '2 a war for religious causes; '21 FCT "a v. XtnVW; a. e.— 2) fo fill. Targ. Gen. I, 22. Targ. Deut.
VI, 11 (0. ed. Vienna '!sa Pa.); a. fr.—Part. -32; f. X^r3;
a war of duty. lb. 44 b '31 WBnj"P T3 the war of conquest
under Joshua, all agree, is a war of duty &c. Meg. 15 b — pi. "(ba;xrs-32, N---32. lb. 0. XXIX, 10. Targ. Josh.
imp bttJ WRtUTVo disputes about the Law; a. fr. PZ. — IX, 2Y(ed.Vii. -,3*?). Targ. Gen. XXTV, 11; a. fr.
r'tr'z-z. Sot. 1. c. finvnb TH nfQ n'anba the wars of the Pa. ^sa 1) to fill. Targ. Jer. XIII, 13; a. fr.—Lev.R. s.21
b
house of David for extending the dominion. M. Kat. 25 b -prfjip ^"r? fill thy vessel; Pesik. Ahare, p. 176 ; Yalk. Lev.
a
rt5 an offspring of worthies 571 ""X^a); Keth. 62 b "4o. Ab. Zar. 29 rT^IsaT
T32 (read:
(in a eulogy) '- "S3 1 ar" . . .
came up from Babylonia and with him came the book BPO and with water. Taan. 29 a Shebu. 10 a Pes. 77 a
fill it ; ;
of wars (allegorically for knowledge of the Law; oth. n^lsa "^Isa lian they made the Tammuz of that year
. . .
interpret. R. Hamnuna who came with Rabbah). Snh. a full month (of thirty days); a. e. 2) to complement, —
97 a '2 rrrm'a in the seventh Messianic year there will compensate, replace. Targ. 0. Gen. II, 21 "-ban ed. Berl.
be wars; a. fr. (ed. Amst. 'a\ corr. ace.).— B. Mets. 105 a n^lrai ma he
took pains to make up for the loss. lb. 'SI i"Pr*"~2" rr~2
T'TiZ^Z f. (r-32) saline atmosphere, corrosion produced Ms. M. (ed. nvip'sa?) thou didst take pains to make up &c.
by saline influences. Ohol. Ill, 7 '2 VtbdKV . . ."Wl a cave a e .— [3) X23 37 '2 to comfort. Targ. O. Gen.
. XXXIV, 3
formed through saline corrosion. ed. Berl. (v. Berl. Mass., p. 27); v., however, Kidd. 50 a ,
— ~ - (b. h.) [to stand forth,prqject (cmp. 232),] to escape. "322 CjOl" , V.1
X-"3 -.
Pi. oVo to rescue. Midr. Till, to Ps. XLI fi3n QT2 n S^bn, Wfy2 I ch.= h. X32, Targ.
bl2 m., c. full.
~2'r?^ on the day of evil I shall save thee. Taan. 23 a
Deut. XXXni, 23 (Var^-V?, "32, -33). Targ. Ruth I, 21
"ztrz "rait-a thou hast saved it(the generation) through a. fr. — Erub. 84 a X""3a "O when the pit is full of water;
thy prayer. Yalk. Ps. 777 '= nobOQ Michael helped ':="-
— PI. fm, F&O. — [Targ.
a. fr. Targ. Deut. VI, 11 ; a. fr.
David to escape from within and Jonathan from with-
0. Deut. XXm, 26 "^bal ed. Berl. those ears which are
out ; a. e.
full (ripe; oth. ed. "'^sa).]
Nif. 25a: to be saved, to escape. Esth. R.introd. 1TX1 t"!3 i
£"3335?- Noah is the first of those saved (mentioned in S"] TiZ, ^"'^0 II m. (preced.) fulness. Pesik. Hahod.,
the Bible). Koh. R. to IX, 15 '; 213 "isi? 90*0X1 £o who- p. 53
a ("ref. to Ps'.LXXXIX, 38) 'a 3" Xl!T^ fnTD like the
soever listens to the suggestions of his good inclination moon growing to fulness. lb.; Yalk. Ex. 190 X1FP0 XM
will be saved; a. e. 'a br this moon; Yalk. Chr.
(Solomon's reign) is the full
Hithpa. 223rn same. Yalk. Deut. 854 I'-sr^r- DPXi 1082; (Pesik. R. s. 15 nrx'pa).— Constr. "A? (= h. kVq)
21 and you will be saved from the judgment of &c. the fill of, as much as. Targ. Ex. IX, 8. Targ. Ps. XCVI,
/
had been created in perfect condition. lb. s. 14 finN^a v9, an evil sense) sneer, scorn. Midr. Prov. to I, 6 IflfWl 11 'a
irsrba ;S fully developed. Num. E. s. 12; a. e. — Gitt. '31 m'litsah (ib.)means the Law proper &c, rx*p3 nabl
70* Ar'., v. vAn. — 8) {the priestly gifts from) the ripe or '51 P$ia fconu; ni^ba nam and why is it called m.? Be-
stored fruits. Tem. 4a (ref. to Ex. XXII, 28) 6TWa *% cause it saves those engaged in it from the judgment of
m'leah means the first fruits ;Mekh. Mishp.s. 19t)"ni3'D &M Gehenna; '31 ysibraUJ "'a tottJ 'a n^'J Hftnpl nab why
"ana "pr-sn that means the first fruits which are taken is it called mHitsah (scoff-producing)? Because whoever
from the fulness (the stored fruits). !b»..|''<V^W»f Ufflttt desires to scoff, will be amply supplied with scoffing.
"at first fruits which go by four names, reshith and . . .
2) metaphor. Cant. E. to I, 1 'a biua. aipa onb UP they . . .
m'leah; Yalk. Ex. 351. find confirmation in plain Biblical prose, in proverbs, and
in metaphors.
parbn, p^bn, read: rmY*
np^^P f. (pba) pinching a bird's head. Sifra Vayikra,
SsPS'vp f. pi. ivomen drawing icater, v. ''ba.
N'dab', ch. VIIl/ Par. 7 ; Zeb. 65* IjHB nb 3>Dpia 'a the
a
lTOD m.(nba) \)preservedin salt, pickled. Hull.ll3 SrP yQ f. complement. B. Bath. 104 b
0>a) filling up,
'a (1U?n) salted meat, opp. ban. lb. 97
h
, a. fr. finro . .
.'a
top [read :] '31 nsium 'ab KIVii "W (v. Eabb. D. S. WS
salt, is ritually to be considered as
what a. 1. note 40) and if there is a surplus, it must go to make
is preserved in
if boiled or roasted; a. fr.— [PL, v. nba.]— 2) safted reZis/i,
up the nine kab.
dessert Ber. VI, 7. lb. 44 a '31 'a rfi f&W? fW5 b3 Ms.
M. (ed. nba, corr. ace; v. Eabb. D. 8. a. 1. note) a meal fcCnbd, NrT^p/ip, ($rhu) f. (pr eced.) l)mounJ,
without salted preserves is no meal. rampart TargTlI Sam. V, 9; Targ. I Kings IX, 24 (ed.
Lag. '"'a; h.text Bf&Q). Targ. II Sam. XX, 15 (h. text nbbo);
SilvQ
t
ch.
• :
same, v. nba I.
a> q.—PI. xr^ba, '^a. Targ. Jer. XXXII, 24.-2) stuffing.
Pes. 74 a ,* v. KW*£w.
a^bn,
t - :
v. **».
* »
t : :
O Sbn&a
Lag. T T
;
/
Levita toba).
T T -'
H-2Q (b. h.) [to lead in council,] to preside; to officiate;
sb n
ba, v. a^a. to be ruler. B. Bath. 164 b QiniU lb "p3ia nsitt 'a when he has
been in one year, they date (in documents) 'the
office
Sb n b?2 f. ch. =next w.— PI. ^ba. Targ. 0. Deut. second year'. Meg. ll (ref. to ^ban, Esth. I, 1) VOSSa 'a
a
XXIII, 26' (ed. Berl. f^tel, v. ^ba). started a dynasty with himself (had no claims of succes-
sion). Ib. woa isba, v. net?. Zeb. ii8 b 'arc n:u nmrs
T\j^Jl2 bbal) ripe ear, esp. parched ear.—
f. (b. h.; '31 ten years during which Samuel ruled alone, 'aU3 nDlXJI
PI. ni'^Sa! Maasr. IV, 5 'a bblan he who rubs parched '31 VlKttJ and one year during Avhich Saul and Samuel
ears; Tosef. Bets. I, 20. Tosef. Ter. Ill, 18 ..•pbsittJ O"03n ruled conjointly; Tem. 15 a ;
a. fr.
"o *,nrayb ... ifone brought ears to his house with the
d Nif. r^a; [to be led,] 1) to take council, to ask advice
intention of parching them.— Y. Pes. Ill, beg. 29 v.b"W. b
or permission. Ber. 3 ",i-nn:03 fO^ffl they ask the San-
,
XIX, 20. Targ. Ez. Ill, 17.—PJ. "psfea. Targ. Jer. VI, 17. TWinb if one buys vegetables .... and then decides to
Targ. Is. L, 4 ; a. e. return (the goods). Ib. 3 snaxtf) '31 '^31^ ^133 if he took
— — : ;
them up to eat thein and changed his mind (deciding) 27 'a naa Tits'1 the 'princesses' (humors of the eye) es-
-'"' '"''"2^ bx allow not the tyrant within thee (the himself is chief. Y. Yeb. XVI, 15 c
v. O^ptTX. Y. Ter. ,
2) (mostly "pVo) to decide. Targ. Is. XIV, 27. Ib. XXIII, 8 Pi3>?2 f. (b. h.; T|ba) queen, king's wife. B.Bath.l5 b
(ed. Ven. Tpba). Ib. 9 F3bpa ed. Lag. (some ed. X3ba, read 'zi X3"a raba laixrt ba whoever says malkath Sheba
roba); a. fr.— Part. pass, rfira, Ib. XIV, 26; a. 3) to e— (I Kings X, 1) means a woman is mistaken; ...it means
advise. Targ. II Sam. XVII, 7. Targ. I Kings I, 12; a. fr. the kingdom (rcba) f Sheba. Sabb. 119 a 'an natt the
Pa. T|"*a 1) to advise. Targ. Job XXVI, 3.-2) to de- queen Sabbath; a. fr.
cide, v. supra.
Xif.—T&rg. Is. XXXII, 7; a. fr.— B. Bath. 4» "pan TTQ fVD^S f. (b. h.; Tjba) l) kingdom, government ; office.
pDpono do people ask for advice (or permission) after Ab. Ill, 5 'a bt? the yoke of (secular) government (burden
they have acted? Ber. 27 b '=" >Pbflftft consult my family. of office). Ber. 13 b a. fr. tfitStt 'a W the yoke of (sub-
Ib. -: 'ax- b"X he went and consulted his wife. Ned. mission to) divine government. Gitt. VIII, 5, v. ",i«*i"l. Ber.
'
M
54 a '21 Btii ji xr,-Vr |'» IS'I xrb-3 53 any change of order 48 b , a. e. '3i rwra 'a -px, v. -en. Sot. nb (ref. to era,
for which the messenger has to ask special authorization, Ex. I, 21) 'a TQ dynasties.— 'aa Tia to rebel against the
is heterogeneous (to the object of the original commis- a
government, to commit treason. Snh.49 a. fir. rtstfrjtt 'a ;
—
b
sion) nbr rfV»
'31 yby qn xrb"3 53 a change for which the wicked government (Rome). Ber. 61 Ms. M. a. early
;
the messenger asks for instructions is homogeneous. Sot. ed. (later ed. fP); a. fr. 'ab anp connected with the —
43 b fib" 'a"1 !* "'X if he reconsiders his original disposal; court (influential). B. Kam. 83 a . Gitt. 14
b
;
a. fr. — PI.
a. fr. ni'sba. Gen. R. s. 44 '31 'ai arma rwa^x the Lord
showed him (Abraham) four things: future punishment,
:| JU m. (b. h.; preced.) leader in council, chief, king. (persecution by foreign) governments &c. Mekh. Yithro, ;
Ber. 3 b 'an -::nx our lord the king! Tosef. Snh. VIII,
'
a. e.
cess, name of a demon afflicting the eye, also a certain
disorder of Pit- . .. ra I. Sabb. 109» (Var. Iplin K3, fcCl'D^Jf ^0^2 f. same, kingdom, rulership. Targ.
a v. xr-.
v. Rabb.D.8. a. 1. note).— P/.-ba moa. Tosef. B.Kam. IX, Ob. 21. Targ. Jud. IX, 9 ; a. fr.— B. Kam. 113 ,
100*
: —
;
43 a "jab ",a irfao (read: N'oV'a, and insert plOS); Yalk. '31 you must not stir a dish (in the usual way) on Pass-
Gen. 77 -;aba iaV» "pin SBp (read with Matt. K. to Gen. over, but he who desires to make a mush, must put in the
s.44: SOsba); Gen. R. s. 44 TB )V X^Jdia pin pop (ed. flour and then add vinegar.— Part. pass, as ab. Tosef Maasr. .
Wil. Bte^tD; Ar. s. v. SJDp: X^-JS in); Midr. Till, to Ps. I, 7 biban *,a ed. (ed. Zuck. baxan, Var. baan) out of the
XL, end VtAna K"ffl (ed. Bub. anb^a); Yalk. Ps. 737 -pin olive pulp.
ISOlba (corr. ace). [8CWIO, seems to be a corrupt, of [xe- Nif. bba? to be compressible, (of webs) to be soft and
tdvoia in the sense of change of mind, the Greek equiv- doicny. Gitt. 59 a (ref. to nrinba, II Kings X, 22) 131
alent of our w.] rinaJI bbasn a cloth which can be compressed (creased)
and stretched (again, showing no creases when unfolded)
S"052 f. (jiaXaxia, malacia) want of appetite, nausea. [Rashi: a stuff the thread of which is twisted between
Deut. B.' s. 6 ininstn 'a nbsil) (not nniaob) whose sister the spinner's fingers and stretched]. V. nbaba. —
was suffering from malacia.
^0/2 I ch. same, v. Viach.
V J!2 III, Pi. b|a, "to (b. h. denom. of Via) [to present, ;
26 b 'an "TO .... silpn he who rends his garment only [Comm.'identifyourw. with preced. .referring tothedouble
— ;
meaning of OT&.] Ab. Zar. 28 b (Var. xbbia. v. Rabb. D. for receiving the excrements of working cattle; [Tosaf.
B. a. 1. note 400). — PL "b\o, **Q. Sabb. 109 b Tl 'tbvi "3 Yom. Tob a. 1. attests a version aibpa]. [Tosef. Kel. B.
-1. ';";-) between the embers *2) gold ore as broken Mets. Ill, 14, v. Ogfco II.]
Targ.V. II Deut. I, 1 (Y. I Xibbx).— [-Yr"2, v. K&a] something which crushes the stiffneckedness of the Is-
raelites (who humble themselves in prayer for rain) "QT
STfl5?Q f. (bVq II) speaking. Constr. nfc&o. Targ.
;
TD5D m. (b. h.; T?b) ox-goad. Kel. IX, 6, v. 'jqrtj. Y. upon both the ears and the stalks Yalk. Deut. 863. Sifre ;
nnpvE, v. rnpba.
"j"EC"E Tanh. Yithro 7, v. "peBb^a.
(R. S. to Ukts. 1. c. 7"";-2; Var. Tosef. ed. Zuck. SsV©, nnp>22 f. (preced.) tongs. Pesik.R. s. 33 ; Yalk. Is. 271
coir. ace). —
Hull. 1. c. a^xb an "pM ixbaa when he takes mnx 'a ba: (some ed. nnpb"3) he took another pair of
hold of a number of glumes (which do not break). tongs.
m
^>u3j pL "'~z. v. a-ra. 12p™!2 1 m. (apb) gatherer, eclectic scholar. Ab. d'R.
N. ch. XVIII, end xba riE" ~Z" 'zl '" a discriminating
!tf£ <"2, i~!£ T2, infinit. PaeY of abx or rpb"|. Y. Kil.
T|/ T eclectic scholar without any pride.
IX, 32 bot.; Y. Keth. XII, 35 a bot. 'a "V;, v. abx II.
"TSwO, Tosef. Ukts. 12p>/!2 II m., rapb"a f. (apb) pinchers for picking
II, 10, v. fMJ*B.
hair, wool &c. Mace. IH, 5 ; Naz. 40 b , v. apb. Kel. XHI, 8
S2£ >- m. (v. a'ba) teacher. Yeb. 21 b rWI 'a thou (ed. Dehx-. 10) rz~'"'zh fUB&\ and he makes use of them
s-halt be a teacher. Gen. R. s. 68, beg. "£?a, N ?~-""?- r
as pinchers; l eb. 43 a apbnb. Tosef. Kel. B. Mets.III, 14
, "("Dii: be cngbctl (ed. Zuck. fVSO br -j-pb^n)the fullers'
Jtf""^, ~*2, S2"i;^" 2, v. sub 'sb"a.
"j"£jf
pinchers (with which they remove knots in a web). Sabb.
|>~G (b. h.) to pinch a bird's neck with the finger 97 a *31 '"33 apb^TVtO . "1CJBX "iX a public road cannot be
. .
nail. Zeb.VI,5; lb. VII, 5; a.fr.— Part. pass, pq&O; f.npVra, made even (as skin is made) with pinchers and razors.
tle) more than your souls Num. R.s. 12. lb.; Tanh. 1. c. 6;
antes v. **.
dibs "O^K nila nnxia na "paa money is named mamon,
that which thou countest is nothing. B. Mets. 2 b , a. fr.
p^IJ-PQjm. (yob) slanderer, in former. Midr. Till, to
n^D, v. Kferai.
means a fine in value, opp. Oaa "ps an actual putting out
21 (ed. Fr., p. 105 "px
1
tfrfeD, v. btt$m •naiad WJB tiPS, read iStOBS, thou canst not define its
value ; Fr. a. 1. emends WD3, v. i^V .]—Pl. naiaa. Snh.
ISr >>D mound, v. xmba.
- I,l,v."pn; a. fr.
T •• • ' t : :
CSiDu place for drawing loater, v. KfWfta. "\V212, #7)1212 ch. same. Targ. Gen. XXXVII, 26 na
T
'a (Y. 'a n"«3n; iJtext 3>S3 na). Targ. Ex. XXI, 30 (h.
TT]7)'7J2
T t
f. (b. li.) wardrobe. Gitt. 59 a , v. bba II. text IBS)} a. fr.— B. Kam. 15» 'a XpTJ iObB the payment
: v ' - t
t : : - t : : - ' i ii""i
T\±ftl212 f. (nja) appointed, deputy, superintendent, in
a
gen. officer. Tosef. Pes. II (III), 11 'aan "p3Yt; Pes. 49 'a
1— 72, Ul2 Mem, name of the thirteenth letter of the 5""1 b^3 Zunin the deputy of Rabban G. (superintendent
alphabet. Sabb. 103 b nair.O dlUT d"a Ms. O. (ed. dWd) VFV who has
of the College). Sot.42 a ia3 bs 'a a superior
the Mem in nnina "pi'aUJ d"a
s/*em is closed (final letter) ;
in office, lb. Kin 'a ixb is no
"jSO the deputy high priest
(ed. nins) the Mem in Shim'on is open (initial letter),
active officer. fSjta 'an the m'munneh
Snh. II, 1 '31
lb. I04 a 'si naxa nairo d"a nnins d"a the open and the a
places him between himself and the people; ib. 19 "OTtl
closed Mems intimate that there are subjects in the Law 'a I3""n "pd the sagan (Tosef. ib. IV,1) is the same as the
which are open to all, and such as are closed (esoteric nCmunneh (in Mish. 1. c), i. e. the deputy high priest.
studies). Y. Meg. I, 71 d '31 d"a d"a 2V31 ftl ina why
Shek. V, 4 '31 bs> 'a KiniB who was the superintendent of
is it that the letters Mem, Nun &c. are written in two
seals &c; a. iv.—Pl. d">3laa, "pSiaa. Ib. 1 '31 'an 'pi ibx those
ways?— Maas. Sh. IV, 11 ; a. ir. — t
Pl. fiOQ, T^a. Sabb. were the special officers in the Temple; a. e.
103 a one must not write '31 'p3ad 'a Mem like Samekh
or vice versa; a. e. ^1212 m. (ttfca) touch, feeling. Targ.Y. II Gen. XXVII,
22 (Y. I oaia . . . ttjsp).
itm, v. «*.
SHO? m. (nia) pestilence, death. Targ.Ps.LXXVIII,
TV212, Y. Erub. IV, end, 22 a 'a rVO, v. baa. —Constr. naa. Targ. XVI,
50 (Var. Xinia). Jer. 4; a. e.
ruaai v. na.
"fiJO/p m. (v. ita) twisted gam, cord. Y. Sabb. VII,
v. sta
"""fc^HD (
n
S y\12) m. pi. (bba II) frail, short-lived ""HOD, v. sub njaa.
people (by the way
of play on tfbaa, q. v.). Fern. pi. —
VKVCfyum, Nrpibiaa f/^iWJ (with <&$ frail words (un- "^1212 m. (b.h.; "TOD, sec. r. of -it, cmp. nnsaa, "WOT, v.
tenable arguments). Yeb. 75 sq. "fcNi im-iax 'a *ttrt BrWSS !> Arnheim Hebr. Gr.p.173) [rejected, outcast,] bastard. Yeb.
'a because you are frail, you speak frail words; (Var. IV, 13 '31 *iXl!) bs 'a 1WN who is a mamzerl The issue
WV^tt . .i^rtW lmnso dioa because you are descendants of any connection forbidden in the ")i"ih; (oth. opiu.)
.
of &c); B. Mets. 109»; B. Bath. 137 b (Ms. R. -,WttH); 151 a *S\ ni3 rbs "pa^no b3 the issue oi
'
connection for-
m
(ed. Pes. nnxibiaa). bidden under the penalty of extinction; a.i'r.— Pl.Ti ~'~^,
-p-n-aa, "ijaa. Kidd. Ill, 13 inaib 'r "pVo^ there is a pos-
^12)1212, v. ^aia. sibility for the issue of bastards to be rebabilitated. Yeb.
; .
Yoma 18 b "2
(corr. ace). KboOl and fills the world . . . . D. S. a. 1. note 60; ed. ppa) worm-eaten sacred books and
;>.— «j )*r^ ni. (preced.) descendant of a mamzer, 42, end (ref. to Gen. XIV, 13) 'a . SOT.X it was a place
. .
belonging to the mamzer class. Kidd. IY, 1 ; Tosef. ib.V,l. called M.; 'a . . .X"Q2 it was a man &c. Men. 85 a name —
of an Egyptian sorcerer, v. ^SrTP.
CTHJOQ, v. noma.
S"]!2<2 II m. pha, pna) rebellious, (n"n "tt 35) 'a -,pT
rnjgo, asfirgq, ngrgqai v •*?*, * : ::
.
-
22; a. e).
"DQQ T : .
m. (b. h.;
'
-=2) sa/e.
- t'
B. Bath. 155 b 'S Prs^-;
t t -
EwZSU m. Orra) [someMinp tangible,] substance; sub-
—Ib.
:
Srr!C!2, Targ. Prov. XV, 13, read with ed. Lag.: of which (in a mixture) as well as its substance is for-
bidden. Ib. b 1*JH MM
S5T lara a mixture in which there
is the taste of a forbidden thing whose substance, how-
^
olives; mill.
r.
m. (Y--Z II) crushing
B. Bath. IV, 5; expl.
tool, press-beam
Ter. in, 13 '=1 - jttf 'ah "pfA frtn when he puts them
l allv affect a mixture in which is left a taste after its
f
in the mill and walks over them crosswise; Y. ib.UI, 42 b removal, is in all cases a Biblical rule. Snh. 63 b ..pyiV 1
top 'T2.1 P.nn. Maasr. I, 7 'ah fUa Mish. ed. (Bab. ed. TfOS '21 '"2 12 pfltB . . the Israelites knew very well that there
'rn Y. ed. a. Ms. M.'
; -Pi " -) from the pulp under the press is no reality in idols, yet they worshipped them for the
Tosef. ib. I, 7 VtMWh ed. Zuck. (Yar. VttBK, bAttr). sake of being permitted public licentiousness. B. Kam.
83 b
"BE pr. n. m. Mammal. Tosef. Erub IV
*a the family of M.; Y. ib. IV, 22 a ftttM (corr. ace.).—
(III), 17 m '"2
Snh. 64 a
pr,
, v.
v.
p2^;
p-a. Ib.
a. v.
'"2
fr.— Y. Ber.
Pir-O actual putting to death.
Ill, 6 d bot. S^p PH$«So
its substance remains (on the skin, even if dried up).
Yeb. 105 a ; Y. Bets. I, 60 b top, a. fr. *a *0 N-X (sa).
lEE"^, SEJEII3 ch. same. Targ. Y. II Deut. XXXII,
s -
t
. -- 1
:
ore. v.
'
N?:
ri
;.
-
• 17.— Sabb. 152 b bot. '-2 n^2 rvw Ms. O. a. Ar. (ed. XOTra,
v. Rabb. D.S. a.l. note 10) that there is substance in him
N ^ r U II pr. n. pi. Mamla, a place whose inhabitants (that it is not a mere apparition). [-2"2 constr. touch, —
were short-lived. Gen. R. s. 59, beg.; Midr. Sam. ch.VIII; v. viaa.]
a. e. ; v. "'SSttsa.
'ytilZC,
T.J •
TvMSD
T T S •
parable, v.
•*
We.
TT
3^02 m. (V5a II) speech. Targ. Gen. XI, 1. Targ. Ex.
XXXIII, 11 (h. text S-CS); a. fr. TTTCIZTZ f. (b. h.; 5S-QI) rulership, power. Koh. R.
:
nCTZ, v. btnrap.
fcOD I. (fcOE II)' who?, what?, v. la II.
t : ' v t i-
'
m
have this?, hoiv do we know? Ber. 7a Meg. 2 a IftXtO 'a '0
/Vow, of; more (or less) than. Ab. Zar. 18 a
il2 (b. h.)
.
lanT Baffin "ja from heaven they will have mercy (on '31 whence do we derive this? —Whence we derive this?
b
me), i. e. I trust in God. Sabb. 21 )' .'¥ UUJh (you ask, as were a law requiring an intimation in
if it
ytWVQft p
v. Tin.— inman "a, v. ins ; nnaian "pa, v. hrjano. —Tem. it is merely a measure of accom-
the Biblical text, while
28 a '21 X^Sinb nannn 'of the cattle' (Lev. 1, 2) intimates modation,) as we were going to explain further on. Ib.
"JO
the exclusion of &c; a. v. fr.-Prefix "», -^3j "O, "*« q.v.— 20 a ; a. v. fr.
f^i 1
(=b. h. v.yx) whence?, whence is
T?"?i Tl?* "? "J^Saa,
S-D, (jjOC) manna, v. 'a I.
it proven? —Yoma 32 a '31 ttJan;i 'a whence is derived the
regulation about five immersions &c? lb. Jlb^aii VsttJ 'ai
'31 and whence is the rule dei'ived that each immersion
requires &c? lb. 44 a 'a . . . xbx ^ "pX this would prove
&CD III, (^feOlU)
T
pr. n. m. Mana {Mona), name of
severalAmoraim. Y. Sabb. I, 2 C top. Y. Dem. IV, 24a top;
me only in favor of whence do you derive that
to
the same applies to . . .
.
?
.
;
.,
a. v. fr.
Taan. 23 b ^Sa Y. Ab. Zar. — II, 42 a top ; a.fr.—V. Fr.M'bo,
p. 114 b sq. ,
m|ft "nj from him, it &c. lb. XXII, 12.1b. Ill, 3; a.fr.— "pSOQ, Koh. R. to VII, 7, 'a yir, read with Y. Taan.
Y. Ber. II, 5
a where he had come from.
bot. pbo~i 'p ",a to IV, 68 a "piSa, v. iis^a ch.
:
ST^a it was lost through its (the chicken's) action alone. SD1332 m. (XD) lasher at court. Yoma 15 a ; 54
1
'
sq.;
Y.Peah YII,20 ,)
XISl mni IrWTQ (the sweetness) is entirely Zeb. 38 a '(expl. Cj^saS) 'VO . .ina R. Judah showed it by
its own (no honey has been added). Snh. 39 b v. X2X; ,
imitating the movement of the lasher, v. TTMX
a. fir.— «W — X3>13 XJ>, M'Vutl bs X? it is not at all in his
"pm v.
'
iD5 a.
?
xbi3. "1 ',a from the time that, after; from the
(
power; v.
fact that; when; because. Lam. R. to II, 2 'j'ibsxi )~o after mS^DQ, v. next w.
they had eaten ; a. v. fr. ; v. "'m
5^3532 m. (v. next w.) any means of charming: art,
IlIZ I m. nja) portion, food. Num. R. s. 12 (play
(b. h. ; contrivance. Tanh. Lekh 15 (play on '$a, Gen. XIV, 20) 'a
on Tainx) the sun '31 ',a 511X^3 n'^'pn TllTttJ whom the '31 tV'ypn n'^y (ed. Bub. ib. 19 nsxa, corr. ace.) the Lord
Lord has created to weave (ripen) food for creatures pXI made a charm..., for Abraham took dust, &c. Zeb.116 Ms.
1
'
'31 r,!"HB X^X "ja man means fruits and food (with ref. to M. xjx^a Yalk. Lev. 579 nsaa^'wa, v x";a H.-P^. r^x:r.r:.
; .
T T
"JOfl,Dan. I, 5).— Esp. ')a(ri) the manna of the desert. Ex. Gen. R s. 43 '31 WITS' 'a na3 (Ar. ni*3aa) how many arts
.
R. s. 25. Tanh. B'shall. 20; Mekh. ib., Vayassa, s. 2 "^31X did I not contrive to bring them under thy power?; Yalk.
'an those eating manna (not troubling themselves about ib. 74 nWJfia (corr. ace). Esth. R. end (ref. toPs.LXVJ. —
to-morrow). Yoma75 a ; a. fr. 3) '31 ~\hv ni'SSDa 'irx "pb^ni na (corr. ace.) how fearful
are thy contrivances ; those to be slain slay their slayers
"]/C I, S2E ch. same (a day's) support. Succ. 39 b '+02
&c; Midr. Till, to Ps. XXII -|Vn X^Sa; Yalk. Ex. 225;
"a for as much only as is needed for the day. Ib. "'Xni a
Yalk. Ps. 790; Pesik. B'shall., p. 81 'n^553a.
'31 'a that man means support, v. preced. — Esp. XSa the
manna. Targ. Ex. XVI, 31. Targ. Y. ib. 27; a. e. (some VlDiO/'C m. (y.a77ptvo*) same, i) charm, potion. Gen.
T
ed. x:a). R. s. 88 ip:n? 1? WS 'a (ed. Wil. yo&sa, pi.) they prepared
— —
rmata 797 Mr»tt
Wil. ^>£.) tby contrivance in Egypt (in not sending the hood of a maiden is two hundred (Zuz), and that of a
plague of the first-born at once). lb. '21 'a 3TT> "T3 (ed. widow (remarried) is one hundred (Zuz, a common Shekel).
Wil. "333, corr. ace.) who understands thy contrivances B. Kam. 90 b '{:r (1313 'a IX ",3n "nis *tj does the Mishnah
at the Red 8ea (when those who had drowned the Is- (VIII, 6) mean a Tyrian or a country Maneh (twelve and a
raelitish children, were drowned)? Tanh. B'har 2 ~Z'~ half Zuz)? Shebu. VI, 1 fTn "^ 'a thou owest me one hun-
,_. -•_.„ «g -
;x (not ^..^ j -will reverse my plans and make dred denars. 8nh. VIII, 2 1T33 'a meat of the weight of a
him (the poor) rich &c. Y'lamd. to Deut. VII, 12, quot. Maneh. Shebi. I, 2 TH SpnW3 'a B^aiO the weight of sixty >
in Ar. 'B rts ~"3~ii "n the Lord turned the plan (of M. in the Italian system. Ker. 6 a a. fr. Erub. 85 b bot. ; —
drowning the Israelites) against him (v. supra). me- — 3) 'a fixa p5 =*3a 133 make room for one worth one hun-
chanic contrivance, machine. Lev. R. s. 20, beg. fpn xb dred M. (in gold).— Trnsf. CIS p 'a a Maneh son of a P'ras
<- -.-.-
Ar.(ed.van33) he did not know tbe mechanism (half a Maneh), i. e. a distinguished son of a less dis-
lVflJ
(of the throne of Solomon); Pesik. Ahare, p. 168 a SiTM tinguished father. Taan. 21 b .
— PL tftm, "p33. Y. Shek.
•'--
7-3:- (corr. ace); Tanh. Vaethh. 1 "p3333 (corr. ace). VI, 49 c bot. 'a . . . C]bx the weight of fifteen hundred M.
Talk. Esth. 1046; Targ. II Esth. I, 2 *T33 by machinery (in Ker. 1. c. ; a. e. — Chald. form: "W. Targ. Ez. XLV, 12
the throne of Solomon). PI. ""333a, rri»3U lb. Yalk. I.e. (Kimhi X33).— PI. fia, Btta, £0, 'Itt^, ""BO. lb. Targ.
"y~'Z r*:;:. "n the machinery burst; a. fr. (v. supra). Is. VII, 23. Targ. I Kings X, 17 ;a. e.— Esth.R. to VI, 10:
x*:?:-;, ri-'assa, v. preced. Lev. R. s. 28.— Sabb. 133 b X31D 'a 333 (not ''WB, v. Rabb.
D. S. a. 1. note 90) fat weighing seven M. (Rashi: seven
HmZ-^ f. (Ezra IV, 13; =fiia; cmp. 313a a. Sia) Jand- portions of fat). Y. B. Kam. IX, 6 d bot. [read as Tosaf:
fflar. Estb. R. introd.; Gen. R.s. 64, v. Mia; Ned. 62 b ; B. to Bab. ib. 100 b :) '31 "paab 'a 'Ml 11335 tpQ T3a!l wool
Bath. 8 a "bail raa IT 'a mindah is the king's share (of worth five M., dyeing material worth five, and ten M.
the crops). wages. Y. Meg. TV, 74 d bot. ""SB (corr. ace); a. e.
ffiD, "- "ISS pr. n. pi. XYar Mandu (Kafr Menda, i i- - I f. (b. h.; preced.) share, portic
ion. Bekh. V, 1
north of Sepphoris; v. Sm. Bible Diet. s. v. Madon, a. 'a 1332 'a pppltt!
TPpllL" you must weigh one
meat piece
nie< (of the
Fischer a. Guthe Map of Palestine). Pesik. Shub., p.l63 b ; of the first-born) against another piece (of secular meat
Yalk. Job 906 ; Gen. R. s. 52 a. Lev. R. s. 1 ed. Wil. ":a.— of ascertained weight). Gitt. 59 b a. e. "jHEXl TOP 'a 'a bla^b ,
[Tosef. Yeb. X, 3 Tea l£3 ed. Zuck., Var. "pl3a.] that he (the priest) have the privilege of first choice
(when a division is made). Sifre Deut. 53; Yalk. ib. 875
'^wE, v. preced.
ns"1 'a the best portion (at the meal). Yalk. Num. 765,
"jtf">«, v. p*tt. end '=1 'a laxsb TVUtt) "ib^ a king who selected a portion
for himself, and another came and spoke disparagingly
"j"*3Q, v. nag. of it; a. fr.—PL ni3a. Sabb. 149 a Tosef. ib. XVII (XVIH), ;
4 irTrriaa b? pD-sa
""— SIDE, v.
-
m^ y .
5. Ib.
fcC'llDD, Y. Naz. I, 51 a bor., read: K31T33. beg. l^aii^a its arrangements, v. "jiaasa.
you quote a usage; Yeb. 13 b ; a. e. — [Y. Ber. V, 9 a 15.naa she (Judah) had found rest (among the nations), she would
rv wa o, v. "an. not have returned (to the Lord) ; a. e.
"'CirGQ f. (ana) roaring. Yalk. Ps. 864, v. *Jf«$9. nrPDQ f. (b. h.) ; same. Num. R. s. 10 n&Op3 nxi33n
'a inspiration is called resting (ref. to Jer. LI, 59, a. Is.
JTTDQ m. (an2) feader, director. Gen. R. s. 39, beg.; XI, 2). Ber. 64 a 'a anb "px n"n scholars are never at rest
a. e. *» x'aa mn dVCttTO laxn is it possible that this world (constantly progressing). Ex. R. s. 1 'a Dnb yWB nsd
has no leader? — B. Bath. 91 a sq. '31 irnaa 13.&W} .*» ..
he saw that they had no recreation from labor; a. fr.
woe to the world (humanity) whose leader is gone, woe Esp. the seat of the central sanctuary (with ref. to Deut.
to the ship whose captain is gone I; a. e. — PI. tfVPnaa.
XII, 9). Tosef. Zeb. XIII, 20; Zeb. 119 a sq. ,
will be his ruler in his old days; (Yalk. Prov. 962 nnia,
iSmnn^LJ f. (preced.) fine appearance, display of
some ed. bffila; ib. 961 pnia). Succ. 52 b v. n"3,-Ji<.— [Cant. ,
flee.
'
rm^aisa Ka^p . . . vbi Ms. M. (ed. 'n isa xa^p, v. Rabb. fr. —Esp. the candlestick in the Sanctuary. Num. R. s. 15.
D. S.a.l. note) before the dying man is dead, his executor Men. 29 a Tam. Ill, . 9; Yoma 21 a , v. ",1tt5^; a. fr.— PI.
stands (ready to assume the administration). ni-iiaa. Men. 1. c.
11212 m. (b. h.; in) shaking; ttSjh *ti3a shaking of the nm'nnD^v.waa.
head, ready assent, submission. Sabb. 104 a (ref. to the
XP1212,
tt -
v. ansa.
shapes of certain letters, v. C]S3) 'Vaa nmnn n3n^3lU (Ar. : t: t
only 'as) the Law has been given under repeated signs S37J3D, read: fc»1»a.
- t : • ;
of assent.
MnWD, 'n"J3Q denom. of »T*B, with
(a feigned
an™, T T : -
v . «™. T ! T
stitute for Nazir"). 'Y. Naz.
xan^lESa xan^aa '^...yr*fro
I,
""la-a
beg. 51 a [read:] ftp*
what are the substitutes
"p^n
N "3D I (b. h.) pr. n. m. Manoah, 1) the father of Sam- of substitutes? ... I will be a Nazik, a Nazih &c. Ib.
son. Ber. 61 a . Num. R. s. 10. B. Bath. 91 a ; a. fr.— 2) M., wwiaa naixn i^x "par* u;aa f**&i3 •piw'z iwo*a ibx "pa
father of R. Huna. Taan. 9
a
.
jo-maa iaiN3 xan^sa xan^taa laixn "53 im na^s xa-j
these are not substitutes of substitutes ; these are direct
niDD II m. (b.h.; tVO) rest. Sabb. 152 b 'a *,nb ffli (Ms. substitutes.If one said manzirna (I will be a Nazir), is
M. nnaa) find rest. Lam. R. to I, 3 '3i 'a nxxa ib^St if he not a Nazir? So he who says &c. (turning the sub-
—— — ; ——
x:-nT:E 799 ijq
stitute nouns into verbs) must be considered as if he had prayer, Minhah. Targ. I Kings XVTH, 29.—Y. Pes. V, 30' 1
said manzirna. Ned. 10 b [read:] X3nTsa X3r,73a Sep"". top.— Sot. 39 b masm 'an in the Minhah of the fast-day.
— PI. xnnaa. R. Hash. 31 a xnoiXH 'an in the Minhah of
N""!^) Xj"">J2Q (v. preced.) I will be a Nazir. Y. Sabbath days; a. e.
Naz. I, beg. 51 a (not '""-), v. preced.
|">HtadJAJ f. (correct '"^aa, mantela, jiavnfjXiov, of
TCP m. ch. = h. niaa, l) rest, relief. Targ. 0. Gen. Semitic origin, b^oa H) napkin, handkerchief. Y. Ber.
v.
VIII.V Targ. Deut. XXVIII, 65 (Y. some ed. nw). Targ. Ill, 6 d bot. '31 'ax pp-H quot. in Asheri to Ber. 24 b (ed.
Ps.CXVI, 7 WTO
(Ms. 'm, Kegia 'ni3).— 2) going to rest,
pbaSFtt, Rashba yV^Cl OX, Var. "pbaxs OX, corr. ace, and
decline (v. next w.). Targ. Gen. Ill, 8 BOY rTO 1
(h. text read: inla for "IIDX) who spits into his handkerchief. PI.
same. Gen. R. s. 5; s. 28 *pbl13a31, *pbl3a31 (corr. ace.),
v. bttsa II.
nniiD f. (b. h.; ni3; cmp. nn_3) 1) [to'd rfotcn,] o/fer-
(26 a )
:VWl -G 'ah rbsn the Minhah may be read until *32 pr. n. m., v. X3a.
sunset ib. 26 b '3i D*n"Oti "pa Va *ran "mro
; 'an nbsn . .
'ar.up to the middle of the afternoon. Ib. nbvia 'a ('a "0/Q a weight, v. riaa.
Nap) the large (first) afternoon, i. e. the time from six
and a half hours after sunrise to sunset (the day being jS) / \212 (b. h.) to divide, distribute; to count. Bekh
divided into twelve hours) ; rr.-^p 'a (n3l"inx 'a) the smaller IX, 7 '31 IRK 0309 naial (Bab. ed. 58 b 'X "p3iai) and he
(later) afternoon, i. e. from nine and a half hours to sun- counts with the rod, one, two &c. Ib. "psim DX3a if he
tt ' :
set. Ib. rttrlnto 'a abs the middle of the late (small) after- counted them while they were crouching. Shebu. 34 a bot.
noon. Ib. top 'a bbsrn x'r nr3 if by mistake he '3i -p yrm naa (not rprraa, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) I
failed
to read the Minhah ; a. fr. counted (delivered) to thee a Maneh (as a loan) in the
presence &c. ; ib. b R. Hash. 12 a '31 bl3ab "paia bxnur "WWl
UnjLJ (b. h.) pr. n. m. Menahem, 1) King of Israel. the Jewish scholars count the dates of the flood in ac-
Yalk. Kings 236 (from Seder
c
01am). — 2) name of tbe cordance with R. El. (beginning the year with Tishri),
Messiah to come. Snh. 98 b . Y. Ber. Ill, 5 a top; Lam. R. and the astronomical calendar in accordance with R. J.
to I, 16; Pirke d'R. El. ch. XIX C^OV p bx"i33> p 'a.— (beginning with Nisan). Pesik. R. s. 15, beg. n:nbb TWO "pX
If., associate judge of Hillel.
Hag. II, 2. Ib. 16 XS" 1
' 1
'31 we count by the moon (fix the date of the new month)
~;ar. tfTOSO 'a M. resigned from the judgeship to enter only when seen after sunset. Succ. 29 a , a. fr. naobb "paia
the King's (Herod's) service.— 4) M. bar Simai, surnamed regulate the seasons by the moon (have a lunar year).
'the son of saints'. Pes. 104 a ; Ab. Zar. 50 a ; (Y. ib. HI, 42 c Men. 65 b a. e. '31 D"^" Mao count the required number
,
1
, top O'MDMJJ Wl'lp "& n X Dim). — 5) name of several scholars. of days and proclaim (one day as) the New Moon Day.
f. Maasr. V, end, 52 a M. bar Mabsima.— Y. Erub. VII, 24 c —
YomaV, 3; a. fr. Part. pass, "sna; f. fTWa; pi. 0^*33,
top.— Tosef. ib. XI (VIII), 10 X^ba Wt 'a (Keth. 60* 0*0). T«0a, *p«a; ni-«iaa a) counted. Taan. 8 b 'an 131 that
Tosef. Shebu. I, 7 It 03 ETX 'a, v. 1T35.— Tosef. Keth.V, 1 which has been counted (is known by number). Bekh.
'
T
a. fr. IX, 7 'an " a inx one of the sheep already counted.
(
'CTjyQ, SCH2E ch. same. Targ. 0. Deut. XVIII, weeks), i. e. the pilgrim's sacrifice (nvar:) may be offered
XVHI, 9 ed. Berl. (ed. 'rn:a). — 2) afternoon, afternoon V«i3ab xb'-"1 (Bab. ed. 1^13ab) if while slaughtering he had
101*
—
va 800 "TO
in mind such as were unable to partake of it (sick per- has been ordained for money, we must not stand up, nor
sons &c.) or such as had not been registered for it. lb. do we call him
and the cloak upon him is like
rabbi,
6i a hot. "piisab "pboiK irprvK (Ms. M. i^isab vioix) the the cover of ass. Yoma 22 b Y. Shek. V, 48 d bot. *W3 .
partakers (to be held in mind) are analogous to the reg- '31 'plana dnxir dnx . . . fc&'WJ ni dX if this one ap- .
istered, lb. 70 a rTO&.V. . • M^N Ms. M. (ed. incorr. V^'OO^, pointed superintendent of wicks, was privileged to be
V"13ab) it (the pilgrim's sacrifice) can only be partaken of counted among the great of the generation, how much
by those registered for it; a. fr. more youwho are to be appointed over the preservation of
"pHaS
Nif. njas,
Stbl are neither
'*>3
1) to be counted.
numbered nor measured.
Num. R. s. 1 b"»»6S
Bets. 3
^ ,
lives (as directors of charities).
'31 *>3> Y'2 Ms. 0. (ed. lla3>!2J,
R. Hash. II, 9 (25 a ) sisarCIB
v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 90)
a. e. nisE^ 1311*0 nx, v. nx. Gitt. V, 6 Wfi (usu. isas who have been ordained as a court for all Israel; a. fr.
1*1251) they (their votes) were counted, they resolved, v. 2) (of things) to be assigned. Tosef. Sot. VII, 20 n*ans
lea II ; a. fr. — 2) to be counted on for a share in the Pass- '31 nd3*lS dlxb if a livelihood has been assigned to a man
over lamb, to be registered (Ex. XII, 4). Pes.VIII, 3 dbl3& (by Providence, he has succeeded in establishing a
i. e. if
'31 1*v>3*
y 50" 3 persons may continually be entered for a
, ,
livelihood), he must buy a house '31 npi lb '3 Tin (v. ed. ;
share in it, as long as there remains for each &c. lb. "pa"0 Zuckerm. note) if more has been provided for him, he
'21 "("OTCroi they may be entered and withdraw again. lb. must buy a field and then marry a wife. . . .
if some of them wish to withdraw and have others enter- X3Pp(S) 13a (ed. Lag. "O^a, corr. ace.) they calculated the
ed on their share &c. ; a. fr. — 3) to be specified. Y. Taan. term (of redemption). Targ. Num. 1,44; 49; a. fr. Men. —
IV, 68 b
(ref. to Mish. IV, 5) ni3a*>nb nxi na what 66 a '31 iai*i "Oa^ to count the days . . . and the weeks
c
reason was there for that specification of the time when (of the Omer). Ib. '31 lai*- 13a .. . *,3d"i Ms. M. (ed. "0a)
each family of priests and the people had to offer wood?; the scholars of .counted the days but not the weeks.
. .
Y. Shek. IV, beg. 47 d ; Y. Meg. I, 70 c top. Hull. 60 b '31 *p *i3a">l= the Israelites shall count days and
Hif. nsan, 'Vi to cause to be entered; to add to the years after thee (the moon); a. fr. —[Yalk. Is. 337 *pi3al,
number of sharers; to transmit one's share to another v. 5ia.] — 2) to appoint, v. infra.
person. Y. Pes.VIII, 36 a top dsn b>3> mix 'in he gave him a Pa. ""Sa 1) to appoint, ordain. Targ. 0. Gen. XLI, 33, sq.
share gratuitously. Tosef. ib. 1. c. nisanb im«J rTTfilh "b3 (Y. Pe.); a.fr.— Y. Bice. Ill, 65 c bot. mni*aa J*n*fl3 *,1in
'31 (ed. Zuck. nisaVj) members of a party who desire to give they wanted to ordain him; ib. d top n^2aa. Ib. n"013a1
others a share in their own portion. Ib. diinx nsaan and they ordained him. Sot. 40 a nnsaab n*6» *,331 •OO'^J
Ipbn b>3* (ed. Zuck. indB) he who assigns to others a share XUJild the scholars agreed to appoint him first; a. fr.
in his portion ; a. fr. Part. pass. xsaa, i?aa; pi. *,Jaa appointed; officer (v.
Hof. nsain to be added to the number; to be entered n**,aa). Targ.Y. Num. 11,5. Targ. Jer. XXXVII, 13. Targ.
as a member of a group or of a family. Tosef. ib. 3 'n IChr.IX,19; a.fi\— 2)to assign, commit. Targ. Ps. XXXI, 6.
dna inx b3? if he (the orphau) has been entered as his (h. text lipBX). Targ. II Chr. XII, 10; a. e.
Pi. nja, '-a to appoint, elect Gitt. V, 4 fmm )fb *?Ot K*$a ii.
'31 for whom their father had appointed an executor. Ithpa. "eanN, XSanx, Ithpe. 'oat-ox, "•aanx 1) to be num-
lb. '31 idX ttlratt whom the father ... has appointed. bered, counted; to vote. Targ. Num. II, 33; a. fr.' — Sot.
Taan. 10 b '31 inisab IIXHU 1*3 who is worthy to be elected 40 a , v. supra. Gitt. 56 b '31 idUrn V& MfiiXl (not . .X3*aX1
manager &c; a. fr. —
Part. pass. n*.iaa; pi. VWOO. Sot. XdHUn . .) the nobles of Rome have agreed to place thee
42 a 'aa "pd nab for what purpose is a deputy high priest at the head; a. e. — 2) to be appointed; to be ordained.
appointed ?; Yoma 39 a I3ia*»a ed. (corr. ace. Rabb. D. S.
; v. Targ. Ps. CX, 4 ; 6; a. fr.— Y. Bice. 1. c. i3anial yh*t* fa in
a. 1. note); a. fr.— Hor. 13 b '31 d315 d^3iaa dnidXID Ms. M. t)d3d (read: ftan^ai) one of those ordained for money's
(ed.diTQK 'aava, = d^Siaan *,a) whose father is of those sake. Ib. (adapting Hab. II, 19) '31 **» XH£d33 xb has he
worthy to be elected manager (v. Taan. 1. c). V. fl^aa.— — not been ordained for money? &c. lb. "Sena i*to Vdp sb
Esp. to ordain as teacher and judge. Y. Snh. 1, 19 a bot. he would not allow himself to be ordained; a.fr. 3) to be —
1"d a court that ordained without the con-
'31 X^IE 'laiZJ designated for a share. Targ. O. Ex. XII, 4. Pes. 89 a —
sent of the Nasi. Ib. '31 n?aa inx ^3 li'fi each teacher im in bo *ind sins-oa^i Ms. M. (Ms. O. mi in bs *>3ai3i
used to ordain his own pupils; a. fr. n^ind; ed. '31 i3n n">1^S *0a-'31, read 12m 1*13*13* ; v. Rabb.
Hithpa. nsarn, Nithpa. nsero 1) to be appointed, des- D. S. a. them be designated as participants
1. note) and let
ignated as deputy, to be ordained. Sifra Ahare Par. 5, with each of them (and leteach of them bedesignated&c).
ch. VIII fisanan inx p3 nidlb to imply the other priest lb. *oana xp *>a l^ntai ind after the lamb is slaughtered
that is designated as a deputy. Y. Bice. Ill, 65 d top 33*1 how can he be entered? Ib. 60 b *C*nnx n'nV'S 1:a*iai (v.
'31 *3Tfl when a scholar is ordained, his sins are forgiven. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 200) and other persons will be enter-
Ib. '31 t]033 'ana xino W (not i3ana) before him who ed for a share in it; a. e.
;
began their vote from the side benches (with the jun-
^12^212, v. yn^aa.
iors). —
Sabb. 66 b '31 'a b3 all incantations which are re-
peated several times, must contain the name of the patient's
;
:a, v. w h.
mother ; a. e.
p^OE, v. p^aw. M. a. oth. TpEi3B3) fan me with the (thy) fan; v. nB3B.
I T t :
' t :
bC"0Q,
T
m. Caa, v. ac^aan) [badge of office,] neck-
'72 XtCJC, Y. Meg. II, 73 b read:
, XTOm.
lace. Targ. Gen. XLI, 42; a', e. Tam. 32 a .— PI. i^SQ. —
Targ. Y. II Gen. XLIX, 22. il~«/U Minnith, in Palestine. Lam. R.
(b. h.) pr. n. pi.
11IJX1 n3"i3B3 inlX ItnXI quot. in Men. Hamm. V, ch. V, numerical value of n^aa (500); Koh. R. to I, 8 (corr. ace).
1, 2 (ed. npa^aS) they seized him by his necklace.
TV02D, Y. Sot. V, 20 c bot., v. n^23n.
V jC"0Q| "^Q,
m. Minyamin, name of 2*12 pr. n.
IV, 8; Yeb. I,
1) to
I'DUSrOQ/^DQ/^ ch.same. Targ. Gen. XXXIV, '31 prsas (b3N) praaa TTt xb pBOn they did not shrink
30. Targ. Num. 1, 2 ;
b
a.'fr.-Sabb. 73 "b nab 'a why does the (from interchange) where the case was doubtful &c.
Mishnah state the number b
(39)?; Kerith. 2 ; a.fr.— Bekh. Yeb. 14 b Gitt. 36 a '31 nilbnba 133B3 they hesitated to lend
.
60 a bot, '31 nxDIE 'a3 nTTW b"Win because it occurs in money to one another; a.fr. 2) to be withheld. Num. —
— ;
R. s. 15 *Bl nnaiBfi nssa? (some ed. n?3a3) joy was with- timate? What the inspired seers (prophets) have institut-
held from the wicked and given to &c. ed for thee ; Gen. R. s. 1. Ib. ; Sabb. 104 a Meg. 2 b D^BIX 'a
;
b
Hif. S^San to keep apart. Y. Taan. I, 64 top •jSHpaa WW Dl"iBN M. intimates that the seers indited them; Num.
Ua thou keepest them (the rain-drops) from com-
11 for R. s. 18; Tanh. Koran 12.
a
mingling (v. B1E1); Y. Ber. IX, I4 top "pa^aa (corr. ace).
Itfrmp^Q, v. Nnrnpwa.
V212 ch. same, to diminish; to withhold. Targ. Gen.
XXX, Targ. 0. Deut. XIII, (h. text
"Dp2U, Ab. d'R. N. ch. XVIII, end, v. BpVo.
XXII, 16. lb. 2. 1
S>-13); a. fr.
SI2p3£ f. (EJJ35) holder, ">*il*S 'a a band on which
Ithpe. SpEWS, fitS"^ \)tobe diminished; to cease, omit.
various trinkets are suspended. Sabb.59 1
'
(defining J&Bp),
Targ. Ex. V, 11 (O.ed. Vien. SSaFP; h. text sna). lb. IX,
v. &OXB.
29 (h. text bin). Targ. Deut. XXIII, 23 (O. ed.Vien.S3.aPin).
Targ. Jud. XV, 7 ; a.fr. — 2) tv restrain one's self; to refuse,
nTfp^ f. pi. (b. h.; p^; v. npjna) tubes. Men. 97 a
shrink. Targ. Ex. XXIII, 2 ; a. e — Gitt. 52 b iSBBTsfc V* (ref. to Ex. XXV, 29) B"Bp lb St l n ni*p3B by m'nakkiyoth
he might shrink (from becoming a guardian). Y. Sabb. are meant the tubes placed between the show-loaves to
VII, 9 b bot. 'pssana j6, v N"fi; a. e. .
let the air pass; Rashi :'which keep the bread clean from
y\^12 y^21Z i m. (b. h.; b?2, v. fcgJ) foot-covering, S2J"13I2| '~QD f.ch.=h. rTVba, lamp, Targ. Ex. XXV,
shoe, contrad/to Vl3B sole. Kel. XXVI, 4. Esth. R. to IV, 31; a. fr.—Y. Yonia III, 41 a top, expl. fiSTOS. Gen. R. s.
15, v. TjHK Yeb. XII, 1. Tosef. ib. XII, 10 '31 BISSE 'a3 63, end (translat. n^Ssn hBX, Is. XXI, 5) 'a T1D arrange
with a torn shoe which still covers the larger portion the lamp; Cant. R. to III, 4 '31 'a na"pst thou (Belshaz-
of the foot; a. fr. — PI. B^SJB, T^MB. Sabb. 129 a . Pes. zar) hast put up the lamp, kindled the light; a. fr. PL
1
a
13 b , v. S5Q. Y. Sabb. VI, 8 ; a. fr.—Kil. IX, 7 p'Wl nfiwSO. fctPHSB. Targ. Jer. LII, 19 ; a. e.
supplied by eight bakers, so that eight may have bought TDD f. (b. h.; h3a) 1) portion, share. B. Bath. 12 u 'a
from one baker severally, but one baker must necessarily '31 3133 I sell thee a portion of my vineyard.— "ban n:a
have supplied at least two sellers. the king's share (annona). Ned. 62 b ; B. Bath. 8 a v. rnsa.,
Ab.Zar.71 a ")ba'a ij>3> Ban settle forme the annona (in kind
D"®2C pr. n. pi. (Mevcp, MefACpt;) Memphis, in Egypt.
or money). — 2) appointment; nsas, nsa hs (abbrev. a"5)
b
Pesik. R. s. 17 filSSa CpJ ; Pesik. Vayhi, p. 63 CnS-ia (corr.
on condition that, for the sake of. Tosef. Dem. "VI, 13
ace.) the Biblical Nof is Memphis ; v. B^BB.
•j3 'as las rnrti nso ed. Zuck. (Var. p rvw»b »"s nbnna .
.)
forms for the five letters are a Mosaic tradition, lb. lira crop of wool. Ab. I, 3,jt. 13?. Tosef. Snh. XI, 2 i3N 3HT
(the nature of the offence and
"
MDTtfl "$> WtpPtW fiB . . . 'a what does the vox M. in- riUJlS n3K (
3 a"ri I know
— ; —
n:r 803 nboae*
had said 'from now', i. e. the stipulated transaction takes happened to be barefooted. Ib. b 'a in D""D nin (not
retrospective effect when the condition is fulfilled. B. — >3XDa) he had put on one shoe. Kidd. 49 a v. X513. Gen. ,
Bath. X, 8 (175 b ) Ihlbn inSO b3> Ar. (ed. VOiaX, v. PO«ia^) R. s. 41, beg.; s. 52, end, v. y^abi-J; a. e.—Pl. *$*&»•
he extended the loan to him (the friend) on the condi- Lam. R. to I, 5 "^XDa "JT» both my shoes. Taan. 22 a 'a
tion which he (the guarantor) offered. ia31X black shoes (worn by gentiles). Contr. "jOa, X3Ba, —
q. v.
HDD, ^rjQ ch. same. Targ. II Sam. VI, 19 (ed. Wil.
XP3a).— B. Bath. 167 a (in a contract) yUJOTDl piR*! n373 SSDS&72, Y. Dem. II, 21 d bot., v. XPSDa.
"HX the share of Keuben and Simeon the brothers. B.
Kam. 113 b X3bal 'a=~ban nsa, v. preced. B'. Mets. 109 1 '
fcSCSOD m. (XD3 to move; Hif. to drive; v. PI. to
T. II Gen. XLIV, 18 msta a"5 153 n Lev. R. s. 29; Yalk. Lev. 645 nDXDXa (corr. ace);
'31 even if it must be done ;
Lam. R. to I, 1 Vina, v. Dab. StflTSCD f. (XD3; v. P. Sm. 2179; 2391) balance, pair
DG II m. =630; nD3=XttJ3) impost, tribute,tax.
(b. h.; of scales.* T&vg, Prov. XVI, 11 ed. Lag. (ed. Wil. Xfipa).
lb. XI, 1 ed. Lag. (Var. XSXOa, corr. ace; ed. Wil. xnOa).
Lam. R. to I, 1 Ynta, v. Bab a. X&a I. PZ. fi^&a, "psa. — lb. XX, 23 (ed. Lag. a. oth. XPfilIJa); v. XPfiDa.
Y. Dem. II, 22 d top IttJnnnSUJ Ton 'a ^»a the places which
were made tributary (under Joshua) are considered as
2012, 3DQ, v. a&rra
conquered (belonging to the Holy Land); Y.Shebi. VI, 36 c
bot. -pOti "ton (corr. ace); Gen. R. Lev. R. nnp) dining couch. Sabb. 63 a top
s. 98. s. 33, 3DQ, '12 m. (b. h. ;
end 'si 'an nbsab xbx laoab xb (this nninsi, Deut. IV, '31 nni 'an on a wide couch or on a narrow couch (an
28) does not mean 'to worship' but 'to serve' by paying obscene disguise for a fat or a lean Avoman, v. ""bllto).
imposts, annonae &c. lb. ; Cant. R. to II, 14 nx . 'ab DX
. .
Cant. R. to I, 12 STpin "in Dan 'on his couch' (ib.), in
:-'?;• -pa (some
•ai ed. tnDSb) if it be a question of heaven.
taxes .... thou art king over us ... . (we recognize thy
sovereignty) . .
., but &c. TX2.012, n^PpD f. (preced.) 1 ) banqueting party. Sabb.
b
149 b bot.— 2) banquet, dinner. Ber. 52 df«a P3pa titfo
#012, S©"72 ch. same. Targ. Prov. XII, 24,v.xnx TQ. ,
JjSQu, ?S jXOQ m. (nxp) repulsive; unclean. Targ. top of the rope) a stick with a cone (to which the ashes
0. Lev. V,'2 (Y.Vxpa). lb. XIII, 45 a. fr.— Eduy. VIII, 4 ;
would adhere).
Ms.M.(ed.nxPDa); Ab. Zar.37 a a.e.— P/.pDXDa, *pnxpa. ;
Targ. Lev. XI, 26; a. fr. Fern. &QKDO, XPnxpa. Targ. Ez. ^bnOD, v. xpn^oa.
IV, 14. Targ. Lev. V, 2; a. fr.— Y. Kil. IX, 8JF bot. X3HX
'a an unclean land (outside of Palestine) ; Y. Keth. XII, rPDDOD, &*bO"10E, a corrupt, for xb^Boa m. pi.
"•IpQ m. ("My I) multitude. Targ. Y. Deut. X, 22. Targ. nipQ m. (b. h.; Mitt, Ges. Thes. p. 941) cover, sheath'
O. Gen. XXX, 30 ; a. e.-[Targ. Is. V, 24, v. "japa.]-V. "\30III. TWttMJ 'a the (iron) sheath of the ploughshare. Tosef
Kel. B. Bath. I, 7 (R. S. to Kel. XXI, 2 UWaail) 'an). Erub.
XTilDO,v. aispa. 22 Ms. 0., v. Xltea.
:i
R. to IV, 3, v. Kiii\
™lijD/2 m. (b. h.; 130) 1) enclosure. Ex. R.
mosa'an he locked the enclosure up before it (the cattle).
s. 15 bS31
^OQ, v. EflR.
T\U12 f. (b. h.; np3) trial; wonder.— PL nigra. Pesik. K^DiDQ, S^HDiDQ m. (ISO) stopper. Sabb.lll a
R. s. 33. Deut. R. s. 7, v.
'
noa.
T T bot. fKeth. 6a ; Bekh. 25 a xn^WI 'a (Ar. s. v. 120, a. Ms. M.
a. F. Sabb. 1. c: 'altta) the stopper of the brewing boiler
fcnnpQ m. (*fl*l) witness. Targ. Job XVI, 19.
(made of soft material, as rags &c).
Lam. R. to IV, 2 (in Chald. diction) 'a nx mb thou art O n E10D, v. o^pa.
not invited. PI. "paiOa guests, dining party. Gen. R. s.
71 '21 a"SSX Wl nxb V© 'a ail (not -p^Bb) most of the HEfiDE, v.iatt.
guests (assembled at Boas' wedding, Ruth IV, 11) were
d escendants of Leah, and yet they made Rachel the chief
(SblDQ m. (Otta; v. ttttan) stomach (of man). Koh.
person (placing her before Leah); lluth R. to 1. c; Pesik. R. to XII, 4 (ref. to mna, ib.) )tra 'a mbl *"5 because
a
Ronni, p. 141 b (not "pitta); a. e.
the stomach grinds no more; (Sabb. 152 'ppTlp; Lev. R.
s. 18 ttttan).
SrVQ^lOQ (xap; v. xrriap) keeper of a wine shop.
f.
Ab. Zar. 70 b tftib tfrbpvb niOal 'a *Wl Ms. M. (ed. in- SxTOp'toQ m. pi. (u-eaoaxuXov, -a) inter columnia-
corr.) a shopkeeper who gave her key in charge of a tion, space between Uvo columns. Y. Ned. Ill, 37 d bot. X3X
gentile woman.— [Sabb. 105 b Alf. Ms. 'tta, v. xmaisa. 'a ^Sam bs> milX . . . man (not "^ais) I saw the tanned
slough of a serpent stretched over eight intercolumnia-
J^bZl'lDQ m. (bap) load. — PI. ^=aiOa. B. Bath. 86 a
tions; Y. Shebu.III,34 d 'V^tt1tta K^an b3J T^p*, v. X11X II.
•vaitvT'ttaa Ar. (Ms. H. "^apa, Ms. M. "^axtta, v. Rabb. D.
S. a. 1. note; ed. "^boxna q. v.) in the case of loads of gar- &O01&D, v. nbttaoa.
lic (which are not packed in bags or baskets).
rilBlDQ, Tosef. Sabb. VIII (IX), 22 ed. Zuck.. v.
ar-Qion, v. MTtfea
t t : :
ttB"tta.
1 'JIlDZj m. pi. (WD; cmp. ;pp) low border-marks (v. S^lOU NHTplOa, v. next w.
tt£/tta). Y. B. Bath. II, 13 b bot. '31 'a "pasi fb*tt if part-
ners of a property divide off between one another by SrOj?"l©D f. (pp?) ascent, step. Targ. Y. I Num.
means of border-marks (which can easily be stepped over), XXXIV,*4 (some ed. KnVplOa; Y. II Krllippa). Targ. Is.
they may object (to opening a school ; v. Tosef. ib. I, 4). —
XV, 5. PI. y^p/iSO. Targ. Y. Ex. Xx/23; a. fr. Targ. —
— . —
805 '-toct:
""i iC2
m. ("pa) informer, traitor (delivering Jews into to verse 5, ref. to WttpVp "pi-raji of the text, v. ?z\l a.
the hands of the Roman government). B. Kam. 119 a "paa t ; • J
tinguishing them in the Biblical law).— Esp. the traditional &OTJD/2 m. (Ithpe. noun of 220) = n^p-X, porch,
Scriptural text without vowels, contrad. to X"ipa the esp. dealer's stall with a bench attached to the house. Y.
traditional vocalization, v. "X. Y. Meg. IV, 74 d bot. (ref. B. Bath. II, beg. 13 b 'a Th r,z — r* . . p2T sold his dwell-
to Neh. VHI, 8) 'they explained the reading', 'an rit this ing and reserved for himself one porch.
means the traditional text Bab. ib. 3 a mmOan "l^X (some ;
b
eds. miO*3; v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1.); Ned. 37 nmoart. Ab. Nr"3TJp22, HD f. same. Cant. R. to VI, 12 pX
Ill, 13 Ll'Wib 5"0 'a the tradition is the fence for (pre- wnrib 'b=rt>a son (not (rtihb) if he looks up to
'zi 'a
serving the integrity of) the Torah. Zeb. 37 b, sq. "anx thatstall where he used to sit tailoring &C.-P/. xr""2"22a.
'a X~pa the traditional vocalization is a help (in
":~S" Y. Bets. I, 60 c bot. ^l KtT«nn 'a to s6 sit not on the
interpretation), and so is the traditional literal text (e. outer benches of the hall of Bar Ula, for they are cold.
g. rzD3, Lev. XXIII, 42, which may be interpreted as
PL Prntao. Tanh. Vaethh. 6 V\ --zzr, "2 £& the tradi- IX, 32 a 'a 3"5 ",ira placed on a stationary stone bench,
tions of wisdom were taken from Moses and given to opp. n-j^a, couch. Y. Erub. VII, 24 b bot. '31
">:S bs 'a HtW
Joshua. —
Meg. 3 a Ned. 37 b v. supra. [n'TSa Masso-
; , — (not iTTtBS) he attached a porch along the whole front
if
rah, the collection of textual readings systematically ar- of the wall.— PL r/P^ppa. Y. Pes. V, 32 c bot. p-"r Ttl 'a
ranged.] pnb they made for them projecting boards (along the
wall, that they should not step on the blood; Bab. ib.
NTHi©D ch. same. Targ. Job XV, 18. Targ.Is.XXX, 65 b i;aa:rxx man, v. xapp^x).
11 XWlpa (Bxt. XJiaCa, corr. ace).
SDVt2DD,Targ. Is. XXX, 11 Bxt. Lex. p. 1462, a cor-
D'iDJGi Tosef. Pes. U (HI), 3 'an ed. Zuck. (Var. ntJOH, rupt., v. xrnisa.
pOaTl), read: PPffB or pi. nioiin (v. Pes. 40 b ).
"^QQ m. Opp) one who diverts judgment from its Af. ^pax same. Targ. O. Num. I.e. ; a. e.—Targ. II Sam.
1. e, v. supra.
straight path (=h. "pi fitta), prevaricator. Targ. Is. LVIII, 6
""TOpE, v. preced.
"j
"I2D/G f. (u.a<7Ti)rT)) ^ttm mastic. Gen.R. s.91 end;
n
5tf <DQ, Targ. Is. Ill, 20 ed. Lag., v. X^a.
YaIk.Gen.149 (expl.a'?,Gen.XLIII, 11; ed. KJWSJ^rOSatia,
'3a2£la corr. ace). Tosef. Sabb. XII (XIII), 8, v. D?V.
fc'TOQ b x"<&aa, v. i&a.
D'H'TaDn, v. next w.
D n DD, Targ.Y. Gen. IV, 8 pBX 'a some ed., read: np">a.
ptov, -a) secret.
'31 ed. Bub. (ed. *p*nnDa, corr.
Midr.'Till.'toPs. IX, 6 "OK
ace.) this secret I reveal
ill "p-naSTo petdo, arfiPba,
t r • : : • :
v. SUb m "i
'a pBO, v. "riapa. Num. R. s. 20, end '31 1HX ^atoa "JW 23 Dtt'ftpan 0^333 the planets on re-entering their peri-
he slapped one of the boys; (Tanh. ed. Bub. Balak 30, odical orbits.
note 175 -iaoa).—V. "riBOO. /
D' a' 1 1
pQ,(Oap' I3, p )Q) m. (a popular corruption
1 !
yntada CtDtjg, laaa), v. r?**?* of semissis) semissis, a Roman value, equal to half an as
or six ounces. Tosef. B. Bath. V, 12 fWnWIp "TO '^a a
|1p"''™)'pCD m. (jxixjTirjpixov) of a secret nature. Y. semissis is equal to two quadrantes ^2113 OaOa Kidd. 12 a
;
Sabb. XII, end, 13 d , v. ffBtSQ. •ppSllalp; Y. ib. I, 58 d "©a oaSVTlp "W.—PI. y vnqiq, &
n
ppap^a, pp'^apsia. Tosef. 1. e 'D^a i3U5 1C3^K an as has
D"!t20E, v. V^B^SO. two semisses Kidd. ; 1. e '^aOia ; Y. 1. c. pDiaiOa.
m
'Ol2, f \U12 (b. h.) to melt, flow) to cause running
OUTDID, a species of wood, v. Oapa III.
off, effect curdling. LXXVIII, 25 K?1U
Midr. Till, to Ps.
ripa^ that the manna might not melt. — Denom. ioa. •^ria^pD, v. xnapa.
Hif. fipan to cause to flow. Ib. to Ps.VI,7 rpp bTirifi
inaa Hpaai ed. Bub. (ed. nnaai) he began to weep and
'31 2 n DQ, Y. Taan. IV, beg., 67 b , v. S*ptt.
make his bed flow with (his) tears; Yalk. Ps. 636.
Pi. nsa
T
same, to dissolve, weaken. Deut. R. s. 7 (play CD^DD m. (=:p£t>a; CfO; cmp. GB^pB, OBP? with
on ni&a, Deut. xxix, 2) '3i ymta rrisaa rvoari the which our w. interchanges) border-mark, partition con-
plagues weakened the bodies of the Egyptians; Yalk. sisting of wooden or stone pegs, contrad. to its^na or bm3
Nif. iipas to be melted, to fall away. Tosef. Sot. Ill, 4 S. a. 1. note 10), opp. to rTlttJS ns^tta a partition ten hand-
rvpaS rOT* her thigh will fall away. breadths high. B. Bath. 2 b 'aB (Ms. M. TP^pBB, v.
XabS-'B.
p^D/Q m. (pda) oftue harvest. Y. B. Bath. Ill, H a top, ^'012 m. (b. h.; 7|3d H to be clear; cmp. aia) clarified,
v. "WHS I. Hall. Ill, 9 'a TVn olives collected at the regular mixed drink. Ex.R.s.42, end (play on ridda,Ex.XXXII,8)
harvest, opp. dlp^S Tl*H gleanings (v. d1p^3ll); Y. Maasr. 'n Tus>a Kin© -y'da -pa pn»ap 3"p the gold in the calf
V, 51 d top (not p^a). Y. Yeb. XV, 14 d 'a d3331 ffiCJ KIT weighed 120 centenaria, corresponding to the numerical
when the grape-cutting is over, the olive-harvest begins; value of mesekh (drink) which removes He (the Lord,
a. e. — V. np^da. i. e. leads to godlessness).
'31 *&tt Tjda the curtain for the gate of the court. Yalk.
p^OD II m. (pes ; sub. d^da &c.) owe who levies con- HD0/Q I f. (b. h.;Tjd3) molten image. Snh.l03
b
(play
tributions, in gen. a Roman collector, oppressor (interch. on is/xxviil, 20 '3i nsdam) 'a ib nosn am ia 133 d3i3
with p**D). Tosef. Ohol. XVI, 13 (ed. Zuck. p^sa); Y.Pes. n*ix should a molten image be made a rival to him 'who
I,27 c (Bab. ib. 9 a a. Ab. Zar. 42 a '310).
;
PI. f^fX B.
,
— gathers the waters of the sea together like heaps'? ; Num.
Kam. X, imbd31 and government officers confiscated
5 'a R. s. 7 ; Yoma 9b . Sifra K'dosh., beg. (idols are called) 'a
it. Ib. 116 b '31 'xa /Da naKI "jKa he who reads massikin
.
d^dld^S dnttJ ©":> massekhah, because they are cast.
is not at fault, nor is he who reads m'tsikin (ref. for the
latter to pCtO, Deut. XXVIII, 57, for the former to Chald. fDOft II f. (b. h.; "3dT I) web, garment. Ex. R. s. 42,
riNpO for bxbx, ib. 42). Y. Sabb. XVI, end, 15 d ni03>b "jSId end (ref! to Ex. XXXII, 8) '3l viOa rYhrtfb TWbDK Irtjri 'a
'an thou shalt be forced by the officers.— Y. Dem. VI, 25 b a bad web have you woven for future generations (follows
a working animal by an act resembling harnessing. Kidd. (next w.) poverty. Cant. R. to
"DQ72 m. I, 4 (inter-
I, 4, v. n^diai
rndia. Tosef. ib -ida 'a K^n irK ib. 1, 8 . .
'13 nnx "^ddaa
preting :dda, v. 'ddall; strike out ia*i)
(ed. Zuck. n-Tdlal, Var. n")diad) what is m'sirah ? He (the
nsi13 "pnK out of my poverty, we shall run after thee.
seller) hands him (the buyer) a bit and he harnesses it
(the animal); Kidd. 22 b '31 ninK 'ad I2£i3 what is bim- I^CQ I m. (b.h.; *|3d I) poor man /(adj.) scanty, scarce;
sirah (Kidd. I, 4)? He seizes its hoof, hair &c, a. fr. trnsf. mean. Midr.Prov! ch. XXII T«na "Jdlda Kin© 'a the
2) handing, delivery. Gitt. 9
b
, a. fr. 'a "ns, v. rnd ; a. fr.— poor man is called misken,
because he is sparsely supplied
3) levy. Cant. K. to IV, 4 (ref. to Num. XXXI, 5) . . fi^SttJ with means of livelihood; Lev. R. s. 34 ifD. KinilJ i35a
'ad . . twelve thousand men were raised by levy, opp. bdb he is called misken, because he is despised of all men
Md13d as volunteers. (ref. to Koh. IX, 16). Ruth R. to I, 1 (ref. to Koh. 1. c.)
Kin© ia 'a ma kpk rrrwi rrnta 'a n\n© »"i b« maan 131
]"H"pE] m. pi. C*n&) rebels, v. "pj^O. '31 li-imd ''ltd was the wisdom of R. Akiba who was a
Tjd13 ; Gen. R. psia), v. dbia [Yalk. Ex. 165 nsdaa, read — Ar. nmn ildla 'aO, read: Vndld 'affl, v. supra.— Denom.
foda, v. r id.]
(
102*
— : ; ;
(for discussion,
"{SCQ II, TSpD to make poor, make contemptible.
'31 *|?B '2 *pn2ip1X have you put up such and such a web,
a
Koh.R.*toIX, 16,v.preced. Ex.R.s. 1; Sot. ll (play on
i. e. have you mastered this and that subject?
nfeSOO, Ex. I, 11) "jnipm nx ni32022113 (read: "(TWO) for
they (the buildings) impoverish their builders; Yalk. Ex.
Jl^pQ, v. rbyq.
162 ni330212) (corr. ace). Cant. R. to I, 4 (play on i33tf:2,
ib.) [read:] nxro "pinx i?i33ea make me (Israel) poor,
fcrbCQ m.php)rejectable, drossy. Targ. Prov. XXVI,
and we shall run after thee (v. preced.).
23 ^XBOS (h. text OiJPO C]03).
Ithpa. "|2c-?nn, Nithpa. "j302ri3 to become poor. Sot.
1. c. TKJWO 'pKO pOWl P3 whoever makes building his POp x02 m. (v. PObo) hair-dresser. Lam. R. to 1, 15
T
business will get poor ; Yeb. 63 a Ex. R. 1. c. ; Yalk. Ex. 1. c.
IWMPa pi023 "|p"iD
;
(expl. nVp, ib.) [read:] '•prmx JSffl
hair-curler.
B. Mets. II, U»iX a poor man. Y. Peah VII, 21 b
8 C top 13
top; a. fr. PI. p?»tJO, N*?"?02, "W30j '*«. Targ.Y.Deut.
l
nOTEn "2 the spread web, i. e. the web hanging from the Ithpa. 02D2piX to be dissolved, melt away, perish.
transverse beam (vestis pendens, v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Tela). Targ. Job IX, 23 (h. text Pi*0).
Kel. XXI, 1 'an U5S3 the woof, opp. to lEW inil) the warp
of the standing loom. Midr. Till, to Ps. XXXVIII Yalk. ; &Q0Q II (cmp. ttJ2U32) 1) to press, squeeze. Part. —
Ps. 733 '31 '2rt 13X we are the web, and Thou the weaver pass. 020122
T
mashed, shapeless. Num. R. s. 14 (play on
a. e.— 2) (crop. Lat. textus) construction, Talmudic treatise. nin2u:2 koh. XII, 10) rvha on 01020122 oixxiionm rwwa
,
Ruth R. to II, 9 (play on 7(5>:j, II Sam. XXIII, 16) MjttBS '31 when they (the words of the Law) come out disfigured,
'31 ns3p1 '2 (not XH302) he (David) constructed it and they are bitter (drops) to those who hear them; v. 02 1;
fixed it as a rule for future generations that the king Y. Snh.X, 28 a bot— Nidd. 24 a (p02012) Dip20l2 liSBID 12
forces the road &c. (v. Snh. II, 4); Midr. Sam. ch. XX; Y. (= '122) a foetus whose face is mashed, contrad. to flim'J,
Snh. II, 20 c top. Sabb. 114 a , v. H^O; a. ix. — Pl. niP302. v. niO I. — 2) (cmp. "pax) to press, urge, esp. (of medical
Midr. Till, to Ps. CIV, 25 '31 131 'art IPX those are the treatment) to sustain vital energies. Gen. R. s. 82 ~p
systematic collections of Bar K. &c. Num. R. s. 18 DH2UJ '31 nu3S3 p02022 this is theway they stimulate the vital
'2 sixty Talmudic treatises [editions, however, count sixty- energy of the travailing woman; (Yalk. ib. 136 p3HD2);
three] ;
TanK Korah 12; Cant. R. to VI, 9 (not nm . .
.); Yalk. Is. 263 rWlfi HX p02021tf (corr. ace).
a. fr.
DDpQ ch. same, 1) to press, squeeze. Hull. 4 a 02022
XPCOD
t v - :
ch. same, text,» treatise &c. Snh. 49 a
rrnSH 101202 fii? he holds the head closely in his hand
bird's
'23 1FJP a legal subject had just been opened for them (so that no mark, if there was any on it, could be rec-
— — -
; ;
WW nn Oaoa"a T3 10 a son was born to him with his corr. ace. ; h. text niTS).
membrum mashed, and he died.
po/wAed wood,
prob. (=5.13:: x, cmp. 1*0) coral-wood. Hag. 26 b 'a iba Ms.
m. (v. Oaca I)
23. Targ. Ez. XVI, 10; a. fr.— Lam. R. to 1,5 rT*r<1 'a m
one of his shoes; "jlT! '73 in the other shoe; a. e. —Kidd.
M. (some ed. C"aoa, read O^aOa; Ar. OO'Oa) vessels of
22 b bot. "WOTS (prob. to be read: "^XDT?) my shoe. — PI.
pohshed wood, opp. to Diaboatnto; Men. 97 a .— [Kidd. 12 a
y:073, X*3C3. Targ. Josh. IX, 5 (ed. Wii. 13073). Targ. Is.
Z"Z", v. 6VW.] IH," 18 (h.text 0^032?).— Hebr. pi. O^Spa. Y. Pes. X, beg.
hcece, v. nz?z-2H. 37 b , v. brfis.
T T ~ : T T : - -:
"iECE m. (b. h. only in pi.; 130) 1) a pointed object, fcO^Q^ m - C\\Z>) pure gold. Targ. Is. XIII, 12 (ed. Wil.
nail, pin.Sabb. VI, 10 (67 a ) aibsn fQ 'a (Y. ed. 3&ttl '2) X3pa; ed'. Lag. n330a; h. text Ona).
a nail from the gallows of an impaled convict (used as
an amulet). Kel. XII, 4 r~i;n "a the blood-letter's pin (v.
ni2pD f. ("|30) strainer; the strained mass. Sabb.
XX, 2 (139 b ) blin
mustard mixture in the strainer
?72J 'a a
infra) rYCffBtl "3X Vl) 'a the style of the sun-dial ''Will '33
; ;
a "pSDa "pK you must
(v. Rashi a. 1.). Ib. 134 lbtt 'aa . . .
the weaver's pin. lb. 5 'SI tPprtTtt tJ; Tosef. ib. B. Mets.
not strain a mustard mixture (on the Holy Day) in the
II, 14 'ai lapSHJ '73 an iron pin which was bent in order
strainer designated for it.
to be used as a key. Kel. 1. c. "W&ID bllJ 'a the banker's
pin for fastening the shutters, v. D*"W.— Num. R. s. 14 83*18 '
NFOOE * (preced.) sieve, basket. Y. Dem. H, 21 d
HMJlttJ lb a nail which has abig knob. —Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. bot. Ib. X3X03 (corr. ace.).
IV, 3 '31 13 DSin tWtA '33 HTX13 niUSTB bpa a staff to the
end of which a pin was attached for the sake of taking CCE (b. h.) to melt, dissolve.
hold of the threshing floor (of making it stationary) ; ib. Nif. 0733, 0733, eia"1 ?, OB"1 ? to melt, be liquefied; to fall
V, 10. Ib.B. Bath. VII, 2 '=1 V» 'an Bin the builder's cord away; to faint; to despair. Ex.R. s. 25 ipOlEr? (Var. TpE^)
to which a pin is attached (i. e. plumb-line). Ib. B. Mets. they faint. Yalk. iVWtfl they began to lose
ib. 251 "p0733
II, 11 SJTW1 "a the scraper's pin (fastened to the smith's heart; Mekh. B'shall., Shir., s. 9 Danb. Deut. R. s. 1, end
block); a. iv.—Pl. tf n otjtj,
}
'
f yJQti, nilapa. Gen. R. s. 68, '21 13* ? or^Pi may this man's (thy) eye run out. Maasr.
1
end. B. Bath. 7 b '53 na rap drive nails into it, i. e. re- I, 2 lOXTTEa 0"aiain pomegranates are subject to tithes
member it well. Tosef. Kel.B. Mets. II, 11 nVott) "flWl nbia when their core becomes pulpy; expl. Y. ib. 48" bot.
'"3 a store-keeper's bowl (?) studded all over with nails. '21 baiX 1573^71373 (cmp. 0730a II) when the eatable portion
Tanh. B'haal. 15 (ref. to Koh. XII, 11) 13X1 rtTlOBjaa 3TO (core) can be mashed under one's fingers; [anoth. definition
'al 'a"piip it is written k'mishm'roth (like guards) and we taking our w. in the sense of falling away, diminution;
read Wmasm'roth (like nails) to teach thee, if thou drivest nsno tFXSMBQ when the ripening core is reduced to half
them like a nail into thy heart, they will guard thee; the capacity of the cavity, — upon which the remark is
Num. R. s. 4. Esth. R. to VI, 10 '731 D^bsn ">3X I pre- . . . made, 1333? ",ia?S 10an Xab^l perhaps he learned
. . . . . .
pared for tbee ropes and nails (for impaling) ; a. fr.— 2) (pi.) it from the homiletical teachers who interpret hemassu
cloves. Num. R. 1. c. D*WB3 '732 ... "pair as sweet to their &c. (Deut. I, 28), they divided our hearts (an allusion to
hearers as cloves. — 3) a peg-shaped attachment to a loaf, Num. R. s. 17)].
knob. T'bul Yom I, 3 I33n mxr *a the knob on the Hif. can to cause to melt aicay. Deut. R. s. 2, beg.
back of the loaf (supposed to serve as trade-mark). (ref. to Ps. xxxix, nnix npan 12) 'ai . . man ba (not
4) a wart or corn (cmp. Lat. clavus).— PL r&VtSQ. Sifra mix) all the delight which Moses longed for, to enter
Thazr. Neg., Par. 1, ch. II '7311; Tosef. Neg.II, IS tTKOOon the land, —thou hast caused it to decay as a moth enters
(sing.). garments and makes them decay. V. npa.
lECE,
T
cOECE ch. same, pin, nail. Targ. Y. Num. CCE ch. same. Targ. II Sam. XVH, 10 ^Oa^ Oaa(ed.
XXV, 3.'— Y. Hag. IH, beg. 78 d '21 '73 in 3^03 mi in '» Lag. "<ca Xca73), v. "ra.
each took one nail and drove Y. Pes. V, 32 b top it in. Ithpe. ccanx to melt, decay. Targ. Ps. LXXV, 4. —
[read:] X13033 -p3> swap xn
be fixed in thy let this [0133X, v. D^xa.]
memory like a nail; Y. Yeb. XHI, 13 c top niaO">aa (corr.
ace.) ; a. e. PI. "-a--, Rvns&a, W*1 Targ. Jer. X, 4 . . .
DCS m. stomach, v. coan.
a.e.— Y. B. Bath. II, 13 b bot. [read:]
ffrub 'pV'K f t Uili
n*bl131 refused to one another the fastening of the
'73
^COE,
T T .-
v. xcsoa.
T t -
b
sors, contrad.to "pO a. msoa; Bab. ib. 17 ; a.e.— [Tosef.
3?©Q m. (b. h.; SD3) removal ; journey ; station. Cant.
Kel. B. Mets. IV, 5 D'nBOa ed. Zuck., read S^a^a.]
R.to from station to station; a.fr. K.tYlSfcO
111,6 'ab 'aa —
503 'a *WS that wicked man (Senna-
Snh. 94 b '31
{fern.). nnDpQi rniSCTj f. (preced.) shearing knife, clip-
cherib) marched ten journeys in thatone day;Yalk.Is.284. b
ping tool Kel. XVI.8, v. preced. M. Kat. 17 a. e., v. ,
Par. Ill, 6 tyngbO b31 n-iB the red cow and all her at- p'OlZ (denom. of a noun pOa, fr. p03 to ascend) to
tendants. harvest olives, opp. to C]p3 to pick, glean. Tosef. Dem.
nT2DD, v. rwtea
VI, 6 ts^nn pioab mm . . . ba-ptfJ biOa -1
if an Israelite
rented from a fellow Israelite ... his olive trees for harvest-
"I9DQ m. (b. h.) = 1Bpn.
Lam. R. introd. (R. Joh. 1) ing, the rent to be payable in olives; ",aiB3 pICab Wn
b
'a "plttjip D3b na why do you compose these lament- payable in ib. VI, 25 top. Neg. II, 4 '31 poia3 in
oil; Y.
ations?, v. IBpn. the position of one taking olives down. Tosef. Toh. X, 4
Da xblT IS before he plucked them a. f r.— Part. pass. ;
1p
1DCQ, HSpn, fcHSpD
T
ch. same. Targ. Gen. L,
T
rnpspa v. npnj?.
R. to XII, 5; v. Krvnirra.
"
pBDl2, l
Q
m. (pEO II; v. pEO) s£mi£, dilemma; dif- SDppQ m. (pes) 1) ascent, height, steps. Targ. I Sam.
ficulty. in, i9 a hot. nni-ian nin '72b nass fte'ten
V. Sot.' XXXVIII, e.—
IX, 11 (ed. Lag. UOXppa). Targ. Is. 8; a.
she placed herself in such a dilemma (to be suspected of Meg. I4 b "Wh "Wl 'al and so it
2) final result, upshot.
adultery and to have to drink the waters of jealousy).
finally came to pass.
Y. Gitt. VIII, 49 c bot. 'si hin "iab -jass o^snb n'wi na
what was thy reason for taking such a responsibility (by "j^ppD, v. txrnpioa.
deciding in favor of a lenient opinion)? —Esth. R. to 11,3
ran 'an "H^b ISO they (the Persian matrons) came to SiHppQ f. pi. (preced. wds.) going up, procession.
that trouble (to have to compete with all maidens of the Targ.IIChr. IX, 4.
country) ; a. e.
HDQ (b. h. ; sec. r. of 10X, cmp. meanings of b. h. 150)
NpSpQ, Hp^CD
T
m. (pSOU) 1) sufficiency. Y.Ber.
1) to seize (v. Num. XXXl/5). —Denom. ni^ea 1.— 2) to
aT
IV, 8 tbp [read:] \ttMa warm verm Kin b3b 'a -jb rrw
hand over; to deliver, transmit. Ab. I, 1 '31 S'lOal and
3*ou have enough material for each Divine Name out of
handed it (the Law) over to &c. (in the chain of tradi-
them (the combined benedictions); Y. Taan. II, 65 c top.—
tion). B. Mets. 8 b (expl. ni^pia) '31 131 Ipian tfM/Q like
2) Pa. of pEO, q. v.
one handing over (giving possession) &c. Ib. lll b bot.
D n 1^BpD, D";"^SpQ m. du. (preced.) shears, scis- form D^pab "vfai it is in my power
against. Gitt. 7 a nlobab
sors. Kel. XVI, 8 'al niBOa pV\ the sheath of a shearing to bring judgment through the (Roman) govern-
them to
knife or of scissors. Y. M. Rat. Ill, 82 a top 'aa with scis- ment. Tosef. Ter.VIl, 20 '31 *npa-; xbl cbl3 'BWi let them
;
to the heart (over which human authorities have no named M., because he surrendered the Temple to the
control), the Text adds, 'and thou shalt be afraid of thy enemy 13 irnoi rraUJ bs 3"nri rT\ . . the Lord went into
; . .
God.' Mekh. Ki Thissa (ref. to 035, Ex. XXXI, 14) C33 judgment because they rebelled against him.
. . .
raaA 'o =rx "XI '_ r-r the Sabbath is given in your
charge, but you are not surrendered to the Sabbath, i. )£]&£, MSIM m. (3^0 1) rebellious. Targ. Ps.
e., there are higher objects for which the Sabbath law LXXVIII, 8 (ed. Lag. pmBO, Var. pltJO ; ed.Wil. "POIOO
must eventually be violated; Toma 85 b a. fr. ;
{pi. followed by sing. TO-IO; Ms. ynmoo). Targ. Is!
Targ. Am. I, 6. "Targ. O. Deut. XXIV, 15; a. fr.— Part, XXV, 8 (h. text nno).
pass, "-tr:;f. X--CO; pi. "TCP; rT<&U Targ. Num. in, 9;
a.fr.— [Targ. Y. II Gen. XVI, 5 Y*n&0, a corrupt., ym "prncQ,
It-::-;' v. -,3-ico.
' -
r . .
20 a '31 TIT«Blfl -ICO Xp TBI were ready to suffer martyr- baum, an herb (v. Sm. Ant. s. v.); v. XTsppn.
dom for the sanctification of the Name '31 "iJ^OO X3 OX
;
pTlCD, v. pioo.
we are not ready to suffer &c. a. fr. ;
Ithpe. ~3"rN, "ico*X to be surrendered, transmitted np1"|pI3 m. (pno II) hair-comber. Lam. B. to I, 15,
to surrender one's self. Targ. Lev. XXVI, 25. Targ. Ps. v. nbcbpp."
"1C/Q II, Pa. ")®/2 (denom. of tf-C-a) to saw. Targ. H"1CD m. (tj'TO ; v. T("]0 I) band with which the saddle
Is. XLIV, 13. Targ. II Sam. XII, 31 (ed. Wil. ICO); Targ. is fastened around the ass' belly. Tosef. Sabb. IV (V), 2
: Chr. XX, 3 (ed. Eahm. IXOO).—Part. pass. iCpp. Targ. fa'TOOTl rx llEp^ xbttJ (v. ed. Zuck. note) he must not tie
Kings VII, 9. his band ; Sabb. 53 a 13"l0O3 13 -nUJpi xb'iJ Ms. M. (ed.
",31-iCO 13, read: 13i-cp); Y. ib. V, 7 b bot. "OillOon rx
i&O m. (b. h. "riap; ic:) a tool with rough edges or (read: i3"^optt).
teeth, file, sate. Sabb. XVII, 4 bTOJl 'o saw for cutting
rood. Kel. XXI, 3 ; Tosef. ib. B. Bath. I, 8 'O ?ttJ ",030 p")CI2 m. (p^D II) 1) comb, strigil. Kel. XIII, 8 bE 'a
iinan the frame of the saw. Y. Succ. Ill, 53 c bot. 'O "pOS *,nilPB hackle for flax. Ib. 7 ; T'bul Yom IV, 6 TK1 bo 'O
saves serrated like a saw, v. b*p; Tosef. ib. II, 7; Bab. ib. hair-comb e.— Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. IV, 4
; a. 13 V3W3 rO pn
J4 a 'ob no*,1. Gen. B. s. 6; Midr. Sam. ch. IX, V.1C3; Ex. (an iron) comb to which a sting is attached (an instrument
B. s. 5 '03 (Var. lpep3); a. e. of torture cmp. ba*iQ).- 2) an indented attachment to a vessel
—
KJ^Ott 812 nsrc
orairfantkc. Ib. 9 'an Vs "flan rtUJ^IU a lamp-chain is con- '31 thou art sufficiently rewarded by seeing the distress
sidered as joined to 'the comb'. Kel. II, 8 "IISIS bttJ 'a; of thy enemy. B. Bath. 126 a '31 "va j6 was it not enough
Tosef. ib. B. Kam. II, 8 pTiDa, v. "Wn* Ukts. II, 3 'an that thou didst sell his property &c? Ber. 55 a rVTWj
KB^H III. Y. Pes. II, 29 b hot. JtfDQFlDQ f. (Dnp; cmp. apix) substructure filled
where is the intimation that this missath means secular? fc^/Q I ch.=h. nra, [grain,] m'ah, a coin and a weight.
(Answ. ref. to oa, Esth. X, 1). Targ.Ysam. II, 36 (h. text rfTOK). Targ. Job XLII, 11
plenty, enough. Targ. Pro v. XXX, 15, sq. (h. text yin).
'a nxa 'a nxa KTCOX if he said 'an Istira', (adding) 'one
Constr. npa, npa, To, TO adv. (=h.^). Targ. II Sam. XXIV, hundred m'ah', he must pay one hundred m'ah. Kidd.
16 (h. text -XI). Targ. Ex. XXXVI, 5 (h. text *«»). Ib.
81 a v. tXS/n. Snh. 26
,
a
a.fr.— STOa=h. nisa, money. Targ.
;
(h. ; a. fr.
Targ. Y. Ex. 1. c, v. supra. Targ. Lev. xn, 8 (Y. ed. Amst. Ib. LVIII, 4 *j2>a *,a (h. text XLIV, 26 sosa Ms.
Htia). Ib.
'an). Targ. H Chr. VIII, 1 3 'an (ed.Lag.); a.fr.— V. npipp, (ed. VtoVVm h. text 133MB).— Mostly pi. "psa, N^?a, 'a,
—*Lev.R.s. 3 "»n&0 Kabste "jinsia snsna no^a it is enough, "a; constr. "VSa, bowels, intestines. Targ. Gen. XXX, 2.
they will pay for it in the hereafter (Yalk. Koh. 971 nrpa). Ib. XXV, 22, sq.; a. fr.— Hull. 93 a SOSa »"h the starting
—V. aonoa. point of the (large) intestines. Yalk. ib. 976, v. Strop. Lev.
R. s. 3 iOSa ^3 (some ed. n*Sa) the small bowels ; Koh.
T
inpQ, v. VHPRq. R. to VII, 19 [read:] 'a rl3B; a. fr.—V. M?sa.
fcttTHiFlGQ f. (nnp II) reel. Hull. 60 a , v. *\)ft*i SDID!/^ m. (preced.) maker; parent. Gen.R. s. 68;
!
XH'D^D m. (13?; v. VFRMft growth. Y. Ned. VII, fftfi II m., *>*. D n |"I?q, ^"TO 0>.h. ; ft*) *»w»^
.. topc
ran, v. wyn. ties, siveets; abl3 "^l-P the best things in the world.
Sot. 9 a ; 15 b
Num. B. s. 7 yon -paSia'S 'a b3 they found
.
lect. "OSa, ISSa.] IX, 3 1"nsa. Tosef. ib. B.Bath. 1, 7, v. rtioa. Ib. 8 . . mtT'lflan
'SpXB the strings and thongs of the share-beam ; a. e.
CN l3>Z2 m., constr. 133a (133) passing, mustering.
xg. Is! XXX, 32.—V. next w. "I^3?D ch. same. Targ. Is. VII, 25.
XHZ2E m. ("in?) ford, ferry. Targ. 0. Gen. XXXII, T\VlZ f. (b. h. pi. ni3a, Is. XL VIII, 19, v. Targ.; cmp.
33a constr. ed. Berl. (oth. ed. 133a).— Yeb. 106 a v. ,
next w.) [grain of sand &c.) m'ah, (cmp. nia) 1) a weight.
r-isra. Hull. 95 a Ar. (ed. K"3a). Ned. 27 b '33 l^pOS the Y. Kil. I, 27 a top '31 rTIK 'a one m'ah's weight from the
ferry cut him off, i. e. there was no ferry to take him top of a melon, cucumber &c; [B. S. to Kil. I, 2: one seed
over. lb. 811&31K iba^a 'a the accident of missing a ferry taken from the top &c, v. next w.]. — Lev. B. s. 17 'a
can be foreseen. '31 'ai 1133 WlK one m'ah's weight of coarse thread &c.
(Midr. Till, to Ps. LXXIII, 4 niiia).— 2) a coin, corregp.
Jl l32?Q f. (b. h.; preced.) crossing, esp. the place of to the Tyrian Obolus Zuckerm. Talm. Miinz. p. 4).
(v.
crossing.— PL 1111333, constr. irhttra. Ber. 54 a D^n 'a the Tosef. B. Bath. V, 12 '31 C]03 'a UJltf six m'ah silver make
place where the Israelites crossed the Bed Sea; yMN I 'a one denar; '31 ""itt? Cp3 'a one m. silver is equal to two
where they crossed the Jordan; a. e. dupondia; Y. Kidd. I, 58 d Bab. ib. 12 a Bekh. 50 a. Y.
; ;
IX?H23?Q v
ch. same, 1) crossing, ferry, ford. Y. Taan.
gen. small coins, money. B. Mets. IV, 1, v. SiDp. Pes. 50 b
IV, 68=, sq.—B. Bath. 73 a Ms. F., v. KR33la.-2) (fc3p*T3) 'a
W\ flJilaa M1K3ri 'a proceeds from trans-oceanic traffic.
a parted beard (perh.=13!?a, pronged like a fork). Snh.
Ib. 0^1^ 'a orphans' money (invested at half-profits
100 b .— 3) Cpbeni) 'a the hollow rim of the capsule of the
between executor and orphans). Ab. Zar. 17 b Q^llS bltJ 'a
T'fillin of the arm through which the thong is slipped.
money laid aside for Purim enjoyments; ripIS btt) 'a
Men. 35 a .
charity fund. Ib. '31 vnisa B1K 'p* Kb one must not give
* 'Xyj2 m. his contribution to the charity fund, unless its manager
(v. next w.) rolling machine. Sifre Deut.
be &c. a. fr.
;
229 WXffo Qlpa Kltt tta3 how large a railing is requir-
'=1
camel IfpiSlI *&& 1KV\ under the arch of the »ate. Snh.
'21 'a with hands and feet as with a roller. 2) a press — vin,
;
1X*y2 m. 1) (b. h.; baS; Siba?) the wagons surrounding meant the stomach, the heart &c— Eduy. Ill, 3 m33X ^Sa
the camp, ring. Num. B. s. 19; Midr. Till, to Ps. VII; a. the seeds and the juice of the melon (v. preced.). Y.
e.— 2) v. V'Mta.
Maasr. I, 48 d n^33K 'a? -jlfiBba '^'"'a "p3 na what is the
7 difference between the core of the melopepon and that
r*DJiI/E,
-8 -
v. nl^ya.
" of the melon ?-Y. Ter. VIII, 46 a top, v.&a&al.—Tosef. Kel.
TT T • -.
w?a, v.^ish.
'
"PTO2, v. -ww.
5™l2l l5'73 m. (FOy) dense, large-sized, opp. pT'a, v. ppT
?
P5Q I of reed matting; m., pi. D^T^Q, ^T®&_ (b.h.; wtwn^ Arakh. 25 a '^1 i"l3~a Kb neither too densely, nor too sparse-
Hi/'.) ftno£s v. "jia. ly sown. Succ. IV, 9 (48 b ); a. e.— PI. 3>iya. Pes.64 b TtTl •,',
103
—; .
tawo, v. a?a. Y. Taan. IV, 68 a bot. 'a ISO; Sifre Deut. 356 d^isa btt3;
M,M,
n
v.sub'^.
Treat. Sof'rim VI, 4 n315>a
»1}tPZ3i v. nwisa.
IBd (corr. ace).
1"<Daaatt5 with the best portion of his estate; a. e. PI. — (v. Berl. Targ. O. II, p. 27, a. Massorah, p. Ill); Y. *jj?a.
12 b . — 3) [that tvhich is looked for,] sustenance, support aba; cmp. Kaba^ri a. aaba.]
(v. I Sam. II, 29; 32). Gen. R. 68, a. e. bu> iaisa fT'apn
the Lord
s.
fcO^Q
T
m. (Vis) spinner. Koh. R. to VII, 9 (prov.)
*,abi3> the support of his world; cmp. dipa.
is
mrob sa rnb p^ba p mrobB by b"ns> 'an xaa^rt (not 'sa;
[Ex. R. s. 24 lniSia -pra f»0, some ed., read: £SO.]
strike out 3^3 b*1ti, being a Var. lect. or gloss to p^bd)
as the spinner winds (the yarn) on his distaff, so will it
\sl2 II pr. n. pi. 1) (b. h.) Maon, in Judaea. Mekh.
J
Beth Maon, near Tiberias. Sabb. 139 a hot. 'a ! MUD^d "a 1 self; v. Kd^a in.
the synagogue of M.; (Gen.R. s. 80, beg. N312a"1 "pnJUirosS, kS>)>U
T
m. (preced.) the yarn on the distaff. Targ.
read "Wl'Stfl; Y. Snh. II, end, 20 d tfnaioa '33). Y. Erub. Prov. XXXI, 19 (h. text -jbfi).
V, 22 b bot. 'a tV&j Y. Sot. I, 17 a bot. -p^sa iTO (corr.acc);
Num. R. s. 9 (ed. Wil. p. 58).— [Tosef. Shebi. VII, 13 "j13>a U«rQ (b. h.; cmp. aia) to be thin, minute. Part. pass. —
N3X Var., ed. Zuck. *j1S>attJ oth. ed. "jSa.] ;
awa, f. naira; pi. a-awa, "paiya; niowa. Y. Pes. v,32 a
bot.; Y. Snh. I, 18 c bot. rriV\ ''aWal mi "id* big in spirit
n&C"13?Q m. (preced.) o/" Maon. Gen. R. s. 80, beg. "tor (haughty) and small in learning (of narrow capacity).
'a Jose of M.; Y. Snh. II, end, 20 d '"Stag (h.); Yalk. Ez. Tosef. Hall. I, 7; a. e.— Tarn. IV, 2 nairaa at least (Talm.
357 K^isa tJbTV—K. 'Sgi'too. Ib. 'al jUlWOSa; Gen.R.
'
dwellings connected by a gate; a. fr. — 2) (interpret.) to packed until they form a viscid mass. Toh. IX, 1 'ail nsi
limit, qualify, exclude from the rule. Shebu.26 a 12"in mn the (intended) exudation produced by lying in the vat,
I'-VZ' -Z" - rr % rr. ':= rx interpreted the entire Law on opp. flEipn rtyi the (unwelcome) exudation originating
the principle of 'It includes and it excludes', i. e. on the in the pile or basket, v. 3W h. lb. 9 ; Tosef. ib. XI, 1. Tosef.
principle that if, in the Biblical text, a specification is Maasr. Ill, 7 'pBSWl Ib. 13, a. e. *,Ol?a. Y. Dem. VI, 2J d
preceded and followed by general terms, both an ex- top ETVn 3*123 '3 a mass of olives from the vat; a. fr.
must be found;
tension ("13") and a limitation (EiyTa)
e. g. ib. (ref. to Lev. V, 4) '3", "»0 . . . Wb . . . rs: "X or &C'.2252 ch. same.-P/. "WO. Snh. ll b (Rashi VenQ ;
if a soul swears', this is a general expression, 'for bad or Tosef. ib"n, 6 WCPO; Y. ib. I, 18 d top; Y. Maas. Sh! V,
for good', this limits (the sphere of the law to things 56 c top.
which are either an advantage or a disadvantage); 'what-
soever it be &c.', this is again a generalization ; now what HD'^^Q f. (OC5 II) torap. Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. V, 4.
does it include? All kinds of words (vows); '31 'a 'a ^xai "•"2, v. nana.
and what does it exclude? It excludes a religious act (the
vow of doing a forbidden thing or not doing a com-
manded thing). Sifra Tsav, ch. XV, Par. 11 CPOSTa 3X
TO WWti v. vqa.
m
'31 r.z'irz 3V"3X x"; totlO -z iz~ if I exclude them X??*VQ, v. xbra.
(the gentiles) from the privilege of laying hands on the
sacrifice, which has a wider sphere of application, must U^VT2, ]^7D, v. ra.
I not exclude them from the privilege of waving &c.?; Vi
a. fr. —Part. pass. 03*033, v. BSW, T^o,
It:— X3t t 3?a,v.rrB,x
-
i53.
rr :
' T : -'
3
'
a
Eif. tarvan to do little, less. Ber. I7 tw "raxn X312
b'TOv.tao.
— T -
ero&a XTil rena lest you say, I do much good, and he 1
learned, whether one does much or little (they are to I Sam. XV, 27) ""2 bl2 iVra whose cloak (did Samuel
equally worthy), provided one directs his heart &c. Men. ;
seize and rend)?; Midr. Sam. ch. XVEil; a. e. Esp. the —
XIII, 11; a
a. fr.
high priest's robe. Yoma VII, 5. Zeb. 88 b Arakb. 16 ; ;
Sot. XIV, 10 '31 E^-n '-V'lr: the days were reduced, and n^-^2 f. (bsa; b. h. bsa) false dealing, bad faith.
the yeari shortened. Ib. ta'ltfn tTtf Tfft Oiian 15-rrr: Sifre Num! 7 (ref. to Num. V, 12, sq.) nr© 10*1 PS 'a "nn
Erarn? the nations began to grow and the Israelites to this (context) proves that maal refers to marital faith-
'3 "X
be reduced R. s. 14 1" --jr^r: he became
(in rank). Pesik. lessness (not to pecuniary defalcation). Ib. . . .
reduced in fortune. Midr.Till.toPs.XlI,end PttPara --Z: Tp*B X3X . . nf'ilah everywhere (in the Scripture) has
b
D«T33* their soul within them shrinks, i. e. they feel jealous the meaning of false dealing; Num.R. s. 8. B. Bath. 88
'31 '35 XOl"! 0"Hp«"! nt this one (who robbed a man) makes
and angry; Yalk. ib. 659; Lev.R.s.32, beg. rasana (corr.
ace). Sifra 1. c. r,z*:r r--~;zr: the sphere of the act of sin precede faithlessness (ref. to Lev. V, 21), whereas that
waving the smaller one; rT3"W0 r,z"~r: the laying on
is one (who robbed the Temple) makes faithlessness precede
of hands has the smaller sphere; a. fr. Erub. 80 b ^xa — sin (ib. 15); a. fr.— PI. rtftVO. Num. R. s. 9 (ref. to Num.
03337-: OS! -r: 'it was reduced' (Mish. VII, 7) means, it V, 12) '31 ibbfl '3 TUB why this repetition of the stem
was reduced to atoms, t.XTOOO.— B.Mets.71 a l"-jr-;r-; """:. i>S53» — Esp. m"ilah,the laic concerning the unlawful use of *
v. 0»a h.— Tosef. Mikv. VI (VII), 14 *"3>ana, v. 7\?~- sacred property (Lev. V, 15 sq ). Tosef. Me'il. 1, 5 (
3 . . V^xri
103*
— — — — ;
D^-n 816
^
'an protects the flesh of the other animal from being
^•/J (b. h.; cmp. Tpa) to crush; to dissolve by rubbing.
subject to the law of m., i. e.no use made of it is
Lam. R. to I, 1 (TWh) pin ns «SM they crushed an old
considered sacrilege. lb. 8 'a +P NS" is no longer am-
1
Pes. 64 b 'a HOB . . . "pafOUJ when one old man was crush-
ed to death, and they called it &c. Tosef. ib. IV, 3 10333
'a nOS . . . ^KTU the 11
Israelites entered the Temple mount
and it could not contain all of them, and they called
pgQ, v. )y_.
it &c; (Var. "p33>ia the Passover of the crushers; Var.
1"2?Q> "]"^3?Dm. (b. h.;-)^; cmp.^S) 1) spring, fountain; •pia); Pes. 1. c, v. rrawa.
to IV, 12 EfTJTn tin Dim 'a 'a sealed well' (Cant. I. c),
friction with her finger; (ib. Hbsia brides acting like
that means the (pure) males. Yeb. 64 b DTD 'a the well (in
Tamar). Y. Sabb. XX, 17 c bot. TjSaa (Bab. ib. 140 a inaa,
her womb) is the cause of the death of her successive hus- v. nna). Keth. 36 b Gitt. 81 a .— Esth. R. to ; I, 14, v. 0*a;
bands. Nidd. ll'
J
; ib. 35 b Kin TnN 'a it is one and the a. e. — 2) (cmp. T^a) to lower. Ber. 45 a iblp fcmprt s^ao*
same source (from which the menses and the blood at
(Var. ^-W Hif.), v. T|a3.
a. e. 'a ">3tU3 like two springs. Pesik. R. s. 42 'aTl *>3 ©31 ed, rubbed off. Y. Maasr. I, 48 d bot., v. OOa. Pes. 1. c, v.
he laid dry all the wells (secretory organs) both
'31 tivi supra. Tosef. Mikv. VI (VII), 14 D-iiaan feSfOSWTffl Til quot.
his own and those of his household &c. Tosef. Sot. XV, inR.S.toMikv. IX, 2 (ed. Zuck. "pasana) they are rubbed
3, a. e. nasn 'a the well-springs of wisdom. Nidd. 28 b against (and stick to) the garments, v. Y%. Men. X, 4 (66 a )
lTViS^Sa, mrvis'isa his, her (the leper's) discharges a.fr. TjSarn itiili that its grains may not be crushed; a. e.
;
2) (cmp. iiya) inside, digestive organs. Snh. 81 b ppTaj IS 2) to be lowered, flattened. Nidd. 47 a , sq., v. CO.
Sj2 n !?El I m . (pj|5) oppressor (=h. p^a). Targ. Is. Jj_Q (b. h. ; denom. of preced.) to circumvent, defraud.
LI, 13. Targ. Job XXXVI, 16 (h. text IS). Targ. Esth. Sifre Num. 7 (ref. to Num.V,
13T b$ 'a 13 fi'^ai 12) mis
VII, 4; a. e. '31 does 'she was faithless to him' refer to marital be-
trayal or to money matters?; v. P&"Wa. Esp. to make in- —
SSp <^r II f-(preced.) oppression,distress (=h.i-i]3lYQ). appropriate use of sacred property, to be guilty of trans-
T
Targ. Ps. CXIX, 143; a. e.— PI. XnpiSa. Ib. CVII, 13; 19. gressing, be amenable to, the laio concerning tti'V". (Lev.
Ib. 6 'rpsa; a. e.— Op *Wa, part, f/of pSa, q. v.] V, 15,sq.). Meil. 1, 1 "jm D^ria in using them inadvertently
r
. —— — —
bs-o 817 nbjna
I
one commits m'' ilah (i. e. they retain their sacred char-
acter in spite of a mistake made at their slaughtering),
Freq. "jbsa, "ibsab, "ibraV::, '???, v. Mtsa.
lb. M2 '"}"" a ""X it has no longer a sacred character. lb. Ill, c) (of time) further on. Pes. 50 b , a. fr. 'abl MM:aM -,a from
2 "."- "?"" - xb" ~:~: xb you must not make use of them,
m
the minhah time and onward. Ber. 26 b a. fr. d) above, ; —
but if you did, you are not amenable to &c. ; a. v. fir.
— of superior rank. Kel. I, 2, sq. EMa 'ab of a higher rank
[Yalk. Num. 765 "lpttJai bsia, read VjWO, v. b'r.] (in Levitical law) ; a. fr.
T
~>*2 ch. same. Me'il. 14 b XEVpa VtHJpl that he makes ~'sl2 {., v. next art.
Targ. Y. II Num. XXV, 4.— Xr212 'a, XMCE("1 ROT) 'B &c. <4R3 because they are better. Sabb. 129 a
KVOnV M^2 'an
Sabbath eve (Friday), Passover eve &c. Ib. XXII, 28. Ms. M. when lying in the sun is healthy. Keth. 62 b S^S
Targ. Y. Gen. XIV, 13.— Gitt. 77 s B. Mets. 49 a hot. Keth. .
'al pious and capable ; a. fr.
62 b 'z' xa" 'a bs every eve of the Day of Atonement.
Ib. 63 a ; a. fr. S*>>12 c. (preced.) good, perfect, valid. Targ. Job
XXXDJ, 28 'a X~nM: the perfect light (of the hereafter).
H~!^2 I m. (part. Hif. of Mbr); flW Mbra Smoke- Nidd. 29 a a
'a nbl a genuine" embryo. Gitt. 29 bot. '*2 X-"
b
Raiser, name of a plant used as an ingredient of frank- ""tl a valid divorce. Ber. ll a. fr. 'a SOUTb a more ap-,
incense (Fumitory?). Ker. 6 a Tosef. Yoma I, 8 (ref. to . propriate expression, opp. M.;"a "Ol, v. M!J. Shebu. 4o b —
""-, Lev. XVI, 2) '3 'a 12 IfTftm Ttba this intimates that ttttroc xn '"2 Mar how
an argument is this!; a. fr.
fine
he must add mdale'ashan. [Ib. H, 6; Y. ib. Ill, 41 a VM a
PI. f. Nr--br-2. Ber. 8 '=l 'a n b"ia tma one of those fine
T 'a2 . . . "X"p2 understood how to make the smoke of sayings of thine concerning &c. [Targ. Ps. CXVIII, 20 —
the frankincense rise ; Bab. ib. 38 a '? mbrMb.] xvra, some ed., v. x:bra.]
n*^"C II m. (b. h.; preced.) ascent. — n-arix Mbra Sr^^^] f. (preced.) perfection, excellence ; improve-
(b. h.j pr. n. pi. Maale Adummim, Maledomim between ment. Shebu. 45 b 'a "xa wherein consists the excellence
a
Jericho and Jerusalem. Tosef. R. Hash. I, 15; Y. ib. II, (of the argument) ?, v. preced. Men. 43 'ab i:n«TK ^X
57 d bot.; Bab. ib. 22 b . Ms.M. (ed. "^xrr.'rx) if it changed for the better. Ber. 56 a
'ab n-b -rsa, v. XMWna. Hull. 5 b X^M 'a does it imply
TZVZ f. (b. h.; preced.) 1) ascent, step. Midd. II, 3
perfection?; a. fr.
'a dPP the height of every step; a. e. PI. M'bra. Ib. Succ.
V, 4 'aM -HE Iflf rrH '"2 T8W rvraM fifteen steps leading
. l Jj5]2 m. (b. h.; bbs) {bringing about,] deed.— PI.
down ., corresponding to the fifteen 'Songs of Steps'
. . . t^bbra! Midr. Till, to Ps. LXII, 13 D^r^M rbbsa his evil
(Ps. CXX to CXXXIV). Ib. 53 a 'a mm Van -:r, those deeds.
fifteen (Songs of) Steps. Yoma 23 a tblXM 'a the steps in
front of the Temple hall (Tosef. ib. I, 12 Mrs); a. fr.— S">2?£) ch. same, evil deed. PI. "o'^rz. Targ. Ps. —
2) rise. Num. K. s. 15 '=! tJ S'p'HS br -rbra the rise of XXVIII,! Ms. (ed. -nniS).—[Targ.Y. Gen.XLH, 9; 12 Ar.
the righteous is a rise without a decline; 1255 Vi" "rb~~ v. xbrbr;.]
'a! Mb":'- '
- Esau's (a Roman's) rise is a rise which may
lead to degradation; a. e. — 3) degree, gradation, super- jb^a v. Mbp.
iority; preference; advantage. Yoma 44 Num. R. s. 7 a
;
^^"3^2 Targ. Jud. IX, 40.
m. (*5W) l) entrance, gate.
'" V"3 '-" '- ~a "T. now, there is no gradation of sanctity T
Targ. CXVIII, 20 (some ed. X^bra, corr. ace); a. fr.—
Ps.'
between the interior of the Temple and the space...,
Gitt. 56 b Mb r">x 'a it has an entrance (for taking in food),
except &c. Keth. 13 a a. e. pOMT2 HE? 'a where priestly
opp. x:pEa discharge.— PL X- :bra. Targ. II Chr. XXIU,
,
Y.I Num. XXXH, 3; 37 (b. text hteVfc; 0. some ed. ''VM a. e. — 2) (perh. hDSam.) handle of the plough; coulter.
M31; Y.II xbsb). Tosef. Shebi. Ill, 20 'a nb -padi xbttJ ISbai Y. ib. IV, ;
judges &c. lb. 144 a bot. "nmbttJ TaSoa in the presence of us upon his knees. Ib. '31 to'iBSa rWUJa (Rashi: lrniSSa)
three (the owner, the trustee, and the recipient). Y. Shebu. from the time he shakes his wrap off (to prepare for
VI, 37 a top; Y. Gitt. IX, 50 c Tax. Y. Keth. XIII, bot., v.
—
bathing). Esp. a travelling cloak with a hood (cmp. Sm.
a
36 bot. n*iasa:3 p&Bttn when her father made the promise
Ant. s. a short cloak with a hood (pal-
v. Cucullus), also
'atl T!X "bin bsn (in levitical law) everything depends S"HB3?Q, Y. Bice. Ill, 65 d 'al 'pSattJ, v. X^BS.
on the nature of the support (e. g. the seal is judged by
its setting, the ladder by its frame). Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. TTWDt v. pniwjg.
II, 5 'a? a piece of a web which can be used for the
>
•p? btU '12 the main body of the shoe made of wood. Y.
Sabb. VI, 8 b fTSBfO Tnx
it depends on the nature of its
DTRS^Q, Y. Sabb. XIV, 14 c bot., v. trrna?.
U^12^D m. pi. (b. h.; (the stone-cutter's trimming adze). Sifre Deut. 308; Yalk.
pas) depths. Ab.d'R.N.ch.III
nblss igasafc TrmttB when f went down to the depths Deut. 942, v. bpB. Kel. XXIX, 6 niai^b bl!3 'an the battle-
of the abyss. axe of the legions. Tosef. ib. B. Bath. I, 7 "ISXB (corr.
b
m ace); a. e.—PI. pnxra. Arakh. VI, 3 (Bab. ed. 23 pi3>sa,
\pT2, Lev. R. 8. 32 nasana, v. asa. corr. ace).
819 nicjra
wan, v. fa). Targ. Num. XVIII, 27 (h. text 2p^).—Ab. 2"H3?Q m. (a"?? II), D-qi? 'a(n) «»Ao causes the even-
Zar. 70'. lb. 74 b "W^SSW my press-room; a. e. ings to set, name of the first section of the night prayer.
STm^Q II f- (isr; cmp. rrow, KFnssi) meeting Ber. I2 a '21 'S 'an fins if one began the first section with
lb. '3 'an D^D if he closed with m. 'dr. (in place of 'Cre-
p"^, p"3?£ (v. pla) to ftea^, stamp; trnsf. to scorn. ator of the lights').— [In liturgy: n^Sa (r&SP) the night
Part, p-r-2, f. X-'-:- -. Targ. II Kings XIX, 21 ; Is. XXXVII, prayer.]
22, v. pra.— T. Ber. II, 4 (1 top V? rp^a yvw . . . -ina*>
ever, Ttavm.
D"0"1?Z2 m. pi., constr. WW (b.h.; ?£») arrange-
an*. B'. Bath. II, 9 t&VC west of the town ; a. v. fr. at the frontier he says, narta fa 'a siamb -jVi salvia *>
let him who hears (this) go to hear the proclamation of
&0"1>E, fcO""j?!C ch. same. Targ. Pro v. VII, 9 2?sa the priest of war (v. Miaa) "iaiK ina nanba 'an what is ;
— Fern. north-western
XL VIII, 19 (ed. Wil. 'gTfe; ed. Lag. VPgViffy. Targ.Y.
fr. rWtJD. lb. 3 'a rP3"!BX 0"ip)
Lev. XXVI, 36 lpi-ira ('fira).
corner of the altar. B. Bath. 25 b rWW: 'a pip north-
west; a. fr.— [12-isa, Tosef. Par. Ill, 6, v. 2^5?.] H7TOE
ch.=h. n-?a. Targ. Gen. XIX,
S^";2E,
T
f.
nn^j f. (b. h.; ir, cmp. TWt) care. Y. Ber. IV, 7 d top, 'a undertook to mark the burial caves.
v. WO II.' Sabb. 33 b tttrnsokVim go back to your cave
7VZj$]2 m. rites) deed, act; practice; fact, event.
(b. h. ;
—PI. Yeb. IV, 9 'a ... nias-va IS until thy older brother takes
rn-tzra. M. Kat. 5b ; a. fr.
action concerning her (v. nx^bn a. 0*12 "•). Ab. I, 17, v.
ficfrisa, r v. ro-hm
T _ ..
b
BS-TO. Kidd.40 v. B. Bath. 130
,
b
W&.
robn T*TBJ& "pK . .
'ab ViDbn ... 'a *Ba K^l you dare not derive a law either
"1*12^2 m. ("?) board on which the baited bread
:j
from a theoretical decision or from an act (of your teachers)
is arranged (Maim.); rolling pin (R. S. a. oth.). Kel. unless they declare their decision a rule for practical
XV, 2.
guidance. Ib., a. fr. 21 'a a practical decision is a teacher
(a guiding precedent). Yeb. XV, 2 mVD '321 and only in
TYDTlVlZ ch. same. Y. Sabb. VII, 10 a bot Dffia 'a2
ytfU (not rnt ma) he who beats flax (on the Sabbath) the same way as it (the precedent) happened. Ib. 116 b ,a.fr.
using a rolling pin, is guilty of an act of the category of n*~'r 'a filttJa on account of an occurrence. Ib. 'J'rTU . .
'31 D"13J?a it happened that a gentile brought &c. lb. '24", Sn5lS!Q, ri^SQ f. (Vfi5) l) dropping, throwing seed.
a. fr. nVOV you quote a fact which disproves your
'a Arakh. 25 a f 'aa . . . S"it To we assess the value of a
b
rule! Yeb. 70 iB"tt3 'ai 'a "ibina he (the uncircumcised) field by the quantity of seed ...which it takes when strew-
lacks an act and this to be performed on his body; a. ing with the hand, opp. to d^THttJ 'a strewing from a
fr. — 'a ^1D3X (sub. D^BS) men in whose behalf miracles perforated bag or wagon drawn by oxen; B. Mets. 105
b
;
occur, saints. Sot. IX, 15; a. fr.— rWta nfcwa, Q^D3 ',0 &c,
a. e. —
Y. Ber. Ill, 6 C hot. T rtasan with one and the same 1
Kam. 95 b , a. fr. fi"P ^33 'a Ntt is it not a daily occur- enter a ruined building for prayer 'an "<3Ea because it
rence? Tosef. Nidd. IV, 3"pV*1 'a ^31U my father '31
may fall in. Y. Sabb. XVI, 15 d top 'an TTB . . "pV^a we
brought the report of two precedents from Tibin to Jab- must save (on the Sabbath) .... persons buried under
neh. Ber. 32 b WW
'a good deeds; a. v. fr.
debris. Pes. II, 3 'a r^>3> H^BSttJ yan leavened matter cover-
NDEJSQ m.C|l»$) stronghold. Targ. Prov. X,29(Ms.'trca).
ed with debris; a. fr. — 3) (=nbaa) downfall. Y. Ber. V.
beg. 8 (1 ann m^na btt) 'ai Jeremiah closed with proph-
"IIEOT m. (b. h.; denom. of 1*5) tithe.—'» naYW the esying the downfall of the destroyers of the Temple;
tithe of the tithe which the Levite owes to the priest (Midr. Till, to Ps. IV l^Baa).
(Num. XVIII, 26); 'a or "pENI 'a the first tithe belonging
to the Levite; 'a the second tithe to be consumed
">3M5 D^plD/G m. pi. (v. KJ31BII) gliding, sinking. Koh.
by the owner Jerusalem (Deut. XIV, 22, sq.); *>X5 'a
in R. to VIII, 11 (in Chald. diet.) yiflb Tfb ?\b9 Vrtrt* «n . . .
the poor man's tithe, every third year (ib. XXVI, 12). 'a (some ed. 'p^Ba) those haughty ones (or Romans) go
^toQ, v. preced.
SnDpm., S?jnDiG f. ch. same; 11JB3 HBa, nnaa
despair. Targ. Job XI, 20. Targ. Is.XVII, 11. Targ. Deut.
D^DDD, v. sub '2T?a. XXVIII, 65 msa (ed. Vien. f$fQ, pi. constr.; Y. rnEa).—
[Pi. ynsa. Targ. Ps. XI, 6 anibxi 'a, v. MB3.]
$^$012 m. (3>5C) mafgi'a {plague), name of an animal
of which the lion is afraid, the Aethiopian gnat (Levys. fcOjnBO, v. KjntBa.
Zool. d. Talm. p. 316). Sabb. 77 b (Rashi: a small beast
frightening the lion with its howl).
"jrtSO, nnSQ, v. ansa.
n p^OW.
NrfiHJElQf. (TjbI) desolation. Targ. Is. XLIX, 19.
V b- t2DQ,
) Sifre Deut. 43, v.
m
yntfQ, Targ. Y. Ex. XXII, 16 some ed., v. JOYnSa. Tt2DD m. v. TJB.
H£Q f. (MB3) 1) flag. Num. R. s. 2 'a mB51 fcP»tt» bsb STSDD/O m. (IDE) dismissal from school, reading of
5221 for each prince a flag of a different color. Ib. 'a SIX Scriptures and prayers at dismissal. — PI. ^XSBQ. Ber.
the color of the flag; i\— [PI. rviEa. Mekh. B'sliall. s.2,
a. f 53 b WHOBa fFSa (Ms. P.i'nBBa Kpl) at the time of their
v. SlESa.] — 2) (crap, Lat. mappa, of Punic origin) napkin, dismissal with devotional exercises "O "frr JOT3 (Ms. F. ;
niDB h*»TO, read: irWBa, v. HB3. edged by David as his teacher. Ber. 4 a . Num. R. s. 8;
a. fr.— Erub. 53
1
v. 3:3. ',
DViBO, v. obs.
D n
SD, b^BQ pr. n. pi. Memphis in Egypt. Targ. Jer.
II, 16, a.e. (h. text #). Targ. Ez. XXX, 13 DEa ed.Wil.—
V. D^B3^.
;
and had mats for them (spread at the bottom of the river
DjQQj v. nViBo. in which they bathed; oth. opin. put up on the shore as
b a. e.
screens) in the days of Tishri; Ned. 40 ;
S""^2
T
f. ch.=h. tt;B~, a. PlViBa. Targ. Ez. XXXI, 13 ;
';*. '~~ \l'":"X X="X one man is delicate and feels pain more
33. Targ. I Chr. I, 23; a. e. — 2) that which comes forth,
sprouting. Targ. Job XXXVIH, 27.—Targ. Ps. LXXXIX,
intensely, another is hardened &c; a.e.— P/.""p:E"C, "p:E~.
35 (Targ. 0. Deut. XXIH, 24 MpBX).—3) going out, leaving.
Targ. Is. XLIV, 4 a. e.—Hag. 4 a sq. 'O l*rvb to include
;
LXVIH,
Targ. Ex. XXI, 7 (ed. Vienna 'fZ). Targ. Ps. 21
109 a
delicate persons (that do not
— Tern. X~:s
walk barefooted). Sabb.
bttn{33BO. Targ. O. Deut. XXVIII, 56
;
NTOOa rvupBia death. V. next w. —
a. fir. -,
T«g;lb. ^E^);
s^one/B. Bath. 67 b Ms. M.'(ed. R. Y.ib.
SrOrTlOBOf. (5B5) trotting. Targ. Jer. VIII, 16 ed. WlSO m., infin. of "p_Q q. v.
104
— ;
regularly, out of order. Meg. II, 1 "6b . . . X~i1pri lie who (111
1
') Hplbn '12 (Y. ed. WTOO) the neckhole of her shirt;
Y. ib. 15 b a. e.—Pl. bTtfflHft constr. "TifiB?. Ber. fil
a
bot.
reads the Book of Esther in an irregular way (corresp.
;
transpose the order in which the events of these days nrDD ch. same, opening. Targ. Ez. XXIX, 21.
are described. Ib. (ref. to Esth. IX, 28) xb 'ab rTW8» rta
X? tab tWQ\ C|X as you cannot subvert the celebration,
nP©!Q m. (firs, Pi. 2) 1) engraver, sculptor. PI. —
d^HnBa. Kel. XXIX, 5 d^3dX ^rtPBa bw ndpa the sculp-
so you must, not subvert the order of recitation. Ber.
13*; Sot. 32 b backward, retroactively, retro-
; a. e. — 2)
tors' mallet (contrad. to TOO
b
stone-cutter).— 2) seal-ring.
Tosef. Sabb. IV (V), 11 ITKMrtOlB 'd; Sabb. 62 rtTQffi '3
spectively, opp. Xdltbl "jXSa. Snh. 27 a bbSS Xin fob he be-
comes disqualified as witness reti-oactively, i. e. his tes-
(corresp. to dnin mbs ttrvB re'dd, ib. VI, 3).
timonies are invalidated from the time that he perjured nf)S)0> n^sHD/Q c. (b.h.; nntt) key. Kel. XIV, 8,
himself (opp. Xdfibl ",3">a, v. Xdlll). Erub. 37 b sq...XXdi1 ,
v. ndldix. Bech. 45 a . Taan. 2
a
, sq.'; a. fr. — PL r.inriBa,
"2b and the retroactive result would be that he drank nin^Bpi Tarn. Ill, 6. Taan. 1. c; a. fr.
untithed wine at the time; Y. Dem. VII, 26 b iJPfcttb.
'ab . . count thirty-three days backward. Gen. R. s. 49 the key (of the College, i.e. Resh Lakish, the chief arguer,
'ab "p TVtr; take up the argument going back gradually Migdal Z.; Y. Hor. Ill, beg. 47 a '12 13X1 (^Xl
v. infra) is in
(from fifty to forty-five &c); a. fr.— Tosef. Ber. IV, 19, sq.
in) and where is the key ? Y. Snh. II, 20 a top (incorrect ;
"2b "pdb to say the blessing after meal, opp. HplTtO(p)j version).— PL p Ett d
i a, KJlTflBO, m*H . . . Targ. Y. Deut. 1.
Pes. 101 b .
c— Y.Sabb. XIX, 16 bot.— Trnsf.xnnBa X"03, or rtfiFlBa
pHDD m. (pnftj cmp. p^G) joint. —PL constr. T^lSS. ]r£>Q m. (b.h.) threshold. Ab. Zar. 41 b ; Y. ib. 111,42'' top
Naz. 52 b '21 D^i "a the joints of arms and legs. '31 "iTVn 'dd 15fi3 (sub. rUBYTp) they revered the threshold
(in Chald. diet.) dMB^X th dSSd the knife may have been feGSZQxn., ^?JDI2G f. (3S5) plant, set. Targ. Is.V,2
notched on striking the neck-bone ; a. fr.
dap (ed. Lag. 3a">d).— PL XlTdSd. Targ. Mic. I, 6 raSM (ed.
VI, 5 '31 XSV%Tl 'aH one who starts for a sea voyage or MJLI/G f. (b. h.; ds*') array, general assembly. Tanh.
a caravan journey. PI. d"VinBa. — dVl ''ftihBa, dTa^ '12 Nitsab. \ (ref. to Deut.'xxiX, 9) '31 "a nii3a •)»«» rid i2Bd
sea-farers. Y. Sabb. II, beg. 4 C , a. e. d">ai 'a » b'J "TFWVi why did Moses call them for a general meeting? Because
I went around inquiring of all sea-faring people (Bab. ;
they were to be handed over from one administration to
ib. 20 b xa^ inms).— [In later Hebr. '12 commentator.] another.
#TT*£ND£>12 f. (dttJS; v. »*»"•) stretching out hands t\ulll2{. (b. h. ; d^*) pillar, statue, monument. Sifra
and prostration at prayers (=h. njIWttJh). Y. Ab.
feet, K'dosh. introd. (idols are named) dilai? dnUJ "0B3 'd
Zar. IV, 43 d top '31 HTOtfSI xrvOiTft 'a the prostration matsebah, because they are made to stand. Sifn' 1
Deut.
on fast days (that
must not be done on stone floors,
it 146 (ref. to Deut. XVI, 22) '31 HdlfiXlU '12 Hal if the erec-
v. ib., a. Meg. 22 b ), and the arrangement of the calendar tion of a pillar which was loved (of the Lord) in the
with regard to the seventh day of Succoth (that it should fathers, is hateful in the descendants &c. Y. Ab. Zar. IV,
not fall on the Sabbath), v. Wtt*lS; Y. Shebi. I, 33 b hot.; 44 a top '12 imPX, v. 1WJ ; a. fr.
T
Y. Succ. IV, beg. 54 b 'te'^jJSO.
srv^nxn,
t t t : :
v. unite.
t
m ( b h
- nt??) opening, entrance. Mikv.VIII, 1
t*: • - -
J
'3? )"\n (Var. nnBb) outside of the (town) gate; Tosef. ib.
1212, pi. nnsqt v. rni^.
VI, 1 (R. S. to Mikv. 1. c. finE).— Pesik. R. s. 37 WBlU PIMM? ^l^C I, ^^"I12D f.(7i&) net, trap. Targ.Jer.XLVIII,
——
Targ. Ex. XXX VIII, 4 (Y. some ed. Xr^:s~ coir. ace;
SJTlffi2 m. (is*) stalk.— PL V&3X8Q, X~-:sz. Targ. Y.
h. text W1); a. ir.—Pl. fpna, WTOa. Targ. Is. XIX, 8,
Gen. XL, 10 (not X^iS":). Targ. T* I ib. 12 (h. text 'X+W).
sq. (ed. Wil. '\TSt). Targ. Koh. Vlf, 26 yn^.— Y. Sabb.
XIII, 14 a bot.;' Y. Bets. Ill, 62 a top -WW 'a by llt teU NTX2, STIXQ m.= xns-s II.—PL "ptwa, K^pia,
— V. MffftEU
are
N~^2
»;tB. Targ.
meant -woven nets (not
T
II m.
traps).
(may be used for eating on the first Passover night); a. end (some ed. rTtPlSO}; a. e.— 2) stronghold.— Pi. ROTOta.
fr. —
_) '-.~ -vr, or ''2 a hide not tanned by a process of Targ. Jud. VI, 2 (ed. Lag. Xrx-S-). V. MffBOi
fermentation, untanned hide. Kel. XVII, 15. Gitt. 22 ;i
p WW
;
bronze. Targ. II Chr. IV, 16 'z WO (h. text pVT3 miT:).— fibp a light command (obejed with little sacrifice); Ned.
Y. Succ. V, bb'
x
top; Arakh. 10 b (quot fr. Ezra VIII, 27) 39 b ; a. fr. — I t't*jfj tlX2n 'z a religious act achieved
atyao r:r:. through a wrong deed, e. g. using an illegitimately ob-
tained object for a religious ceremony. Succ. 30a ; a. fr.
y&!2, v. ktzsko.
Y. Sabb. XIII, 14 a bot. ; Y. Hall. I, end, 58 a 'a mtO yn
\ \Z. £12 111.(3^) pyramid, pyramidal file. Y.B.Mets. no-sin is virtue ; rt^SS 'a "pX no-virtue is sin. —Zeb. 52 a
,
II, 8
1
', sq., v. «£-"-. a. fr. 'z (sub. p"p) an dependent on certain oc-
offering
casions as ordained in the Law, opp. FCin an obligatory
"2^1212, 12 "5 pr.n.pl. Pi-M'tsubah (Maasub, Neub. offering (at regular seasons). — "nenx,
'a —Y. Sot. v. "fiSTX.
Geogr. p. 22), in the district of Tyre. Y. Dem. II, 22'
1
top I, beg. 16 b arOt?i (IX) '•& rna mw said only as a rec-
is this
(ed. Krot. raiXB Tosef. Shebi. IV, 9 xrrii X21S). ommendation or as an indispensable act?; Y. Pes. lj
;
II, 29
[— [2) (v. XSTS II) dry ttvigs, chips. Succ. 29 a xp->T xrx
fr., v. X2-5, a. bft, IX;. — '•: na the
corpse of a person
'a ";=*;-•; xpi Ar. (ed. otto^s two xpi; Ms. M. xri-rx;
whose unknown and whose
relatives are burial is oblig-
i
28 b "|2aTn xbx n^S *Q13> 13^X 'a one violates the law
"
^n51SQ f. ch.= h. nbssa I, depth, glen. Targ. Job
by adding to the prescribed
(
form of ceremonies only XLI, 23; a. fr. — PL xnbixa. Targ. Y. Ex. XV, 5. Targ.
when executed in their due season (e. g. one does not Ps. LXXXVIII, 7 (ed. Wil. sing.).
T\W2 (h. form), ^riTl^a, NfllED ch.same. Targ. fc^l^Q m. ("('""4) chirper; X32nn 'a [smoke-chirper,]
XII, 16.—Targ. Y.II Deut. XXV, 10— [Y.Kidd. cricket' in thechimney. Midr. Till, to Ps. CII, 4 '12 p*in3
Y. I Num.
I, 61 b bot. IffWlBb 'a XDX, v. WBMX.]— Esp. charity. Lev. 'm (my days pass in smoke) like that cricket (ed. Bub.
*ip"n XX^Xa, read "np-n, the cricket on the hearth, v. Bub.
E. s. 34 rTCRJ b3 let every one distribute charity;
Tfehtt* Xa2>
a. note 14).
a.e.—PL 1«5M, *W«*0, rWflWa Targ.Y.IIDeut. VII, 10. 1.
Targ. Y.II Num. I.e.; a.e.—Lev.E.l.c. n*OS S^aiU X3X KW D n p£E, T^XQ m.pl. (psa) mortals, v. pstj.
'a I hear that he is charitable. ilpnal rmWI lb. s. 3
'a 13 he desires to be called a charitable man. Y. Ber. 3?"l1]IQ m. (b. h. sn'xa; STlX) feper. Neg. XIII, 11. Ib.
IX, 14 b bot. '31 'a "psa iina ia3U5 lUnB ed. Lehm. (oth. Xiv/i. Meg. I, 7 -jbma 'a, -isdia 'a, v. dbn II. Ned.64 '; 1
which opens not for good deeds, will open for the phy- fcCTOQ oh. same. Targ. Y. Lev. XIV, 2; a. e.
sician ; a. fr.
niLID f. (b. h. "HSU; naa) quarrel, wrangling. Bnh.
""ISC, v. *r* 74 a ; 79 a ;
Keth. 33 a (ref. to Ex. XXI, 22) '31 rTffnaBB '80
the text speaks of a fight with murderous intent; Ex.
m72, T?W$ v. xxa.
E. s. 1. Y. Naz. IX, end, 58 a (ref. to Ex. 1. c. a. 18) xbm
"SD^SftQ m. (denom. of ma; •») wrangler, hair- '31 nd^-ia ton 'a x^n are not matsuth and m'ribah the
T
I^McArcr. Sabb. 152
a
'a wnp (id) ed.' (Eashi bbK**JM, same?; Y. Snh.IX, 27 a bot. Y. B. Kam. IV, 4 C top. Gen. ;
Ms. M. X^Ba) Baldhead (wants to be) a hair-plucker!, v. E. s. 50 (play on nista, Gen. XIX, 3) '31 hVrti 'a a great
dispute arose (between Lot and his wife) about the salt;
Yalk. ib. 84. Pesik. Vattomer, p. 133 b (ref. to 1X3, Lam.
TVT^n I f. (b. h.; bbx) [precipitous declivity,] glen, IV, 15) n"dpnb 'a ibSd ibj. xb they did not go into . . .
shaft? fish-pond. B. Bath. 67 a 'al n-dbm a sand-mound exile until they had become contestants against the Lord.
(for glass-making) and a glen (shaft for metal-digging; [Not to be confounded with niaa, pi. of nsa, a. nixa, pi.
oth. opin. fish-pond); Arakh.32\ Meg. b (missing in edi- of nisa.]
tions revised by censors,v. Eabb. D.S. a. l.)rVd3in inx 1*PX1
&<rV)2&2, 'ISSQ ch. same. Targ. 0. Gen. XIII, 7 (some
'ai (Ms. M. nidin) and on the fourth side it (Eome) is
/
ed. isa). Targ. Ps. Ill, 7 (h. text tnidd"; Targ. II Sam.
bounded by sand-hills (clay-ground) and glens (or shafts). !).
;'
B'shall., Shir., s. 5 (ref. to Ex. XV, 5, a. Jon. II, 4) ft« rpf T72D2 m. (b. h.; nns to glisten) forehead. Koh. E. to
'31 mx Jonah went down into one whirlpool, but
'ab XII, 2 'an m n*nm 'and the moon' (ib.) means the fore-
they (the Egyptians) into two Yalk. Ex. 246.— PL niblXa, ; head; Lev. E. s. 18 'an nr -nxm (Sabb. 151 b nn^B It).
'isa. Mekh. 1. c. d^lS d^a xbx 'a "pal m. means rapid Yoma 7 b a. e. in^a b2? IrYTlS as long as it (the plate) is
,
waters; (Yalk. I. c. '31 nbixa pXI); a. e. on the high priest's forehead; a. e. — Trnsf. effrontery.
— — —
xnsr 825 *TD
Tanh. T*ruiu. 1 1 rz:r:~ 'z » ns=? to atone for the brazei; Hif. x-aan to furnish, provide with. Gen. R. 1. c.
front. Kidd. 70* rflO, v. WW; a. e. '31 n"2pn 'm TQK3 they had been lost, and (the tokens)
the Lord provided others instead. Hag. 5 a (ref. to ",X^ar,
Sni?C ch. same. Targ. Y. I Gen. IV, 8.
Deut. XXXI, 21) '3- X-uaa 13-a* nar what remedy is there
rZZ'2'212, Gen.R.s. 65, end '-';, read feOlS&tt r. v. ==s. for a slave for whom his master invents evils and troubles ?
Gitt. IX, 10 ~-~v -" ~z 'a he discovered in her some- is started); Mace. 8 a ; a. e.
in the case of—, so &c. Sifra Vayikra, N'dab., ch. VIII, four orders of the Talmud, how could I master six?
Par. 7 'Z' -----2 3X. .STiapm "&W0 ha as when burning
.
a
lb. 14 , a. fr. ifh ~ax "-sz he may say to him. B. Bath.
(the sacrifice on the head is separated from
altar) the 84 a "p min W*0 (mil) X*3 (v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1.) thou wouldst
the trunk, so when pinching the neck of the bird the head not have had the right to retract; '31 pnxa. .JfftiBtl now
must be severed &c. a. fr. Part. pass. *iaa, f. ITCPL;
;
that thou hast overreached me, canst thou retract? ; a. fr.
pL """aa; ffi^xa accessible, frequent; likely. Arakh. 30 b Ithpe. "aa"X, 'ax [to find one's self] to succeed. Keth.
.'-
-j-s xa -1 'and he find the means' (Lev. XXV, 26), this 62 a '31 "H3! '^X xb the gentile did not succeed in keeping
excludes the case of the means being accessible, i. e. of one pace with him. Ned. 89
1
'
VOXtvA 'ax xVl... B"m he tried
who had the means at the time being. B. Mets. 27 a (ref. to his utmost (v. XQ5 1), but had no success in his studies; a. e.
Deut. XXII, 3, v. supra) '31 bxx *tr1 aa^tt irrOKtt 18 that Af. X^xaX (with rvrs:, or without) to place one's self
which is lost to him but accessible to any body else; i~i~"~N within sight of an enemy so as to give him a chance for
';" ~'SH'z WW
".'i ~ lost to him and inaccessible to every-
m
reconciliation, to be ready for reconciliation. Yoma 87 a
one else (e.g. swept away by a flood). Sabb. 151 b IS fflDS X^saa r.m (v. Rabb.D. S. a.
rVttftfl 1. note; ed. X^xaai
'31~"~ 'Xfi xaia ITTUWJ do good while thou findest(an oppor-
n-;).— [Keth. 60 b x^aa., v. "aa II.]
tunity), and it is possible to thee (thou hast the means), and
*
thou art yet in thy own power (possessest thy faculties). ¥!2t Tl'^2
!
yZKFZ) (b. h.) to squeeze, wring, esp. to
Snh. 86" 'a; D-fi fctton "3 'if one be found stealing &c.' u-ring out the blood of the bird sacrifice. Sifra Vayikra,
(Deut. XXIV, 7), this excludes the case when the abducted N'dab., ch. VIII, Par. 7 hJfha Btth he wrings it; a. fr.
and sold person was in his power (his own child &c). lb. Pi. nra, nsa
T
1) same. Zeb. VI, 5, sq.; a. fr.— 2) to
TQTl •-"- -" :r;r the case is to be judged as if they (the pour out to the last drop, to drain. lb. 64 b nsa'] rr: -z
children) had been in his possession. Gen. R. s. 85 "iBSJri '31 iTSB"] (ed. punctuate nsa^, Hif.) it does not say (Lev.
m
r z:~.'z 'a the note can be produced for collection, i. e. V, 9), 'he shall pour out (the remainder) at the bottom
evidence can be found against us. Gitt. i
1
'
'a a^r "pX &c.', but 'it shall be wrung out', which means, that it
• z~~p~ no witnesses are to be had to identify it. B. Mets. will run out to the bottom of itself. Ter. XI, 8 *:""~
18 a 'a r-—•I'm* where caravans pass frequently.
CTIpZJQ WOl (Y. ed. ra"a"; Ms. M. rsat) if he bent the vessel
Esth. E. to I, 1, v.
"-"-. lb. (ref. to Ps. XXI, 9) "p" NPIP, 1
and drained it; B. Bath. 87 b (Ms. H. a. R. r^'Z'); ib.V,8
"pa^'Xa Z~Z~~ '- thou shalt have the opportunity of (87
a
) nr^ai WO**! (Y. ed. PCttfl; Bab. ed. n^STll, Ms. M.
punishing thy enemies. B. Kam. 4 a 'a ripiTJi the damage narai; Ms. R. RBljpol). Gen. R. s. 85; s. 92 (play on X^:,
through it is frequent. lb. 60 a 'a Wl an ordinary wind, Gen. XLIV, 16) '31 MStaa KYT8 HT3 as one drains a vessel
'a WW Wl an extraordinary wind; a. v. fr. and leaves nothing but the lees. Midr. Till, to Ps. L1X
Nif. azz: to be found. Gen. R.s.85 rcroaa UttagV who (play on xxa, Prov. XVIH, 22) rtsaa x^n nr- ItDNTtB
are caught at a theft; a. fr.— Esp. to turn out, to follow, to '31 irvna 'jVo r z-zr, (;3) ed. Bub. (oth. ed. rxaaa, a.oth.
m
result. Hull. I, 4 '31 "183 ': the result is, what is legal in variants) when the wife is bad, she drains all the good
slaughtering is Pes. 25 b TOP '31, v.
illegal in pinching. things out of his house and makes him poor; Yalk. Prov.
'lab II.Sifre Deut. 210 tf*TO3 a-aa: from which we can 957 X"a*aa (read: n"^aa); a. fr.— 3) (cmp. SXa) nTV- '-
—
consequently derive. Y.Pes.V, beg. 31 c, a.fr. *ttf» "XS-;: b
to measure exactly. Erub.IV, li(52 ) -,':rr: r-—z:zn *-x
thou turnest out saying, i. e. the result is, consequently. '31 the surveyors(in marking distances for Sabbath limits)
i—"T015 (xaar) "^Z'T ax (abbr. b'TX) if you will say. Gitt. do not measure exactly (but mark within the limits), in
82 b '=" xr"X -a*'; X'^.r 3X if you will adopt the opinion order to allow for mistakes. Trnsf. to sound one's learn- —
of &c. Sabb. 136* '3* "-'~t V'rs if you assume that they ing. Men. 18 a "^niTa nisas to have my own learning
differ &c. ; a. fr.—Tosef. Ohol. IV, 12 '31 lalb jtr.r:': if examined; '31 "rWTfla 'ab to sound the learning of &c.
j'ou assume kc. Hithpa. naara to be wrung out; to be emptied, drained
— —
•Stt 826 7"E2E
Sifra Vayikra, Hob., Par. io, ch. XVIII; Zeb. 64 b yTurna SFl-pXD f. (bsa), v.^~ tiVnpj toe washer? fork (?).
TlD^b D^Bana where the remainder is poured out towards
Sam.' XIII, 21 Kimhi (ed. nbsa, 'S^a; ed.
Targ. I bag.
the bottom of the altar; a. fr. [Ib.Vl,4 (64 ') nsana HYI, read
1
'
n
Y. Shek. Ill, beg. 47
1
' '31 ib^b nisrana p )HC 12 op to that KQ)tfqi xa, v. «*?$».
time (the first of Elul) the latest births of the old year
(of those conceived before the first of Nisan) take place ^
n
2272, &O XD m.(5>?0) 1) (noun) middle, midst. Targ.
n
—
&c. Tmsf. (with y3irn)fo be exactly counted, to be finally
0. Num. XXxV,5 5*Sa ed.Berl.(oth. ed. KJ*Xa Y. MnTO).—
;
a
(he sufl'ers a loss by the death of Constr. Wpa. Targ. Ps. XXII, 2:i; a. e.— PI. fOTWO. Targ.
settled. Y. Sot. I, 17
his ox &c.) nsana fatJWtl and the account (of his sins) Jud.XV, 4 ed.Lag. (oth. ed.'|3^a).— 2) (adj.) middle, aver-
Num. R. s. 9 *31 KSIitna nnx, v. SHKI; Koh. age. Ned. 81 b top R.N. (ed. twya).— KSWa N33. v.33l.—
is settled; ib.;
R. to VII, 27.
[JOS^a, Targ. Prov. XXIX, 13 Ms., v. X^a.]
(IS" -*Q m. (preced.) /yiw^ betiveen, central, average.
"^£?II ch. same, 1) to wring. Zeb. 65 lj
Bib *>$$\ fm Targ. Ex. XXVI, 28 ; a. e. — P/. "W^. Targ. Jud. XVI,
'31 (not CT 'VOxn, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 1) and since he
29; a. e., v. SO'-Tv?.— Fem. KrTO">Sa, KTOTtO. Targ. I Kings
wrings the blood out, he does the act prescribed for the
VI, 6 "WWS ed. Lag.; ib. 8.—B. Bath. 107 a tff&rSQ WlVa
burnt-offering &c— 2) to suck. Sabb. 54 b Wnta^y. rV«.
it is the average (between twenty and thirty). — Esp.
Pa. i$a to give suck. Keth. 60 *KU
1
'
(T»V SOSaa she will
Mishnah &c, contrad.
fctwsa the middle clause of a
give him (her own child) more suck.
to X1!3'"H first clause, and NB^D the ending clause. Hull.
Ithjia. ^Sanx, Ithpe. "TSttlnaj, ^sa^x to be wrung out, 94 b ; a. fr.
fcTXQ m.
&TXI3,
(•$$) quarreler, v. Ki*««a.
acrxa,
t: - :
v. «*».
:- t :
n^XQ, v. xn^aa.
H^Q, v. ttfKBO.
R. s. 33 N^rbob.
Vayikra, N'dab./ch. VIII, Par. 7.— PI. WMta, Hull. 132 b
bot. (missing in Tosef. Dem. II, 7; Men. 18 b ). SriQXQ m. (rvtybrightness; StaVI nTCOSa noow. Lev.
R. s. 24*(Tanh. K'dosh. 9 fti^STS).
nV^a i.,pi. niV'sa (b. h. n^a; ^) d bens.
a
Pes. 50(ref. to Zech. XIV, 20) '=1 pVrWJ 'a «3 all bells yQX/3 (v. ysa) <o squeeze, suck, sip. Y. Ter. XI. 47''
or take a suck of the grapes (and throw them away) VSfc m. (b. h.; mattress, bed. B. Mets. H3 h v.
»J)
WW
,
T
a
VCtXt\ (read: ":•J•:•:' ). Gen. R. s.
,
Y. Maasr. II, 50 bot.
y -,•"- Ab. Zar. 10 b '=1 '"3 Oh! that I might be
-a
60 (expl. tVffmi, Gen. XXIV, 21, as if fr. nrr) fORM thy mattress in the hereafter!— Sabb. 55 b n?3a rx b~';-z
" n"" he sipped (the water which she handed him) he upset her (Bilha's) bed a. e. PL r-rsa. Ib. Nidd.
;
—
and looked at her; Yalk. ib. 109.
32 b . B. Bath. 53 b. Hag. 14 b '= ntttTO r-x/'a (fern.) fine
kmxd, K^m Ngsso, v. *&m. dining couches were prepared for }ou; a. e.
one of them, and they knew that the count for the lot S"ZC, v. ksxto.
T • t
was to begin with him Yoma 25 a Ib. '=1 bin "nxa 'a
: : •
; .
is there a turban (mitsnefeth) among common dresses (not "1"S2 m. (b. h. ; nri) step.—[Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. I, 7,
used at the priestly service)? Ib. VII, 5 ; a. fr. v. Tsra.] — PI. CHSXa, constr. *VAU. I
Yalk. Jon. 550 *tfj
"|TO nrx "n b; and the steps of every living creature dost
xr.r::r:, kotsd, k&xoq ch. sa me T arg . is. thou examine.— [Arakh. VI, 3 (23 b ) "J-nrsa, v. isra.]
XXII,
T
18!'
T
Targ.Ex. XXYIII, 37. Targ. Zech.III, 5; a. e —
11. ly'JJtU Targ. Y. Ex. XXVni, 4 (ed. Vien. 't^Trl 0. S /TC m. (938) optpressor, creditor. Targ. Prov.
XXIX, 13 ''a X-Q5 (Ms. x^r-s-3, read 'an of oppression;
ed. Berl. -£":;: .
Pi. "Vr !) ( v - ^a Hithpa.) to be exact in calculation, fli^llZ, HSS2 (b. h.) pr. n. pi. Mizpeh or Mizpah
(Watch-Tower). Vzah. II, 6 'an r-X the man of M. (or the
to measure exactly. Tosef. Erub.IV (III), 4 HX ITSFa DX1
':" ~T,T- and if they (those authorized to lay for him governor of the Watch-Tower of the Temple).
he had the Erub laid &c. Ib. '=" rx rvi'l (read W«) Y%]2 (b. h.; v. "pa) to press, suck; to drain. Sabb.
if they (the partners) laid the Ernb &c; Tosef. ib. IX XlX,2"|-Ui*a"and compress the blood-vessels of the wound
(VI). 12 rs-a (read: a. e. 2) (denom. of 5*») Wo); — by sucking. Par. IX, 3 T'S'J.' a KTM3 she (the dove) sips (and
to place in the middle. Snh. H, 1 WS0R3, v. rWRJO. Y. Ber. lets no water out of her mouth again). Tosef. Sot, V, 9
V, end, rx )TMMJ<J the priest is calied upon to
9' 1 "jTWl
'
'31 telWI issiai "tou he takes out the fly and sucks it
s
read between the two common Israelites. Gen. R. s. 95 out and eats the dish; Y. ib.I, 17 a bot.; Gitt. 90 Lev. .
'; T'x "ruaa l"n they took him in the middle and R. 8. 15 '=1 YStO Xinir xb not that the dry sponge drains
guarded him. Pes. 1 1 l a TOKUtftl xbl TOXaa "px nirblE there the wound, but it protects it. Deut. R. s. 2 n?32 ~b "pX
are three objects we must not allow to pass between two mal nniX "pia hast thou not a ring (containing poison) ?
persons, nor must any person be passed between them. Suck it and die; a. fr. —
[Cant. R. to in, 10 fflxa rss'a,
Part. pass. rsiaa a) exactly placed (=-,i!ca); b) placed read rrsia, v. ns\]
:
Sifra Vayikra, N'dab., Par. V, ch. VII rsaa. Ex. R. s. 2 LXXV,'9 (some ed. fCOpBt] Pa.).—2) to wring, press. Ib.
'=" ~U"X- IUTP1 -^ T^tra who was standing in the very
'
' LXXI1I, 10 frsaa Ms. (ed. "pOPIUj h. text tgBP).—V. fn,
centre of the fire. Y. Ber. IV, 8 b top nssraa VtttiB . hVm . . inn.
'31 knowledge is something great, for it is placed between
pSDT (sec. r. of p2?) to pour, cast. Hor. 12 -ppsia
a
. preced. Targ. Y. Num. XIX, 4. Targ. Y. II Gen. XLIX. bound. B. Bath. 61 b , sq., v. tfc h.
[
b a
Prt 1SO"pb n^b |Wl he ought a board suspended, rope-bridge. M. Kat. 6 bot. Kidd. 81
aries of the land. lb. 'a X51
W UK
.
")SQ,"122
n
Q m.(b.h.; 11SI) 1) narrow, jmm». Hull. 50 b e.— PI. ^Xisp, '313. Targ. Gen. XLIII, 32 a. fr. Fern. ;
—
(expl.">OlEn D13) n-jobl "ion IB from where the stomachbe- xtiisp, xnisp, 'to. ib. XVI, 3.— PI. kitiiso. Targ. Ex.
gins to narrow and downward (the animal being suspended I, 19 (Y. ed. Vien. fctrrn .
.
, corr. ace).
',
'21 X21X1 (Ms. 0. XIOIO; differ, in Ms. M.), v. X16BX. Ib. '31 ip Wl an Egyptian proselyte was my fellow student
62 a '31 "pIXI 'O the field which I sell thee is contiguous &c. Ib. "JH13X1 'O an original Egyptian proselyte, opp. to
to Reuben's on the east and on the west side; a. fr. PI. 1113 'O the son of an Egyptian proselyte. B. Bath. Ill, 6
n-nsp boundary lines, bounds. Ib. 6l b 'o lb "tfttB W» 'on dblO an Egyptian (small) ladder a. fr.—PI. 3"- "3p, ;
Dlixnn although he defined (in the agreement) the outer- di-Sp. Pes. X, 5. Ex. R. s. 1 a. fr. Fern. PP130. Yeb. ; —
most lines (of the group of buildings or fields), 3inn 'o 1. c.'nJIUJKI 'O, niT13 'O, v. supra. B. Bath. 1. c. 'on yibn,
15 he intended only to give an amplified description of v. "jftrj; a. fr.— PI. ni*130. Ex. R. 1. c; a. fr.
Ex. R. s. 1 ; a. v. fr.
'o a boundless possession.
'31
"1SQ, &*"J12Q, '2H3 I
'ox bought a fieid
ch. same. B. Bath. 5
a
T •• : • t t :
•
lpP> T"!!pE m. (nnp) Sorer. Kel. XIII, 4. lb. X, 28.-3) reservoir.—PL X^pa. Targ. Is. XXII, 11 (h.
XVII, 12 '31 ha»V^ffl bna 'a'xbas as large as the hole text nipa).
made with the large carpenters' borer kept in the Temple
cell, which is the size of an Italian dipondium &c. ; Ohol. illpD II m. (xnp) acid. Keth. 75 a Ar., v. RWp.
XIII, 1 ; Tosef. ib. XIV, 1. Ohol. II, 3 '31 'papa.. . 'a WHO
what borer do they mean ? The small one used by phy- D^p/E, v. nextw.
sicians &c. Ib. XIV, 2 XiniU ^3 'a s6a any hole made with
the borer, v. SW^ffl Tosef. ib. XIV, 7. Tosef. Sabb. XIII
;
|
"ipD m. pi. (macellum, jxaxeXXov) 1) slaughter-
CV, 16.—
(XIV), 17 rmpa; a. fr. [Num. E. s. 9 &^n btt 'a some — house. Gen. E. s. 86, beg.; Midr.
meat-market, provision-market. Hull. 95 a bfcOU^ Tiaoi'a
Till, to Ps.
2)
ed., read !"npa.]
if there are meat-stands (kept by gentiles) in a place
""IpE, v. "plpa i. where the butchers are Jews. Ib. 92 b top "lttja "pbpltiJ "pX
'aa nan they (the gentiles) do not retail carrion in the
WJ "Ip£> an abbreviation for Stamina, n^p, d^ and markets;a. fr.— [SifreNum. 131 a^lpaanb 13a they erected
"V""w, wrong intention at slaughtering a sacrifice, illegality markets for them (Var. Disbp), v. S&p HI.]—Y. Hag. I,
concerning one part of a sacrifice, the legal effect of the 76 b top "pbipaa "ifix even if you have to buy your meat
sprinkling of the blood, and the occurrence of the word in the market (having no sacrifice of your own).
sh'lishi {third) in both laws under discussion. Zeb. 28 b .
bVipQ* v.abpi.
iL^pQ.m. (b. h.; tthp) sanctuary, esp. 'a or 'an lYq
(abbr.a"nn) the Jerusalem Temple, contrad. to ptt5a the DlpDm. (b. h.; dip) 1) place. Ab. Zar. 8 b ; Snh. 14 b
Tabernacle. M. Kat. 9\ Erub. 2 a 'a "np^aa piaa ",n3^X diia 'an, v. SHI. Yoma
38 a bot. '31 ^aipaai "jliOpi -jaiM
'31 'ai we find that the Tabernacle is sometimes called thou shalt be called by what name thou deservest, and
mikdash, and the Temple wwsAfam. — "jHUsn 'a the first given the place due to thee &c, i. e. be not afraid of
Temple (the Solomonic Temple); iJlB 'a the second (post- human envy. Shebu. VII, 4 naipab nsiaian rtlfll the oath
exilic) Temple. Yoma 21 b ; a. e.— Ib. a'Tia MSlua when
... goes back to its home, expl. ib. 47 a "Vob nsiaili nitn the
Solomon had built the Temple; a. fr. PI. d^mpa. Meg. oath goes back to Sinai, i. e. no oath is demanded and
105
; —
Olptt 830 l&pn
no decision rendered, the case being surrendered to him the runner (in zigzag). PI. h npa. Pesik. B'shall. p. K4 1
bot. '31 'a Kin S)S this calculation has also been adopted
everywhere. Sabb. 40 b a. fr. TB 'a bfi, a"33 wherever. ; — (v. W^bWiBa) that ten young plants within an area of
:
He is the existence (the preserver) of the world, but His bribe-taking. Pes. IX, 5 UttJSba ifipa must be selected it
wor Id is not His existence; Pesik. B. s. 21 a.e. Ab. Zar. ; — (designated) on the tenth day of the month (Ex. XII, 3).—
40 h filial laVtt ibaiu 'an yra blessed be the Lord who 2) (traditional pronunc.) fipa buying, purchase, bargain.
has given his world over to preservers (who has created 'an b" Tiasn ^N do not stand bargaining when
Ib. 112 b '31
remedies). Nidd. 49 11193 rVlT' 'an the Lord be with
1'
you have no money. B. Mets. IV, 3 'ab mirffi if the over-
him. Ber. 16 b ; Lev. E. s. 5, v. ynbti; a. v. fr. charge amounts to one sixth of the price paid. Ib. 50 a 'p
^npa *b give me back my goods. Ib. b 'a Vlli"V3 annulment
DlplO, Treat. Sof'rim XXI, 7 'a 'Oris, v. biia.
of the bargain. Ib. 51 a TV<2 Ifipa fiplb the purchaser has
Nft^p/G, aapa. his purchase in his possession (and can show it to his
v.
friends to have it valued); a. v. fr.
—'an pit auction-stone
f]1pD m. (Cjlp, f)Bp; cmp. K©ip needle-eye) the eye of for slaves. Sifra B'har ch. VII, Par. 6 (Yalk. Lev. 667 fipbfi),
the coulter for the insertion of the horizontal pole. Kel. v. Naaib I. —isaal 'a, v. isaa.
XIII, 3.
fcTTOpQ, rnitSpQm. ch. (lap II) the upper gar-
"lIpQ m. (b. h.; lip, v. ^pl) fountain, esp.=bi lipa, ment with the girdle, walking cloak or sheet. Y. B. Mets.
the interior of the womb from where the menses are dis- II, beg. 8 b 'a2 ""p13 . . nstiJi* found a web wrapped up in
b
charged. Nidd. 65 b . lb. 66 a ; a. fr.— [Pesik. B'shall., p. 89 a cloak. Ab. Zar. 58 b '31 "j^S ^libJWW before you take
SWafaH fpo, v. Nipia I.] off your cloak, go back (and rescind your decision).
™l"lpQ m. (Ip3, v. next w.) beak, a tool for whetting *|"Vit2pQ m. h. same. Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. VII, 1 'XOK
millstones. Kel. XXIX, 6 (not Tpa). 'am VpiOB (E. S. to Kel. XXIX, 1 "pi-opal; Kel. 1. c.
V\ milpa (not n^lpla) he put his beak (into the lion's fcOlQpQ m. (denom. of H^bp) cucumber-field. Targ.
mouth), and brought the bone out; Yalk. 1. c. n^Slp (corr.
T
Is. I, 8 "ed. Lag. (oth. ed. X^Jpa). — 'a *tt pr. n. pi. Bar-
ace). Mikfya. Y. M. Kat. I, 80 b hot".
'
NnipQ, v. shpa. S*t2p!Q, fcC^ID m. pi. (BgS) objects held in the hand
'
the torches were moved (v. Mish. ib. 4) in the manner of yJTpES m., v. ^Ipa.
—
831 T\m?K
TVZ^plZ f. (v. Kapa) bought object, thing. Lev.B.s.5 H^bpQ f., pL rfi95pQ (preced.) braids, nets. Yoma
>b "pjrn nibbE 'a ~jb rPX (not "jann) bast thou such and YI 7 ; v., however, bpa.
such an object? wilt thou lend it to me?
DpS, &^pp T
I m. (ttp) 1) =h. lasa, standing, at-
Np"p~, v. #$m. tendance, office. T&rg. I Kings X, 5. Targ. Is. XXII, 19 ed.
wood-ashes (not dust, crushed bones &c). Par. IX, 7 "EX S2£j>!!2 m. (C]p3 U) 1) surrounding, circitmvallation.
'- "irxz z~vrz~ ~r: ashes fit for lustration (ashes of the T
Targ. Lain. bn).— 2) going around 'a '^TOa
II, 8 (h. text ;
he has admitted a part of what is comprised in the claim pTrattS; h.text *m*\; Pesh. ppBns).
(empty 'casks' against the claim of 'pitchers of oil'). Ib.
i, v. p^aa.
B^bs nspaa minhe admits that he owes a portion of
if
—
the vessels claimed. B. Mets. 3 a a. fr. fiJSan 'a(a) MTvo ,
ypJ2 m. (preced.) ^Bt>1 'a book-worm. Sabb. 90 a .
S3W he who admits a portion of the claim must make
oath. Y. Sbebu. VII, beg. 38 b '31 'a nsnai 'a njnsu; i&b
^pQ, 'S^pK] m. (v. ppa, Ithpe.) sneezing. — PI.
because he is benefitted to a certain extent and benefits TPpa, '^pa. Targ. Job XLI, 10 ">1ppa Regia (Ms. Var.
(the owner) to a certain extent, he must swear in some ^ipipa; ed. 'H*^ b. text TWO*).
cases and pay damage in other cases. Sifra Sh'mini, Par.
")}2Q, v. ip/a.
9, ch. XI 'a mfiBl 'a ttKaa you make it possible to
declare (the seeds) unclean in some cases and clean in
y]2 m. ch.=h. IBJia, cooling; 'a Sp shady rock. Targ.
others. Ab. V, 8 '31 "jtlXpal -plBSa ^pa if a part of the Is. XXV, 5 (h. text 3S).
people give tithes and a part give not, v. rTnza. Koh. R.
to VII, 27, a. e. fflfian baa tfJSin 'a loss of a part of one's iSHpQ pr. n. m. (Maxpo;) Macra. Gen. R. s. 46 [read:]
life (pain, loss of property &c.) is considered
like a sac- 'al NTn XianBa this interpretation of M. is plausible;
rifice of one's entire life; a. fr. — Ch. v. nap. (Lev. R. s. 25 «tj?T).
Lev.XXVI, 39) tea? Nbx sipB"? lalX I3i« it does not merely wilt be called.
mean 'they shall decay' (when a portion remains sound), but
'they shall dissolve' (v. Mace. 24 a bot.). Nidd. Ill, 4 pia"1
?
v> JP^l m. (b.h.; fcOp ) \)call, convocation. Sifra
T
Emor,
'al ibin the embryo may have been mashed (mixed up Par. 11,' ch. XIV lUTp 'a 1X1I5S ax aba unless one made
with the blood) before was passed. Y. ib. Ill, end, 51 a
it
it (the Day of Atonement) a holy call (observed it). Ib.
'31 ln^bttJ iip/ia^ the placenta was mashed.
Bab. ib. 27 a
ch. XIII, Par. 1 1 '31 ffilp 'a bNTW "ffl the sons of Israel
'31 B2B piaa nan laitf there is no comparison are a holy convocation (called to celebrate the festivals)
between
one presumption that the embryo was mashed and two &c. Mekh. Bo. s. 9 a. fr.— 2) reading, esp. the reading from
;
such suppositions (that the placenta of one embryo and the Scriptures. Ber. II, 1 'aa 'JB1 the time for reading the
the embryo of another placenta were mashed). R. Hash. Sh'm'a. Meg. 3 a , a. fr. nb^a 'a the recitation of the Book
Ill, 8 O^Bi? m they decayed (from the serpent's bites), of Esther. Tosef. Ber.
Scriptures and prayer are permitted there;
II, 20 nbfini 'a B'tB im reading the
opp. "pKBina; a. e.—Tanh. Noah 10 inia^paS; Yalk.Dan. Sabb. 10 a ;
1060 IT* pais, v. infra. a. e.—Meg. 1. c. (ref. to Neh. VIII, 8 'a lfcOpil) It this means
Hif. pan l) to squash. Y. Ab. Zar. II, 40 c bot. pian xbll) the reading of the text; Ned. 37 b ; a. fr.— 3) pronunci-
'31 lest she may
squash the embryo in her womb. ation, vocalization d^BlB 'a the traditional vocalization
;
2) to enervate, cause consumption. Keth. VII, 10 inpaa of the Scripture texts. Ib.— 4) teaching the Bible, primary
she (the intercourse with her) will enervate instruction. Ib. IV, 3 'a 13lab*> Kb he must not teach him
him (the
leper). Bible, contrad. to 1TT1B &c. Ib. 36 b bot. 'an bs aipaa . . .
(Rashi) his (Nebucadnezzar's) pride was crumbled (he the Bible. Y. Meg. Ill, beg. 73 d Y. Keth. XIII, beg. 35 c ;
'31 'ab IBB tva Beth Sepher was the school for Bible, Beth
confessed his wrong), v. pna (ed. Tl its (the kiln's)
;
ma
Talmud for Mishnah. Lev. R. s. 2, beg. 'ab "peaza enter
foundation was crumbled (from the heat); [oth. vers, n
TTC the lime in it melted; Tanh. Noah 10 Vnoi pa3; Yalk. the primary school; a. fr. 5) the Scriptures. Y. Taan. —
Dan. 1060 1TB pa^]. IV, 68 a bot. 'an b3 bS imm, v. im; a. fr. — 6) Biblical
Hithpalp. papann to be crushed, to pine. Taan. 25 b verse, text. Sot. V, 2 '31 mWl "ja 'a lb yWB there is for
-15-jSilpapan^ia TJ until he is made submissive (by star-
it no passage in the Torah intimating that it is unclean.
vation) and feels pain. Ib. '31 "jB 'a lb *Oaa produces for it a Biblical text in
evidence &c. Yeb. ll b a. e. 'Witt* T«a KXT' 'a "px a Bible
,
y\JQ ch. same. verse can never lose its literal sense (although its meaning
—
833 *™?£T?
may be extended by the methods of interpretation). Snh. THpQ II m. (b. h. *,"pa denom. of "ftp) having Jwrns.
;
not die on touching it &c; Gen. R. s. 19 DrVa xVl Mas sidered real estate ; a. fr.
r-z-~zz.
NiTRpC, NFTPpE f. (v. -ipa) cooling place. Targ.
DTSuTpQ, tD^TlpE, v. onsbxi-ipa. I Kings VII, N"2:. r~pa r-3 the royal summer-
2, a. e.
house (h. text yvzbft 19" ntl).— 'a pr. n. M'kerta K^W
D"HpE m. (|j.ay.p6;) tall. Yalk. Gen. 114 { OtKJ CX ' '
d'Tsillaya {Cooling Shades), name of a field. Y. M. Kat.
'31 13"3"~2 'a though in thy sight he is tall, in ours he is a I, beg. 80* (ed. Krot. rnpa).
dwarf; (Gen. R. s.65, a.e. Crs? X1-)pa &c, v. ci-z'rs---: .
c
B. Bath. 21 b 'SI &6n ^ 'an that a teacher cannot prevent (cmp. XnttEa).—PI. iripa. Y. Kil. HI, beg. 28 ptTfi 'f\V\
a colleague from opening a school in the same avenue. 'a were sitting and raising questions.
Ib. a 'Z' '- a "0 the highest number of pupils for a
1^12 I pr. n. m. Macrin, (supposed to mean) Ma- •ttfc-vqn T'Jjepa ed. Sonc. (Ms. 0. TOVd; Ms. M. I^xrpa
crianus, one of the thirty tyrants, who after the capture ed. only li-^ll) (who guards) his late fruits; a. e.
1", S?'iai,
by the Persians of Valerian, was declared Roman emperor —[Sabb. 90 b "Wl hv WBpO, read: n^ pa. v. STJp.]
;
whose lips to not drip from care (Cant. B. 1. c. WSJBTU ; D. S. a. 1. note 60); a. e. — 3) pr. n. m. (?). Snh. 5 a bot.
lia — 3) mar, name of a bitter herb, ferula.
niBliiS). Pes. B. Bath. 52
a
(v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note 8). Pes. 103
a
top 'a
1. c. iXlli la, expl. i Kin m la mar y'roar, v. "**t*] is ;
[for. lax (Ms. M. 1 X3112 31; Ms. M. 2 X31la, v. Rabb. D. S. a.
"ID III (or 153) m. (nia) exchange ; ~l Ia3 instead of; "ID, &OD II f. 1) (=xixa, v. nix) hoe, rake. Erub.
as. Hull. 94 a n-JinU5l 1532. niVniS rOrfl and he gave her 77 b X3i2ni 'a "«ai it requires hoe or pick-axe (to get it
(the ritually forbidden hen) to him (the gentile) pretend- out). Meg. 28 a v. ill II. Taan. 23 b top 'al "Q^S the wood
,
fr.— Snh. 109 b/31 153 i«Y... n31 153 iK if the one (Moses) S"ID, to be strong, v. 11a.
is teacher (leader), thou art a pupil (subordinate), and if
the other (Korah) is &c. Hull. 105 a , a. fr. Kin lax la &OD, v. 11a.
'31 lax lai one said one thing, another another thing,
S^D, v. Xiia.
but they do not differ. Yoma 20 b *b lax lai Ms. M. (ed.
max rial) and you, Sir, say to me &c. lb. n3i3 31 UrTO la n^"lDi m. (b. h.; nxi) sight, looks, appearance; color,
la (Bashi Kin la) the man (you speak of) is a teacher shade.' Yoma 74 b nttJX3 t3i3i3> nxia the pleasure of looking
sit down, Sir. B. Kam. 60 '31 la Ka^ h^ lax la one at one's wife. Tosef. Neg. 2 ',nijXl 'a the first inspection
b I,
said to him, tell us, Sir &c— Ber. 2 a a. fr. la lax it has ,
of a leprous affection (Lev. XIII, 3), 13© '53 the second
been said (introducing a discussion on a subject previous!)
-
(ib. 5) &c. lb. 4 *,2b 'a bo all shades of white; ni3iD 'a
touched upon). Y. Snh. I, 18 c bot., a. e. xrtfaUJl WTO 13K grey color. Ib. 5 ni33, 'a the appearance of an elevation
'3T in such a case the author of the rule would not have nan3 bx 'as as the appearance of a shade thrown on a
maintained it. Y. Ter. YIII, 45° 'a Kroiatt) iia xn xm sunlit object; Sifra Thazr.,Neg., ch. 1; a. fr.—PI. nixi53
K1212 here is a master of traditions and a master of prac- (with pronom. suffix) V'Xla, rnxia &c. Neg. I, 1. Sifra
tice. Gen. B. s. 58 (expl. 3©in, Gen. XXIII, 4) Km3 UKa 1. c, Par. 2, ch. II 1iXla3 retaining its original color; nn3
(=ni3n ^53) owner of a house, citizen, opp. Kini. Succ. liXiaa fainter than its original color. Bekh. VII, 5; v.
32 b a. , fr. "b mi53 ni> illE the Lord forgive him (he is Tpion ; a. fr.
HiTO 835 KbrriE
nS"C f. (b. h. ;
preced.) 1) mirror. Kel. XIV, 6 rt»SW w^ann,v.wwt^
'a 13 (not HX12JS\2J) one part of which he polished to serve
n
as a mirror. Tosef. Sabb. XIII (XIV), 16 a. tr.—Pl. rfarm. ;
lT31I2, Targ. Y. II Gen. XIV, 14, v. K^ais.
Gen. R. s. 4 niblia 'a magnifying mirrors niSBp 'a diminish- ;
rFS'TQ (b. h.; n3i) increase, profit. B. Mets. 61
a
v. tWitt I.
.
rPS~i£ f.(nxi), ',*~(n)'-3, appearance, sight, semblance. 1. c.]. — 2) training, teaching. Targ. Prov. II, 1 7, v. XS^aia.
Bekh. VII, 3 "Sri "2 "91)8 because he is repulsive to look at.
Lev. It. s. 26 ; Midr. Till, to Ps. VII 'a ">3Ea . . . "pbia li^X NTP SlIQi
t: - - :
v. xn^aia.
t t :-:
. .
'S 'a ">3Ba ",33lb n"bl do the Rabbis not care for appear- rcgizi^rrisa'Ta
t t * t : • : •
v.n-anan.
ance?; a. fr.
&ON10, v. Kym.
T T (fen, resting place. Targ. Am. Ill, 4 TttT&BTtt ed. Lag.
a
AtfHft Targ. II Esth. I, 2 ISaia.— B. Bath. 73
'
(ed. Wil.
mi^NHQ f. pi. (b. h.; denom. of head-part of
'JJX-i)
XBlt X35131 n'Waia "3 the resting place of a small star
the bed, bolster, pillow. Y. Ber. Ill, 6 d bot. '13(a) nVin . . .
flbin (='aa) the Divine Presence is above the head-side JTJI2 to sway to and fro, vacillate.
of the patient; Yalk. Ps. 741. cause swaying. Targ. II Sam. VI, 6 ; Targ.
Pa. V*T8 to
I Chr. XIII, 9.
2112, S"TO, (b. h.) pr. n. f. Merab, daughter of King
Ithpe. a^ianx to be swayed, become unsteady. Targ.
Saul. Snh. 19 b ; a. e.
0. Deut. XIX, 5 Regia a. oth. (ed. Berl. -platin, v. Berl.
wD")E, v. 1(3113 a. r 3i3.
(
Targ. 0. II, p. 55 ; h. text nni3).
nil"112, v. nana *.
- pr. n. pi. Marguan (prob. Antiochia Mar-
Beware,
T
wwsna
T-t • : -'•
v. seem*
t : - :
-
R. Elh. "jXtt
b
giana, in Central Asia). Ab. Zar. 31 (Ms.
la, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note).
M. TOW, Tosaf.
TargTProv! II, 17 ed.Lag. (ed. Xri3ia teaching; h. text fcCliPD f.=b.h.nsa"ia(cmp.xn"isi31),rcs^,Pflse. Targ.
1
"'"
^r! !!!*^, SrP*S"]E f.(preced.)n»rse, foster-mother.
1
JSWTQ, v. i^aia.
^oj KWin
(Ar. rprr^aia) she (whom he calls his mother) was his SiT^inQ f. (W1) irascible, quarrelsome. Targ. Prov.
XXI, 19*(Le'vita xn^.Ul).
foster-mother (or nurse).
word; "*1 rValWa used to say. Ber. 17\— Snh. 50 b ; Zeb. Yalk. Is. 289 nittttirro (coir, ace.).— [Num. R. s. 14 niiraia
36 b (of a traditional law). some ed.,' v. iliransra.lJ
Tt i
Tnibana (not 3.31\tt) she tarried six hours lying at his feet. msbaa rebel.— Meg. 13 a D^bana nsa>2 'a he (Caleb) pro-
tested against the counsel of the spies. Ib. iblb^an ITTTa
'31 she refused homage to the idols of her father's house
Y. Shek. II, beg. 46 c 'a "jnix itt5^1 why not let them ex- threatens to burst out of its socket). — Sifra Thazr., Neg.,
Par.3, ch. IV nTriart rTDai Tfian yrw a running (open)
change the coins (to be taken to Jerusalem) for a jew-
el .. 'an bYtn StattJ the jewel may fall in price. Yoma
.
wound from contusion or from a burn Neg. VI, 8 VIII, 5 ; ;
'31 'a iT>b ipniB they ground for him a pearl worth &c. ning against, cmp. b?a,] desertion, rebellion. Pes.55 b *inx
Kidd. 26 b '31 'a hn Slbn he set in it (the needle) a pearl Wi^ab !"Hi;btt5 after three days since her (the bird's) desert-
(or a precious stone) worth &c. lb. 18 a i"PTO 'a qfJW he ing the eggs ; ib. pnn/iab. Midr. Till, to Ps. XC 'an b*nun
possessed a pearl (a precious slave). Ber. 33 b 'a "jb IS^pn '3T ^X innait) I beg for amnesty for the rebellion which
they composed for us a precious prayer. Yeb. 94 a linn I made. Gen. R. s. 23; s. 26 (ref. to bmn, briilj Gen. IV,
'a !"P2 ffi-nab fpb R. E. had an opportunity for a most
. . . 26 ;VI, 1 X, 8) 'a *|1tJb
; it means desertion from the Lord
precious interpretation, opp. NBbn. lb. 92 1
', a. e., v. ?Vj; (cmp. bbri, "pl^n); a. fr. — 'a nna^N a document stating a
a.fr.— PI. tttTHSVya. R. Hash. 23 a 'a pOa they bring up wife's, or a husband's, refusal of duties, v. Tip I. Keth.
pearls (from the bottom of the sea). 64 a ;
Y. ib. V, 30 b bot.; Y. Kidd. I, 59 ;i
bot.; &. fr. — PL
D'H'ja rebellious acts, contrad. to sins of passion (niDlll).
m'&jPQ f. pi. (tian) noises. Lam.R. introd. (R. Joh. 1) Tosef. Yoma II, 1 ; Yoma 36 b ; Y. ib. Ill, 40 d bot., v. rra.
'SI 'a Tfrik .'
. mil -jiw^n this expression (niKffin, Is. XXII, 2)
serves for three meanings: distress, noises and darkness; 1 j]2 II m. (v. preced.; cmp. rWroI a. nnn) [bringing
—
down,} subjugation. Gen. R. s. 42 (ref. to Gen. XIV, 4, sq.) Prov. XXII, 15. Targ. Y. II Lev. XIX, 20 Ilia (h. text
jflldb 1tt53> 531X2 in the fourteenth year counting from nipn); a. e.— PI. Kfilliia. Targ. Y.ib. XXVI, 18; 23.
their subjugation; Yalk. ib. 72.
SrjlTlH II ch.=h. tMlla H. Targ. I Sam. XX, 30.
Targ. Josh. XXil"22 TWO ed. Lag. (ed. Xlla). Targ. II Sam.
XV, 12 (h. text "Mp); a. e. — Pl. "pi?, ?»• Tar g- Job fcT'TTQ m. ("**}) ploughshare. Targ. Ps. CXLI, 7 (ed.
T ;
'
v :
(h.
^n^3
text'nilS); cmp. Nil.
^3.*- ^ v *
^n ) moist, green. Targ. Is.XVn,6 (Parthians)
—B. Mets. 39
who do care &c, and cry, rebellion! rebellion!
a 'a nana ni!3 who flees from persecution
rriwn • T -
v. - ~wo. -
S ;
"OHHQ (b.h.)pr.n.m. Mordecai, l)the uncle of Esther.
n^l.Q I f. (nil H) fcaZrer's shovel, peel. Tosef Kel. B.
. Pes. U7 a inilatf m&XI 'a M. and Esther recited (compos-
Mets.'ili, 7. Taan.25 a (Var. Nila).
b
ed) those psalms of Hallel. Yeb. 24 v. 1§; a. , fr. — 2) name
of an Amora. Keth. 87 a . Ber. 31 a ; a. fr.
to the discretion of the court, con trad, to the Biblically or- v. Fn Aram. Premdw., a garment made up of p. 104)
dained punishment (Mpsa). Naz. IV, 3 (23 a ):iSDn...nD^nX patches. Lam. R. to 1, 1 m3l ('nib in 1) '31 rT$ nr* 'a
*a 'a if she cannot receive the lawful punishment of forty (ed. Wil. 11a, corr. ace.) he has a garment made up of
lashes, let her receive the punishment for rebellion. Keth. twenty four patches, v. Nn^D^X II.
45 Sabb. 40 b Yeb. 52 a Hull. 141 b [Rashi: = nil,
1
'. .
; ;
'blows enforcing submission', v. TttJ H a. preced. w.] r*l!?T")Q f> (preced.) pack-saddle or cushion, consisting
of patches." Sabb. V, 2 (52 ) '31 'a3 seep lian an ass may
b
Nri'THlQ, 'HHQ I ch.=h. rwia I, chastisement, cor- be driven out (on the Sabbath) with the cushion tied on
rection (corresp. to b. h. 1WB). Targ. Ps. II, 10. Targ. his back (as a protection from cold) ; ib. 53 a . Tosef. Kil. V,
106
— 6
**J?T!^
838 rTnitt
fctj^HD, v. *%f{n.
S^ID square, v. 53.S.
NiTPTQ,
T
(SrrnQ)
T
f.
Cr?*?) running about, turbu-
lent. Targ[ ProvT VH, 11 (Ms. WvnTa, read: "th^).— "H""^ m. (tP;
T
cmp. WiJ), 'an the lowest, youngest.
*2)'a NFrttti32 name of a synagogue in Caesarea (Me turbu- Gen. R. s. 23, beg . 3^13311) "tin Ar. s. v. Tnafi (ed. TOM
lent synagogue, v. Josephus B. J. II, 14, 5). Y. Naz. VII, timv).
56 a ;
Y. Ber. Ill, 6 a hot. tOWm (ed. Krot. WhS"fo); Lam. T1HD m. fna I) rebel. Tosef. Maas. Sh. I, 5 'ti sassa
R. to I, 3 KMDflt); Num. R. s. 12 IWia (prob. to be read:
(not Saiaari, Var. -ilia, corr. ace.) a coin issued by a rebel
rtirta).
(Bar Kokhba); Y. ib. I, 52 d top, v. 'Tin I.
fctrHlQ,
T: ../ Tanh. ed. Bub. Huck. 2,) v. Slla,
t:-'
. .
Y. Ber. VI, 10 a
frttO nbd2 their bitter taste is gone.— Xp'ha. Targ. Job XXIV, 13 (ed.Wil."pTja; oth.ed.ymiaj.
3) drop, poison (v. G"1X). Ter.VIII, 5 'tin the serpent's dis- Targ. Is. XXX, 1 ; a. e.
Gen. XVI, 12 (h. text K1B). Targ. Job. VI, 5 (Var. MOTTIS).
on nv-pti) E&13& 'a nxsii "aaam (not KSV) from it austerity
Ib. XXXIX, 5; a. e.— PI. Wifta. lb. XXIV, 5.
(responsibility) went forth to the world. Keth. 1 03 b pVit
BiTaVfia 'a cast bile among the students (be austere
STFllG (or 'a) m. (TTa) rebelliousness. Targ. Ps. L, 1
CPTTja v. rr<ij»
t'HD
T T
III hoe, '
v.Sian.
T T
NrfH"lE, v. wwra.
t t
t :t' :
rHEl IV l) to be fat; 2) to be disobedient, v. "no I, II.
air. Bekh. VII, 5 (expl. Lev. XXI, 20) '31 rmiD ^3 he who
SS MZJ m. O^l; cmp. Lat. salvia, v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Ele-
has wind in his testicles; Tosef. ib.V, 4 (v. 3X?^p); Yalk.
lisphacos) marva, a medicinal plant; fcfilVft 'a white smashed. Ib. (R. Yishm.)
Lev. 632.-2) (= rTiiaa, v. rna) T
marva, sage. Sabb. 109 b (a defin. of ffi ailX; Ms. M. *nt}
'3i innasuj; (Tosef.Y c. C)inw). —
[3) -jusx 'a m, r iyn nxna (
fj
^"iHQ, SThQ
jrf. (v. "to. IV) power, dominion; ty-
rTDlni] f. (B"na; sub. rTTSffi) plucked hair, nickname
ranny. Targ. Nah. Ill, 14 '31 'a "tt&X increase the yoke
of a baldheaded person. Ex. R. s.24; Tanh. B'shall. 18;
of tyranny and force them &c. Targ. Is. XXVIII, 20. Ib.
Yalk. Ex. 255.
XL VII, 2 Regia (ed. KSlla).—V. iStfTHfl.
frequent; opp. Bi'siajpZ. B"Wtb, fiiavia. Hag. I, 5; a.fr. ri^inD f., jp?. rii'lHQ (nn)rfr?ppiw^ o/wes. Y.Maasr.
Sifra Tsav ch. XV, Par. 11 "a (ITia) the more frequent I, 49 a top [read:] >lTi^a from the time tha
'31 IT"3tt) 'a
act, v. £35*0. Pes. 37 a ; Bets. 22 b 'a r®, v. 35 I; a. fr.— the olives of the second year in the store-house begin to
R. Hash. 4 b a. , fr. tWfra the larger sphere, v. HSla. — drip (from the heat).
Kni'nq 839 a^wp*
dipa (corr. ace). Gen. R. s. 66 'pa *,d; Cant. R. to VII, 1 SpT"lQ I m. (P^a) a substance used for polishing,
pa TO; Ruth R. to II, 5 diTd; Yalk. ib. 601 pTOS (corr. prob. pumice (v. S"JpT ?a). B. Mets. 47 a sq. 'ad 'jWp (Ar. ,
ace). ed. Koh. SKp'nad) you may take vicarious possession with
a vessel made of maroka (although it is too brittle
D")""lQ m. (b. li. W\) ; height, on high. Lev.R. s. 5; Yalk.
for practical use; Tosaf. 'date-stones used for smooth-
v.3»x—PI. d^aina, constr. ^apa. Nidd. 16 b (cit.fr.
:
Is. 290,
ing parchment'; Rashi: 'a vessel made of baked ordure',
Ben Sira) mp a3 rOttJ d^ttJiail be wbo places his (scholar's)
/
JtfQ"H/2 I ch. same. Targ. Ps. LXXV, 6; a. e. — Y. &$J2T")Q II m. (v. Nppia) saffron-colored.—Pl.'^prro.
Taan. I, 64 b bot. nbdia Criia, v. s&dla.—PtSjai'^, Targ. Targ. EstbJl, 6.
Job XVI, 19.
"ll")D m.(b.h.; pa) 1) (adj.) bitter.—KvHhQfhfhfr
SOllD II f. (preced.) uplifted. Targ. Y. Ex. VI, 6, Snh. 108 b ; Erub. 18 b '01 'a •VYlilta ITf let my food be
v. da*;a. bitter as an olive leaf but given at thy (the Lord's) hand
&e; a. e. — 2) bitter herb, esp. maror, (cmp. Trixpt;) a plant,
TV2FHT2 m. (Sta^) fraudulent; 'a p a case in which
prob. Cichorium Itybus, Succory. Pes. II, 6, expl. ib. 39 a
the court has reason to suspect legal trickery or conspir- xassoi Krvma Ms. M. (ed. only stmTo). ib."p inbtin 'a na
acy. Snh. 32 b . Shebu. 30 b .
maror
'dl Ms. M. (ed. incorr.) as is soft (mild) in its be-
ginning and hard (pungent) at its end (root). Ib. ijtaa
I m. (Spa) rebellion; 'a V3 rebels who surrender,
"|"1~1/Q
'Ol 'a ^Xfrt how can you tell that the maror (d^pa, Ex.
v. Wia'St R. Hash. I, 2 (16 a ) (differ, in comment.); v.
XII, 8) means an herb, perhaps the gall of a Jcufta is
also "next w.— [B. Bath. I, 6 Ms. M., v. fjia.]
meant? Ib. in 'a xa^it but may I not say, maror means
n" !!1
Beth Mar on, a place the one certain species exclusively? Ib. b 'a dSa id UJ^ttJ bo
1"1™IH II, 12 pr. n. pi.
a
access to which was by a narrow path. R. Hash. 18 (expl. whatever has the taste of maror (bitter, v. supra). Ib. 'a
"]3dTl bitter herbs which are subject to tithes merely by
pa "aa, v. preced.) 'a rYQ nibsaa like going up the ascent
to B. M. (in single file Var. pin ma). Erub. 22 (v.Rabb.
b
;
rabbinical enactment; a. fr. Pl. EpVia, ppia. Ib. a — ;
1*1*122, "l"n* l
DTKO, Tosef. B. Kam. I, 4, v. WttJ, JWlQ vessels (?). Y. Ter. VIII, 45 d bot. b» . . . "Wi
pal be read pia T!== penn v. tf* I)
'a nSd-iK (prob. to :
, t ,
>
S5T11Q
T
f. (3>p) (et-iZ) occurrence, visitation (cmp.pXI). and he put the posts of his bedstead into four vessels
a
Targ. Hos." XI, 7. Targ. Mic. VI, 3. Targ. Is. XLVII, 2 filled with water (cmp. Ab. Zar. 32 Y. ib. II, 41 b -padb ;
M^ID I f. (b. h. ;
y!Ti) running. Yalk. Gen. 109 TOh &TD£n"ia, v. ^puia.
106*
;
'B ">bapa you see that they (the Pharisees) recognize no makers.' Lev. B. 5 (ref. t'o Am. VI, 7) [read:] )"!t*ia ma
s.
(royal) authority. — 2) domestication. Sabb. 106 b (v. TH-J) 'a nna B^nnB what is mirzah s'ruhim? The banqueting
'a iibapa fia^KID it does not submit to domestication. of the feasters.
Tosef. B. Kam. I, BK Var. in ed. Zuck. (sub. bW;
4 'a 1*1
ed. Qina,b1*ia; ed. Zuck. FWt?) if they (the animals) were SS'l'fHQ m. (Bn, transpos. of t"iB; cmp. ana) hammer
domesticated, opp. IBlain "ja 1KB. (=h. napa).— PI. "pEnna. Targ. Ps. LXXIII, 10 (h. text
B'Vi, v. o\£). Ib. LXXIV, 6 'aB3 "pna (some ed. 'na3B,
{^P^HD, ^ni"lQ,
T
"HT2 ch. same, authority, domin- ed. Wil. 'aB, corr. ace; h. text 'a'Vn).— V. RMJT'TO.
ion (v. fctna). Targ. I Sam. 1,11 (v. rTjia II). Targ. Ez.
XVI, 9 SriV-ra ed. Wil.; a.fr— Gen. B. s. 55 (play onfi^b) M] jQ m. (b. h.; nnt or tilt, with ~i inserted) merry-
XB^an Itm ~in&< ed. Wil. (oth. ed.anna) the seat of the making, banquet, also the banquet given to mourners to
dominion of the world, v. preced. —PJ.'ittTina, v. la. cheer them up. Lev. B. s. 5, v. nina. [M. Kat. 28 b v. — ,
into the neighbor's court can be claimed on the basis ^n^^^P!Pch.l)same.Keth.69 a ,v.infra.-PZ.^nna,
of undisturbed use, but not the special place of its Targ. Am. VI, 7. Targ. Y. I Num. XXV, 2(v. Sifre
1">riina. '
b
discharge; (Tosef. ib. H, 13 WS). Yeb. 75 'S3 if the Num. 131, quot. in preced.). — Esp. (banquet) exhilarating
1
mutilated membrum has the shape of a spout (leaving the mourner; 'a "a (roa) the place of the mourners meal.
b
the urinary canal unprotected). Sabb. 146 'a BlttJa rT"Pta Targ. Jer. XVI, 5.— Keth. 69 a '31 'a ta -,!*a who sits 3W
b
it is forbidden, lest he shape a regular tapping tube
at the head at mourners' meals? expl. ib. ^BX 'a Itta
(v. Wial). —
2) a sort of cape, having the shape of a
(be-)marzeha means (house of) mourning (ref. to Jer. 1. c.).—
gutter, formed by throwing the edges of a garment over 2) (v. nina) pi. Sf»*yi1U those who cheer the mourners.
the shoulders backward. Ib. 147 a , v. KB"©. Targ. II Esth. 1, 3 ed. Prf.(v. X^nBa).— Y. Ber. Ill, 6 a top
(reprehending the excesses at mourners' meals) . ."pbapn &0>
fcojnn, NyjTQ ch same Targ J<> bxxxviii 25 - -
'a "inab (not Tilta) after my death do not receive to-
. .
- >
'pa (ed. Lag. ^n'a). Hull. I05 b "nia 'Mn mama — day mourning (condolence) and to-morrow merry-makers.
they put it under a spout. Gitt. 69 a 'ana iron. — PJ.
fcGTTq,
T -
v. Nana.
T- -
nana, gpo ^ana, ">np. Targ. Koh. II, 8 (h. text rrrp
l
J
•• : :
nTTW). Targ. Job' XXVIII, 4; a. e. Snh. 109 a M. Kat. — ; XVrp_, KHTTD, y. nna, xnna.
25 b ma^XI 'a the spouts of the roofs of Sepphoris.
HDJIQ, v. nania.
&OllV"TC5 m. (Pers. marzban, Vullers II, 1161) [cus-
= xnsn&U,
XFl'DriQ hammer. Targ. Jud. IV, 21
todian of borderland,] prefect, duke. PI. WHtt. Meg. 6
b — f.
mmf~lQ f. pi. (v. XSina) hammers, as instruments of Pi. rn**a a plaster, rub a salve; in gen. to
1) to strike
torture. Lev. B. s. 27 •paVaaai 'aB Ar. (ed.;Num. B. s. mash, crush. Tosef. Sabb. V (VI), 6 fiBim n^Ban he who
B. to V, 16 nBTBl Tiaa, read: niBpaB or mashes ingredients for a plaster on the Sabbath; Erub.
10, beg.; Cant.
102 b Y. ib.X. 26 c .— Sabb. 75 b '31 mBVaan he who spreads
KfiBfiaB) with hammers and whips. ;
cmp. X^a II, n^sin &c.) mats (used for partitions), mat- maa (Mish. Pes. rjinaa, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note 90) be-
mc 841 vne
•WO crushed. Bekh. 44 b V\ T-X tW 1*1 (not LNIUU) if pPHZZ! m., fctpPHQ f. (prft) abominable, unclean.
I'roah meant crushed, it ought to read m'morah kc. ;
Targ. Job" XV, 16 (h.'text 3?r:). Targ. 0. Lev. VII, 18 (h.
Talk. Lev. 632, v. -i~;.— 2) to pass (the hand) orer a viscid text blOB). Targ. OvDeut. VII, 26 TOfl that which is ab-
mass, to wipe off, rub off. Y. Sabb. VII, 10a bot. TTO frHOO Targ. Lev. XX,
ominable (cmp. BTTOncft). 21 (ed. Berl.
rnx he may wipe (or with one hand; (Bab. brush) it off
xrrra; O Targ. Y.Deut.
a
—
h. text STflj; a. fr.— PI. fy i'T .
subject to tithes) as soon as he evens the pile, and if he Targ/lTeut.' XXIV, 4. Targ. Prov. XIII, 19; a. fr.
does not even &c; expl. Y. ib. I, 49 a bot. '31 "•tT fl "JO
jTCJrnQ, ]l^n"lQ (Assyr. Araah samna, Schr.
when he gives a finish to the surface of the pile. Ib.
— when he has not
KAT 380)'Mar he shvan, the eighth month of the Jewish
2
,
•:"- m
rv~z pWDQ (not PiTO"^) the in-
calendar, containing twenty nine or thirty days, varying
I
over. Tosef. Kel. B. Kam. VII, 10 rtETfi BT rTiEWB is until nia'l'ral msonai nima(Ar.niTna) they yield wool by being
it is smeared over so as to be even with the rim. shorn, by passing through water, and by being plucked
Hilhpa. ~"zr~, Xithpa. ftyiri to be shaped into an (in passing bushes &c; [prob. to be read niS*Ott)1 rYTtfta
even pile, to be finished. Y. Peah I, beg. 15 a/on3 k?bj *& niavroi].
~zr. as long as the pile is not struck off; a. e. [Y. Maasr. PLxfTVQ 1) same. Naz. 39 b/31 tpSPO TO tt&nif he pinced
a
1, 49 bot. r.TOr-«0 ntt-On, read IVWMDU, v. supra.] : his hair (near the root), plucked it off, or trimmed it &c;
(Ar. s. v. CpSO 'created a bald spot : by using a depilatory').
JTjQ I ch., Pa. rfto same, to strike off the pile, finish.
Sabb. 1. c. -TO? he who plucks the down
pHOO niSTO n**tt
Bekh. ll b "X- *r,'.-r,—z- who, do you mean, finished the supra) coming under the head of
is guilty of an act
(v.
pile?
scraping (leather).— Part. pass. aiioo bald-headed. Naz.
TTjZ II(denom. of WT») to Wo?» up.— Part. pass. rJHg 46 b ; Yoma 61 b TOtt T*0; Tosef. Naz. I, 6 anTOSl; Y.ib.VI,
haughty, bold. Targ. Prov. XIV, 13 (ed. Wil. rftfl, corr. end, 55 d KITOI "Tta (read: TOa 1^3 or alTO).— 2) to smooth,
polish. Num.R.s. 12 Olioo nU5n3 (prob. to be read n^'Tiwa)
ace. h. text 310).—V. »"""-.
:
;
pohshed bronze.
NirriZ m. (trtj) friend.—PL pBTpO, '
HJljJU . Targ. Nif. I3TO3 to be plucked, to be bald. SifraThazr.,Par.5,
Lam. I, 19. Targ. O. Gen. XXVI, 26 "TO (ed. Berl. Wiom, ch. X'31 1S5!!0 T if his head became bald through sickness.
TTnTQ c. (yrr) fcatt. Y. Ber. IX, 14 b top 'on r'z-" Palp. -TOTO to pull to pieces, to divide, plunder. Targ.
Job XVI, 11 ia^TOra ed. Lag. (Ms. a'TO'TO, Var. ansa Pa.;
prayer on entering and on leaving the bath-house. Ib.
np-z: X+7V2 TO a heated (vapor) bath.
b
Ab. Zar
Sabb. 33 b
III, 4, v. h. text 1331'').
my wound
Targ. Ps. XXXIX, 3 CW 1O0
1=53).— Hull. 92 b .T? 00*100 he
tTO he lacer-
•-•-•-zx; a.fr.— PI. WMCM f lO . Ib. 2 ; . Cant, ates (h. text
R. to I, 6 r"-sr.~2- • _ -fr.lo ^~zz with a slight bath in pulled the fatty fibres out (going to the root).
1
Ithpalp. aa-iapx, 'a^x to be torn to pieces, dismembered. (Ar. ed. Koh. s. v. 1aX: "p-na^X, coir, ace.) who maw
Ab. Zar. 69 a Wjl iIWO'TS-'X (the mouse in the liquid) was provoked thee that thou didst get angry?; Num. R.s.5,
dismembered. Nidd. 56 b diala" !* *< KriB£ it would have 1
Q end. —
Gen. R. s. 42 (play on ^BSaN) '31 ""'JBXl "nasi he
been dismembered. [Koh. R. to X, 16 nalarvx, read: provoked and made sport of &c.
nsiamx, v. *rq I.] Ithpe. TPfft 'HX 1) to get angry. Num. R. 1. c. rV^asp;
Sot. 1. c, v. supra. — 2) to quarrel, rebel. B. Mets. 84 b
10HD II, St2"^2 m. (preced.) 1) baldness. Targ. O.
T^a.—Hull. 58 b
\N+&% Ms. Npdb **?$** Ar., v.
M., v.
Dent. XIV, 1. Targ.' Is. XV, 2; a. fr. — 2) plucked wool,
N|53 (ed. 'da X ia' X she ran away in anger from &c,
. . .
,
,
. . .
Maas. Sh. I, 52 d bot. fb^O'T^ htJ "p^ln )tp "t» (not . . . S"JT0, v. BP^O.
"p3d . . .) R. 8. is still alive,and you hang your garments
on him, i. e. you refer to him as your authority I
•Q ]Ij name of a j'eweZ in the high priest's breast-
plate. Targ! Cant.V, 14 (corresp. to diilD, Ex. XXVIII, 20).
ND1I21D, n&^taiDjread: rtWam. (btfi; cmp.
X3dnri) hash of small fish or locusts preserved in
/"Q"HQ f. (b. h. ; V)) strife. Num. R. s. 3 'a tt^fOVin
salt. Y.
Ab. Zar. n, 42 a top (v. WilTh).
'31 those who
between him and her. Ib. t]X
caused strife
ram wyrp_, v.
^w*
the opposition. Ib. Mi^lad d^laiS anx (corr. ace.) you
are of the opposition. Midr. Till, to Ps. CIII 'a *r\*WJ I
JSp!2~lD, m. 1) (transp. of 8pT 1da, q. v.) tchip. Yoma entered a contest. B. Mets. 59 a ; a. fr.
against. Part. JTria.—'ai Vilb(p) the rebellious son, ame- fctnTlQ, Hull. 59 a top, v. Xni-rta, a. fcttWlS.
timoreh? Ib.68 b ; a.fr—PZ. d^ia, ynia, v. rt'n'id LT, a. di*iia. C>"C2 r ]12 m. pi. (MocpEwTYjO ^e people of Mareotis,
Hif. JTiari 1) fo m«&e strong, energetic. Gen. R. s. 42, a district of Lower Egypt with the town of Marea. Targ.
end (play on X^aa) 'SI d'aB 'rTO3 he showed a stern coun- Y. Gen. X, 13 (some ed. 'di^a); Targ. I Chr. I, 11 ed.
tenance against Abraham (rebuking him). — 2) £o provoke, Rahmer (ed. Lag. ifitU&Oa, read F for X; h. text ttVS9),
to rebel.Y. Kidd. IV, beg. 65 b (play on lax, Neh.VII,61)
'31^X^ SHa^ia they provoked God with their evil doings.
S^TID, Pes. 39 a Mus., v. IKitJ.
n
"]P, ^y2 ch. same; Af. "nax to provoke. [Targ. "|"1"HD m. (rno) rebel— PI. dipi^a. Pesik. Ekhah, p.
Zech. XII, 10, 'v. "Tia].— Sot. 35 b top n^BW If??* "J^a 122^, v! X^dpdX (v., however, "VD-lN III).
—
rmte. 843 Brna
V, 32 bot,; Y. Peah I, 15 c top X"na; Y. Ter. XI. beg., 47 c II Esth. IV, fr.— [Targ. Prov. XVII, 11 a »"Ga (ed.
1 ; a.
I, 9 (9 b
j. Ex.R. s. 1; a. v. fr. — 2) name of several persons.
'a ; f. T^-ia. Targ. Ex. XV, 23. Targ. Num. V, 18, sq. Targ.
Lam. R. 0in*2.—lb. Pesik. R. s. 29-30-30 (ed.
to I, 16, v. ;
I Kings II, 8 (ed. Lag. STHla, corr. ace.).— [Targ. Y. Num.
Pr. p. 140') M., daugbter of Nakdimon. Lam. R. 1. c. M., — ].— Lam. R.
daugbter of Nahtom Yalk. Deut. 938 (of Tanhum). ;
— V, 24 Nrrn'na, read: Vpn
xaios.
to HI, 40, v.
EDD'HO, Cant. R. to I, 6, read: rYOma, v. rtte^b. ( i I ,a2 f. (b. h.; preced. wds.) [b. h. bile,] bitterness,
DlJ .'/U pr.n. m.(M«pTvo;)3f«rmMS, name of several Lev. R. s. 12 (ref. to Deut. XXXH, 32) '31 'a lfcOafitfJ "ftWl
persons. To^ef. Toh. VII, 7.— B. Bath. 56 a . — Lam. R. to it is they (the grapes) that brought sins &c. — 2) (v. next
II, 22. Y. Gitt. IV, 46 a .
w. ; cmp. M32J3 II) curse. Midr. Till, to Ps. XC, 9 (expl.
Fttri ib. cmp. ri3!i a. SON) 'a IT that means 'curse'.
;
Lag. JWJD).—E. Hash. 16 a 'a&O *TOp* p^kftt we pray . . Targ. Esth. IV, 1.— 2) curse. Targ. 0. Num. V, 24; 27 (Ms.
now for the sick and the ailing Ned. 49 b IZJaa *fap VTttp ; 1, III Tto; ed. Berl. a. Y. Bib ; h. text tPNft); v. preced.
'a by k'tsire we mean the really sick, by m'ri'e we
*,33."i
rV!3'"H/2 f. (denom. of Ti) friendship, sociability, so- rflTHD, Tanh. M'tsora 1 It 'an, v. nwia I.
pBffmH
'
, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note; Ms. M. 'Snnani; Y.ed. Lam. R. to I, 3; Tanh. Naso 23; Midr. Till, to Ps. XCI, 6;
omits our w.) except the basket (for gathering disinterred Yalk. Ps. 842. Pes.lll b Ber. 5 a (quo t. . fr. Deut. XXXII, 24).
bones for burial), tbe shovel, and the crusher, and things
a
specially designated for burial purposes. Y. ib. 51 bot.
pKM nx rtSfnoW 'a Y'B (v. Babb.D. S. to Bab. ed., p. 68 a ; via I.— 2) also V^rtyo,
JtfrH"HZ2 f. (via) l) bitter, v.
Bab.ed. add rtTBpn tvtib) he who calls the tool m'ritsah
Vfhno^h, rTTO, gall, bile. Targ. Y. Ex. XXIII, 25 'a nna
(instead of "pIBS) does so, because it makes the stones affection of the gall, v.rtTOl; a. e.— Keth. 50 a rWrt Tia
run (fr. "pi), i. e. makes them portable. '31 the gall of a white da^a/i (v. ffwj). Pes. 39 a , v. ^S>13.
[Ib. wtfm»a ii^aa; KVVtaS, v. Nrvn-ia.]
rETHQ
t
II, • : '
v. rwna
t
i.
i
p'HD, v. pryq.
^^D m. (contr. of IDI&ta, v. P^X; cmp. Targ. of ">UJ-lla,
Job XVII, 11 tv\b) joist,beam (cmp. ITJWto). Gitt. V, 5 'an
^
:
Par. VII Disn npi*5a3 'a the m'rikah (Lev. VI, 21)
3, ch. object changed its name), before it was placed it was nam-
means like washing a cup, contrad. to iiS^OTU (rinsing); ed HlTiTS, and now it is «bVa (ceiling); a. fr.— PL nia"na.
. — —
Kmia 844 tnn
&G2HQ, "TO ch. same. Targ. Lev. XV, 9; a. e. (Dai) trance, catalepsy. Gen. E. s. 17 (and thence copied
in s. 44; Yalk. Gen. 23 Kaala; Yalk. Sam. 139 WWOfft).
rQS^Q f. (b. h.; preced.) chariot. Esth. E. to I, 2
(ref. to IlChr. IX, 17) [read:] To bw fetaSlsa *«W9 ffTTO Tana, v .
n*
'31 it was made like the chariot of him who spoke and
the world existed. Num. B. s. 12 Pitnsip/i . . mast Igrath . CS "D"D, '12112 m. (niarmor, u,cxp|xapoi;) marble,
and her chariot; a. e. — Esp. the divine chariot of the in gen. polished stone. Targ. Y. Deut. IX, 9, sq.; a. e.
vision of Ezekiel (Ez. I) ; 'a rtttJSa, or 'a the mystic specu- PI. "p.^-ia, (WW lb. V, 19. Targ. Esth. I, 6. Targ.
lations on the divine chariot, esoterics. Gen.E.s. 82 niaxn I Chr. XXIX, 2. Targ.
o Lam. Ill,/ 9.— V. JOaia.
T T _ .
'ail
"
n Irt the patriarchs are the divine chariot. Hag.
II, 1. lb.
(
13 a 'an !-lU)S>a3 -paa&t I shall instruct thee in the UCTJD m., SQDHQ f. (dill) uplifted, high. Targ. 0.
secret of the vision of Ezekiel. lb. 'an fflttSa *p*T\ 1$ up to Ex. VI, 6 (ed. Viem Naia; Y. WffiTo). Targ. Y. I Ex. XIV,
8 a. fr.
which verse (inEz.I) do the speculations on 'the Chariot' ;
go (the communication of which is subject to certain re- 012112 m. bal) that which
(b. h.; is trodden upon.
strictions)?—Tosef. Meg. IV (III), 28. Cant. E. to I, 4 (ref. Tanh. ed. Bub., B'resh. 23 ; Yalk. Dan. 1066 'a tin Via tP
to vmn ib.) 'a -nun onb n^a^...*p5a how should Ezekiel
n'"l!!t^ how long will they be trodden upon by the nations?
be able to reveal to them the inwardness of the Chariot? Gen. E. s. 21 '31 -jtfba ">iB^ 'a trodden upon by the angel
Ib. 10 '31 'a iTina KOU5 hast thou perhaps been studying
of death.
the secrets of the Chariot?; Lev. E. s. 16 'a ^TlDa (corr.
ace); a.fr.— PI. nidSla. Pesik. Bahod., p. 107 b ; Pesik. S^lQnPjf. Opal) casing, ouch. — PL "pto^o,
T
arcana.
E. s. 21 ; a. fr. Targ. Ex. XXVIII, 13, sq. (h. text nisnttJa) ; a. e.-V.",'a-i I,
C* J 23 j!2
:
m . (preced.wds.) chariot-driver. Targ.I Kings npip,np"]D, v.iia.iia.
XXl£ 3Y.
112112, Y. B.Bath. X, 17 c some ed., read: laia, v. la I.
^^"TO ch.=h. nasna; top* rasys thedivine Chari-
ot. Targ. I Kings VII, 33*; a. e. XHQ'IP m. (v. KiTsna) white, marble. Succ. 51 1
'
KWTO
'ai 6<bni3 yellow, black and white marble; B. Bath. 4 a ;
meal offerings)? ed. Wil. XB">pn KV! Kni; h. text nri:x"). Targ. Cant.
Ib. (play on "piaa x:b"ia 6"ia, ib.) "'rx r-~a
" ~" - -1 r~::a I will crush, chop and dissolve their lives
II, 5. Ib. V, 8. Targ. Koh. V, 12; 15*; a* e.— PI.
jttfta
fee.; Meg. 12 --:e;
,J
"3
*6y<0 tr,b= did they ever stir the
Targ. Y. Gen. XXX, 36 (some ed. ixria).
blood (of sacrifices) before thee? niniaa -j"CBb lD"iia 01^3
* jR HI> &*< '2 c. (preced.) evil, sickness, affliction.
did they ever stir the flour for the meal offerings &c.?;
Targ. I Kings VIII, 37. Targ. Koh. VI, 2 a. fr.—B. Bath.
Talk. Esth. 1051 *m Yoma IV, 3; V, 3; a. fr. — Shebi. 153 a (in a formula of a deed of donation) 'si ftyq ljal
;
and him rub it (the garlic) with oil. Part. pass. Cna.
let — i (SHU m. (b- h.; nrn I) ^a«f M rp. Pesik.R.s.
Targ. 0. Lev. XXI, 20 (h. text mia, v. rna). Ib. XXII, 24 16; Yalk.
Kings 176 (expl. "9\ I Kings V, 3) 'an |Q directly from
(h. text Tr -)-
the pasture ground. Num. R. s. 10 'an bs the whole
sS-Q iQ flock ; a. e.
(b. h.) pr. n. m. Mars'na, one of the attend-
ants of King Ahasver. Esth. R. to I, 14; a. e., v. C~i. 12HQ, NSTiSTlE f. = sna ni. Targ. p s lxxvii, . i 1
(
Pa. ?-a same. Targ. Jer. XIV, 17
not'-?-!) grievous (h. text rbr,*.).— Part. pass,
r-aa suffer-
; Targ. Nah. Ill, 19
ab^nn,
T - •• :
v. kw t • :
-
ing, unwell. Targ. Jer. XIV, 18. Targ. I Sam. XIX, 14 ed.
i *'<]C If.(b.h.;nr"I)po.sfure-^roMtwf,pa^ttre. Pesik.
Lag. (oth. ed. jna 3"0«, v. next w.). Targ. I Kings XIV, 5
R. s. 26, end '31 'a n^lttJS KVrl and she (Zion) has become
ed. Lag. (oth. ed. S"ia); a. e.
a pasture-ground for the beasts of the field. B. Mets. 86 b
Ithpa. r:arx, Ithpe. ™arx 1) to fall sick. Targ.I Kings (fusion of Hebr. a. Chald.) 'SI VrV'Uja lin ',"W3a (v.
XIV, 1 (ed. Lag. TVS). Ib.XXII, 34 ed. Lag.(oth.ed.5T2). Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 60) they bring from his pasture an
Targ. II Sam. XIII. 2; a. e. — Koh. R. to X, 16 (ref. to ox that has not been forced (used for labor) &c; Yalk.
rcrr, I Kings *6» rr-ar-x (not nan...) she fell
ill, 19) Kings 176 (not yfWUO); a. e. Trasf. feeding one's eye,
sick (fainted and upon him (cmp. Targ. to Ps. XLI, 9);
fell) satisfaction. Cant. R. to IV, 5 (ref. to Bi?nn, ib.) pirn
a. e. — 2) to feign sickness. Targ. II Sam. XIII, 5, sq. where did the
'Si "jrpy-ja tir^ii Israelites have their satis-
3) to be shaken, quake. Targ. Jer. LI, 29. faction on Egypt?
* _'H II, * Tfc m. (denom. of??"!) sick, suffering. Targ. rP^"]D IT, Sn"^l2 If. = xnria, evil &c. Targ.
Y. Gen.' XVIII, l ''31 X2."3a '" (not '-2a) suffering from Ps. CXXIV, 4 (h. text nbra); a. e.,v. kf*n.
the wound &c. Targ. Y. I Deut. XXXIV, « '31 n-]5a 'a.
;
B. Bath. IX, 6 '21 anr'13 'a "Z'Z'S if a sick man assigns Sv"™]/2, *<1^3 m ' (''?")) I *1!? pouch throum over
allof bis property to a stranger (as an unqualified do- an animaVs back, haversack. Lev.R. s. 25 Koh.R. to 11,20. ;
, v. *«?*.
(VIII), 5 '31 SIT "nn 'a laixn (not la&<n) to say marpe is
a superstitious practice (v. I'liaN). lb. 'SI i3Ba 'a T0K xb • jHG m. (b. h.; Stt^) awl, borer. Kidd. 21 b tfianb 'an
did not say m. (at college), because it is an interruption bnan 'art 'the awl' (Deut. XV, 17), this includes the largest
of study j Ber. 53\ awl (borer); Sifre Deut. 122; a. fr.— PI. VWJS- Kidd. I.e.
JSSjD m. (preced.) surgeon, operator. Mekh. Mishp., X2JS1Q Targ. 0. Ex. XXI, C; a. e.— Y.
ch. 1) same.
]N'zik., s. 4 nianilJ 'a a surgeon who caused the death Maas/sii.V, 56 KBipSH nwl? the awl (penetrating
1
'
sq. '31
of his patient (through negligence), v. d"iS II. acumen) of Akiba .... has been here. 2) (cmp. nylX") —
strap. — d
PI. n^ssna, contr. n^-ia. Y. Sot. I, 16 bot.
nrf £023 1
f. pi. name of certain fruits (prob. so named [read :] '3i panai rrt "ppbai 'ai hn^BBB prvna piih s6
from their loosening on the bowels, v. «">B^)> perh. a
effect should we not have brought in benches and straps and
certain kind of apples. Y. Maasr. I, 48 d bot. smitten him and reconciled him to his wife?
P^SHD, Np n £H2, v. pB"ia, xpT B-ta. plQ (b. h.; sec. r. of pi; cmp. ansa, Targ. II Chr.
that no Israelite shall drink the wine of idolaters, but Nif. P^as to be cleansed, purged. Ab. d'R. N. ch. I,
only wine trodden with their own feet (allud. to Ez. beg. '31 bsa p^S'^S biB123B that he might be cleansed of
XXXIV, 19). all the food and drink in his bowels. [Tosef. B. Bath. —
XI, 9 p"ias, read: pna?].
riDS^lD f. (preced.) a gallery or balcony to which Pi. p'vra l) to polish up. Koh. R. beg. n^Ta/i nnmo
doors of the upper compartments open, and from which he chiselled the stone and polished it, v. D3"]B. Sabb. 33 a
steps lead down to the court. Erub. VIII, 3 'a 111338 tenants (ref. to pnan, Prov. XX, 30) '31 lass p?aan he who
that have a common Y'&p gallery; ib. 83 b , sq. *bft 'a ifca polishes himself (makes toilet, prepares himself) for a
'31 S-pi3S was thought marpeseth (in Mishn. 1. c.)
at first it sinfulact; (Rashi: who makes himself free from all other
meant the dwellers of the upper story, and they are so thoughts, devoting himself entirely to sin, v. infra).
called, because they go up to their rooms by the way of 2) (cmp. U31I3BB nsa) to finish. Tosef. Hull. I, 2 '31 iian 'ai
the gallery; 'aB, DiYin "jniK those who have rooms on and a gentile finished the slaughtering (by cutting farther
the gallery itself. Tosef. ib. IX (VI); 19; a. fr. than the ritual requires); (Hull. 121 b las.); Yoma III, 4
"ial Hull. 29 a 'ial. Tarn. IV, 2 -JlX5Snn PN 'a he finishes
;
jM/G (b. h. ; sec. r. of YTi) to quicken. Yalk. Deut. 850. Yoma 86 a np"iaa nn^a death finishes
Nif. yna? to be made rapid, to flow rapidly in a gutter. the atonement (v. supra); Y. Snh/x, 27 c bot. nplaa nr-a
ed. Zuck. fcpbttJ death removes the last third of sins; a. fr. Y. —
(Var. "pliasni, v. "W; R. S.'to Par. IX, 5 'jipiuni) water Keth. VI, beg. 30 c (in mixed diet.) n:*1E Tib p-aa «Vi and
running slowly in a channel or rapidly in a gutter. Num. does not pay off the entire dowry. Sabb. 33 a v. supra. — ,
^/CfilZHD f. (ds-i) contusion. Koh. R. to VI, 11 (a gloss p"*lD, p*'™)G ch. same, to polish; to cleanse. Targ. Is.
:
to tXVQftQ) 'a fii-miK mil some read martsumi. XXI, 5 '(ed. Wil. "*iq Pa.). Targ. Y. II Lev. XXVI, 43.—
[Y. Bets. I, 60 d -jlai-iSIp p'na Kin pnil3, read: na p^ni23
FfiSPjH m., only in pi. BiEISIa, "jiBls-ia (tfljn) packing '3ip, v. R. N. to Alf. Bets. I, 7; v. 'pBinjip.]
bags, leather bags, esp. adapted for ship-loads. Kel. Pa. pi^ia same, to cleanse, clear, finish. B. Mets. 15*
— — : —
*rc' 847 ™?
(in a deed of sale) '=1 p"*?»tt "WWI ^WBM Kabb. D. S. (v.
nnp~lD f. (b.h. ; preced.) druggist's preparation, drug;
a. 1. note 6) and 1 will satisfy (all claimants) and clear and
poison. Gen. R. s. 10 ('Rashi': rrinpna, pi. of nff tytO),
clean the property &c. Yalk. Is. 352 nb Xp"iaa to pay it,
v. DO.
v. p?flS. — Y. Keth. VI, beg. 30 c
, v. preced. — [Targ. Prov.
Ill, 11 pman, read: p^tl; ib. XIX, 28 p*icn Ms., read: ^* a spiced Lam. R. introd.
T •
P™^ f (P r eced.)
- dish.
p^Tjaj v. pfa.] (R. Abbahu 2) (ref. to Ez. XXIV, 10) Xina OOin |JBflCI n*\n
Ithpa. p'~^T^, Ithpe. p^wrx 1) to be scoured. Targ. 0. 'a their bodies were bubbling (hot with grief) like a spiced
Lev. VI, 21. —
2) (denom. of pnan) to be used for toilet; broth ; Yalk. Ez. 363.
(of persons) to be perfumed. Targ. Y. Ex. XXX, 32.
[p-nanit, Targ. II Kings IV, 35, r. ppa.] iTplQ, Y. Bets. I, 60 d top, read : npra, v. np-n.
to distribute three hundred griva (of flour in) wafers Pa. Ruth I, 13 "pTtall
"P^2 to embitter, aggrieve. Targ.
among the poor on every Sabbath eve (v. a^pbl); Lam. (ed. Amst. ^an). Targ. Y.I Deut. XXXII, 32 TTjajD (some
R. to 11,2 x^rp pVwb nams baa 'ai "Wtii . . . Ar. Compl. ed. Tn-)aa; Y.Uyrm).
ed. Koh. (defective in eds.). Af. ^*<yz»!, "BKj 1) same. Targ. Ruth I, 20 (not "iajK).
Y. Snh. IV, 22 |J
top TjSip'B abprPX thy patch is peeling
mourning for him, as is arranged for &c. (v. infra).
off, i. e. thy ignorance is laid bare. B. Bath. 20* 'ab "^n
pTHBK, v. Ithpa.]
MBia'n Ms. fl. a. Ar. (ed. Wnpb) can be used for a
Palp. Wtft l^P^a to aggrieve. Targ. Prov. XVII, 25. ,
npniQ
m. (b. h.; npn) aromatic herb.— PL a^fipna. p. XLII).
PirkeVR'.El.ch.XXV; Yalk. Gen. 84 'an drug-store. m ~HD na. (preced. wds.) \)bitterness ; trouble; 'aa bitter*
107*
— —
'
nn 848 nnxtj-c
ly. Esth. B. to III, 9 (ref. to Is. XXXIII, 7) 0*013 K3S bsi . . of silver from the lead with which it is combined. Citt.
'S3 all the hosts on high weep bitterly. 2) sin. Cant. — 69 b . lb. 86\
B. to V, 5 (play on 13S Ha, ib.) *Tfl b3> 133> he passed
*]7] jTj m. (B|til) store-room, cellar where vessels are
over (pardoned) my sin. PI. O^lia. Ib. Ilia nm 'a
Ol troubles, —
when Cyrus decreed and said &c. lb. 'a
stored in rows and layers. Pes. I, 1 b3 "OB bs rYTntiJ VUD
'art the two rows of piled vessels in front of the cellar.
Ol barb Vsiasttt) sins,— when I said of the calf, these
Suh. 108 a yain bia 'a a store-room for vinegar. Lev. R.
are thy gods &c.
s. 24, end ; a. fr.
(excitement of mourning).
' '
— '23 NtFHQ,
T
&Nl2 ch. same.— PI. K^firna, n^BCTia,
Chr.XXVII,
bitterly. Targ. Esth. VI, 1 ; a. fr. — 2) curse. Targ. O. Num.
^Pl-ia. Targ. I 27 (h. text, nilXX).
j :
Ilia,
T'
a inter herb,
prob. succory. Succ. 13 a '21 $<aaN1 'a "VI that succory of "ttOb v. -a.
the marsh. Ib/31 Ifiiiatti- Nano 'a "Wl the name of that plant
is plain m'raritha, and the reason why they name it 'm. of Wft3, v. "»oa.
Ib. NrmaK Hiia mn ed. (corr. ace, as in Tosaf. to Succ. 1. make the carrier unclean. Ib. 3 ifcttBab is&a hlttJttithe touch
c; Ms. M. 2 N1311 lgrp+pq*} took pains to get m'raritha of which has the same effect as the carrying of it; a.fr.
(of the field). Hull. 59 a top KHTlal J*1p"0> ed. (read as 2)"jttal 'a carrying and giving, business, dealings; worldly
a
Tosaf. to Succ 1. c. xrrilal; Ar. KrYIUI) the root of &c. affairs; intercourse. Sabb. 120 'al 'a3 in worldly affairs,
opp. min "1313. Kidd. 35 a 'al 'a lOPl tf)"N a man (has
tlTHQ,
r
v. fiiiia.
*
the protection of the law) because he is engaged in bus-
:
'vision' 'burden' &c. ib. '31 ISaiBaB 'a '•last ",331 the
OW1) mortar's. Y. B. Bath. II, 13 b bot. [read :] Kpnia
. . . ;
[Comment, saw-mill (v. KlB^la ) which corresponds — Gitt. 71 a msnai 'a business transactions.
- t Nma,
ma, T t
nnnu : r : t
v.iaiv. rDSEjQ m. (T^a) stretching. B. Bath. 73 b "T-I^ISI 'a
'31 (Ms. M. KBttJa 13) the length of its neck when stretched
"jnn™lD, Ex. B. s. 51 'a 13 bswiC, read nnia or Knia. :
was &c.
SplFHQ m. (pm) 1) [knuckles,] fist. Targ. Y. Ex. nbStZJDf. (b. h. b&TCJ) request, prayer.— H.nibsda. : ;
XXI, 18.— 2) a blow with the fist. Y. M. Kat. Ill, 83 b (ed. Num. B.s.il ^"'nibx^aB "jsni 'be gracious unto thee' (Num.
Krot. Xp/rna); Y. Snh. VII, 25 b top. — 3) knocker at the VI, 25) by granting thy prayers (beyond deserts); Bifre
door. Ib. d top [read :] fipmiaB in mb *fafr Jrtfcf/1 "jWa Num.41; Yalk. ibid. 710.
whoever entered (the bath-house) struck him with the
knocker, v. Mp^nj ch. V. pt-pa. — "1^02 m. constr. (IHti) the rest of, others. Targ. Y.
^O*^ 1 1
^ f- Wp Ay»»v i^ w -
Tar g« Y - Lev - n >
7 ;
Y. Num. XIX, 3 piS3 'a other (not dedicated) animals.
VII, 9 (h.'text mama).
fcOKOT,
T T ••
v. vrveha
t : "
I.
^D nP]"ia, v. NBPna.
lTl"}S©/2 f. 1) (b. h.; 1&ra to swell, rise; omp. lixb)
Sj^n ?}"ia, v. Kp/nia. baking trough or dish. Tanh. Vaera 14 (ref. toEx.VH, 28)
'31 n">1Sa 'a •na" 1
?* when is the trough near th6 oven?—
cs DTI IU m. (Pers. murtakh, older form of murdah, v. 2) (ixttj to remain) remainder. — P/. rvilNiaa. Mekh. Bo
xpn"wa) litharge, dross formed during the* purification s. 13 (ref. to nniKlUB, Ex. XII, 34 ; v. Targ.) ma -miia lb«
;
"Iw'C m. (b.h. ; "i2^) [orifice of the matrix,] (in Talm.) time, he is not yet considered a huckster 0"ian). Trnsf. —
d
travailing chair. Kel. XXIII, 4. Gen. R. s. 72; Y. Ber. care, interest. Y. Ber. Ill, beg. 5 itrnSD NUTO ^a lb px
IX, 14 a bot. 'an bs rOOTS when she is seated on the he has none to take from him his duty (of burying a
travailing chair; a. e. dead relative).— PI. as ab. Num.R.s. l,beg. rVWb^.n&Wa
firpxiiua he sends important men... to attend to
fi^XttJli
S^IEStED a faulty version, a rejected Bor-
f. (ttSairi)
their (political) affairs; (Tanh. B'midb. 1 tMjtea; ed. Bub.
aitha, opp. Ktorntto. Gitt 73a ( ref to Tos ef. ib. VII(V), 2)
-
since there
-
"xi^a). —
CT3B 'a (v. Xtoj) respect of person, partiality. Ab.
fct^n 'ai fcO'L'pl "(VtS is a contradiction be-
IV, 22 Y. Snh. VI, end, 23 d sq. '31 npal t 'a partiality
. . .
; ,
tween the first and the second clause, it could not have
and bribe-taking. Yeb. 79 a ima ST 'B 'a *tifl was there
been discussed at college (or an attempt to harmonize
partiality shown in that case?; Snh. 104 b ; a. fr.
would have been recorded), and (therefore) it is to be
b
rejected. Sabb. 121 ; a. fr. nSTJSQ f. (b.h. nx/i'a; X r3) signal, esp. fire signal ;
(at the priests) and not be diverted. Y. Dem. IV, 24 a top Till, to Ps. lxxiv, an "no lib maxt) craven
3 ItmteJ . .
&c; a. fr.—Bets. 38 b rvnaxp "VSia 'a by Moses, art thou desolations; Yalk. ib. 809.
nSnl^JQ
t t :
ch. same. B. Mets. 107
b
. SD^TOp f. (denom. of tfptf? tooth) I) jaw. Erub.l00 a
'S3 10T1 (some ed. nm3 . . ; Ms. M. xr^TT *S) if the roots
DlttJE m. (b. h.j Btti) oar. Zab. IV, 3. — PL po'taje. on the surface are shaped
.
Y. Yeb. 1. c.
passages in the loft (v. Midd. IV, 5 quot. s. v. bib). Men.
27 b 'a "pi by breaking through a side entrance (or walk-
rB^Q f. (b. h. ; T];izJr=^3D) hedge, a hedged-in place,
ing in a zigzag as on winding stairs); [Rashi: =ttDWa,
fold.— PI. riibtea. Tosef. Ohol.XVIII, 12 (ed. Zuck., a.R.
S. to Ohol. XVIII, 10 niSHttJB; ed. Zolk. miUBa).
v. mo] ; Yalk. Lev. 571 SBlttJa (corr. ace).
legitimately remarried.
V, 11). B.vMets. 61 b ; B. Bath. 89 b — Sifra K'dosh. Par.3,
2 m.(b.h.; UJ!p!^;denom.of 8&SJ)j pi. 0"<tt5iw5a,
ch. VIII VnSh TH It 'as 'in measure' (Lev. XIX, 35) that
puSlwJo developed to one third of the full growth. B. means you must leave a large crest (in dry measure),
1 )
the quantity (of one cake of figs) for each three trees
S^HilSQ f. (iltt)) journey.— PL TT^^' Tar g- Y - T
out of nine.
NuimXXI, 1.
rjCi*rj.]— PL VtlWiSU. R.Hash. 17 a Ms. M. (missing in ed.). crown with the oil on your finger &c, v. P. Ib. "pit
Sifra Vayikra, N'dab., ch. II, Par. 2; a. e. '31 ~[ba fTnBYB a king succeeding his father is not an-
ointed; a. v. fr.— Part. pass, niira, pi. fiinrcJa, '|T"-'f
rm^ifilL'jC f. (preced.) apostasy. Pes. 96 a Ms. M. (ed. 'a a high priest installed with the ceremony of an-
'JftS
m fllan), v. man; Yalk. Ex. 211 niblbS nilama (read: ointing, contrad. to b^lSb fiblla, v. rWria. Hor. Ill, 4;
rfsbis 'airaa). Meg. I, 9 '31 lattJb 'a IMS pb pit there is no difference
between the anointed and the unanointed high priest
MEtalfe, fcOttj/2pQ m.(ttjattj) servant, attendant. except &c. Sifre Tsav, Par. 3, ch. V; a. fr., v. rTOJB.— Jtrahj
Targ. Num. XI, 28; a. — PL pMJOttfo 'JjBBO. Targ. fr. ,
nanba the priest anointed as the chaplain of the army.
I
R. to
Kings X, 5
3 ^niaiOaiBab
l
TO«lJOWSa (ed.
Sax
Lag. WD..
'1 mm
., corr. acc.j.— Koh.
and Eabbi asked his
Yoma 72 b ; a.fr., v. mm— Pesik.R.s. 8 nanba 'a, v. m-ira
I,
end. Hor. 12 a v. )-q\ lb. ll b '31 'a 111
,
mb ^bba the kings
waiters ; Lev. R. s. 28 "13UJB£JaK
of the house of David are anointed kings, those of Israel
riS'ldJ/J m. (denom. of SPiaia) (be) excommunicated.
are not installed by anointment; a. fr.
Sabb. 67 a (in an incantation). Nif. nub? to be anointed. Ib. '31 '3 xb Kim Jehu would
not have been anointed but for the contest of Joram's
rPIfittJD f. (next w.) grotto. Tosef. Ohol. XVIII, 12, followers, ib. '21 pttan nm; isaai with tbat oil mn
v. nbtoa. (prepared by Moses) were anointed the Tabernacle &c;
— ;
mm 851 "•TTTS
Y. Sot. VIII, 22 c . Num. E. s. 12 obia leasts t? until Mount of Olives. B. Hash. II, 4; Tosef. ib. H(I), 2; a.fr.—
all the vessels were anointed ; a. fr. [Sabb. 56 b , quot. fr. II Kings XXIII, 13 'an in, Ms. M.
r-nran.]
riw^2 ch. same. Targ. 0. Gen. XXXI, 13. Targ. Ps.
LXIV, 4 (Mb. nna) a. fr.—Part. pass, rP«So. Targ. II Sam.
;
nin«-- f. (*nr) whetting implement of stone or wood.
I, 21 a. e.— Ker. 5
;
b '=1
mOtf l Stinn (not mean) that son Kel. XVII, 17; Tosef. ib. B. Mets. VII, 10 n^a na O^J 'a
of the high priest that was anointed was high priest &c. ':t a (wooden) whetter which has a receptacle for oil.
Hor. n b '3i rrwo rno -x. Bets. 28 a p& br '" a whetstone; ys b'S 'a a wooden
Ithpe. rT^em* to ie rubbed with oil, perfumed. Targ. whetter; a. fr. [Ar. reads TTOa.]
Am. VI, 6.
rnn'^"^ m. (b. h.; nnia) destroyer, esp. Mashhith,
name of a demon of destruction. Deut. B. s. 3; Yalk.
r!UJ - II to stretch, measure. Denom. nisja, hlTKfcl.
1ft/. rptJofi fo draw the outlines. Yalk. Num. 719 nav Deut. 853; a. e.; v. nrran. 'an ->n Mount Mashhith, v. —
nrnDo.
i"Q l_r«BJuyi stood there drawing (the pattern of the candle-
stick). U m. (v. Xtrral) pine. Succ. 40a 'al CPSS (Ms.
nCQ ch. same. Targ. Y. Gen. X, 25. Targ. Ez. XL, 5; M. MnWl) wood of the pine-tree (used for torches).
a. fr. —Sabb. it" WO bipflMi rra-: rrt 3tTW twen C*-n»JD m. (preced.) ointment, perfumed oil. — PI.
Ms. M. (ed., v.
;
X~"l *: II) let him measure when giving pariBQ. Targ. HEsth. VI, 11 (ed. Vien. yan/sa); a. e.
it out and again when receiving it back. B. Mets. 107 b
V" -r:—-:-r xb Ms. M. (ed. WrtWri) do not measure ^niZJS, v. nra IU.
(survey) at all.
S^lT^U, tfrrCE, *?3 f - (^9011) measure, length.
~'$2 Targ. I Kings VI, 25 'ed. Lag. (oth. ed. xryra fern.). Targ.
III, Sr"'!^, tJTQ Im.(ni»aI)l)oi/,/ar.Targ.
2; a. fr.— Sabb. 74 'ax TSp ^X if he is par-
XXVI, b
Num. VII, 13. Targ.' Ex. XXIX, 7: a. fr. Y. Maas. Sh. — Ex.
ticular about a uniform lecgth (of the chips). B. Mets.
IV. 54 d hot. '2' TOR) rrt fit! had oil which he took down
107 b 'ian blbtn xb (or *ttnpV2\pl) do not treat surveying
to Acco (for sale). lb. '21 '.jHltfUJ x"~~ (not rm'-a, some
lightly.—PI. inra, '-2. 'Targ. 0. Num. XIII, 32 'ai |BBTW
ed. WW'S) that oil of thine at Beth M.— Ab.Zar. 37 a TOTi
"2 who permitted oil (of gentiles). lb. 28 a XTViXI "2 goose-
(h. text rma TO*). — NnrTOQ. Targ. Ez. XL, 28, sq.; a.
":ti).— Succ. 40 a b
(h. text yam "Sr, v. , v. 'fit- Gitt. 69 , Kn^irSTZJq, v. xrara
v. x-n-r 11.
the sacred oil (by using it for non-Davidic kings)? lb. band's hands. Ib. WDOOb to wash; a. fr.— Sabb. 77 b
12* 'an 'r mn ->al did any oil for the installation exist "TOXa, v. xba-ca. Kidd. 52 b '31 sons JClSa was washing
(in the days of Joahaz) ? ; a. v. fr.— 'an in (=b. h. nTTtn nn) a foot in a basin of water.
; ; ;
He who has been anointed &c. Sifra Vayikra, Hobah, is your band (the attraction of Palestine made me travel
ch. I, Par. 2, a. e. "|ban fit bw 'a by mashiah (Lev. IV, 3) all the way to die there) ; Y. Keth. 1. c. bot. '31 'a XI n
you might understand the king. lb. '31 'a fit 'an 'the (corr. ace).
anointed' means an anointed who has no superior an-
ointed a. fr.— 2) 'an ?jba, or *a Me Messiah, the future
;
ST^Q m. ch. (bfcttD) =h. nbxraa, prayer, request—
redeemer of Israel from captivity. Gen. R. s. 2 (ref. to PI. constiOb^a. Targ. Ps. XXXVII, 4 (ed. Wil. "^lUa).
Gen. I, 2) 'an 'a bti) inn nt that means the divine spirit
of the king Messiah (with ref. to Is. XI, 2). Succ. 52 a , :p03i v. •qtthp.
v. :3n.— PI. BTOWfe. Pesik. R. s. 8 (ref. to Zech.IV, 3) ibx a Up^ntO "J113 as the scholars declared m'shikhah
e. '31 'a
'31 hanba miaa mx 'an *m these are the two expected to be necessary to bind the seller, so did they make it
Messiahs, one appointed to conduct war (CpV p 'a) &c; necessary to bind the buyer; a. fr.
Esp. 'a X3ba or 'a the Messiah, v. preced. Targ. I Chr. Sm^ra,v.nextw.
Ill, 24. Targ. Y. Ex. XL, 9; a. fr.-[Targ. Cant. IV, 5 n^TOa
in 13, ansx 13 'a, v. preced.]— Lam. R. to II, 2 13^n StD n 02 m. (b3», Shaf. of bl3; cmp. xb"<3a, Xfib-VDa)
'3 X3ba this (Bar Kokhba) is the expected king Messiah 1)a ivash-basin. Sabb. 77 b (phonetic etymol.)xbl3 "HDXa 'a
'washing everybody', contrad. to xnb^31T>3: xnbs KTOQ
Y. Taan. IV, 68 d bot.— Sot. IX, 15 (49 b ) 'a ni3pS3 in the
'washing brides' (distinguished people). Kidd. 52 b v. iSJa.
period preceding the coming of the Messiah; a. fr. ,
T : , • 1 t : • :
be transferred to ours; a. e. — c) v. T^HJa.
HQ"02 f. (Wfej, formed with ref. to a*nBri DUB, Deut. Nif.T\U?t 1) to be stretched. Y. Yeb. VIII, 8 d bot. nsiua?
T
XVII, 15)" appointment, office.— PL rvhrtMj. Yeb 45 b ba !"Pbxa if the prepuce overgrew the corona of itself, v.
'31 D'VBa FtnXttJ 'a whatever offices thou createst, the elected T^'-ia.— 2) to be prolonged, continued. Hor. 12 a .."pHiaia px
must be from among thy brethren; Kidd. 76 b ; a. e. "jpisba ^ttJHPiia ''IS . . . kings are anointed at a spring in
order that their government maybe prolonged (cmp. Hag.
MiTlED f. (C)W}) embrocation. Sabb. 77 b .
n"lp n I23Q, v. KM^-fa). fr. — 3) withdrawn. Tosef. Pes. VII, 7 'qifisrib 121
to be
'SI ni3anbl(ed.Zuck. incorrect) if they desire to withdraw,
S'^tED,
T -I •
v. varfnAa.
-
t :
and that, others be entered &c. lb. 'si "pablril "pSttja? they
5Si "IjQ pr. n. m. M'shitlia, surname of one Joseph or may go on withdrawing &c, a. fr. — 4) to be drawn after;
Jose/Gen/R. s. 65; Yalk. Gen. 114 WWQ. to follow. Ex. R. s. 24. Gen.R. s.86 xbl . . "psUJia VVTtt msb
Meshech, a son of Japheth and pro-
fiSTJJaS nnfl like a cow which they attempt to pull to
:JL;Q (b. h.) pr. n.
genitor of a race of the same name (v. Schrader KAT, the slaughter-house, and which will not go; a. fr. — 5) to
Y. Meg. 71 b
bot.; Yoma 10 a
v. KJOBJ.
be conducted in a channel. Tosef. Par. IX (VIII), 9 D^ap.
p. 84). I, ,
of), and to drive. Gen.R.s.86'31 "psdia TTltfJ.v. infra. Mekh. 'SI if he drove the animal, or pulled it, or called it. Ex. R.
Bo, s. 11 (ref. to Ex. XII, 21) '=1 lb U)itt) "«a C^a 'lead forth'
s. 20, beg. *|D13 lipSttJaP I pulled him by the bridle ; a. e.
(select), refers to him who has a lamb, 'and buy', refers to 3) to conduct water into channels. Tem. 1 2 b OT:ra miXir
one who has none. lb. T"Sa IStiia withdraw from idolati-y. itbis a collection of drawn water all of which has been
lb. 'si 131313 Oil^-P P,X fOUttaVthat you may withdraw your conducted through a channel. Y.Shebi.II, end,34 b T|1BaPb
share in the Passover lamb as long as it has not been to irrigate by gutters, contrad. to Plptt-'Sib. Y. M. Kat. I,
slaughtered (v. ttia); Pes. VIII, 3. lb. IX, 10 fOXOm ibx 80 b top pSaP. 'P. he led the water of a well into it.
'31
'SI nnx fib .the one company select one lamb, the other
&c. —
M. Kat. I, 3 'si tnan px &"0«5ia you may draw (con-
Tosef. Sabb. VII (VIII), 16 '31 pp'tfaa you may let p
wine or oil run in gutters before bride and groom Ber. ;
breast) will yield him milk when sucking, but it did not
yield. Ex. R. s. 52 Ol "'"O'H PSttJia PbTiPn it (the valley) :|Lj/Q I ch. same, 1) to draw, carry along. Targ. Y.
began to give forth a flow of gold denars before their Gen. &OP3 tTSKtSfi (read: WD ^rt) which the
IX', 20 '31
draw out their spittle Hag. 14 a (assume aristocratic airs). Kiasb i-QS the many brought the single man over (to
'si lab "pSttJia they draw the heart of the people as one their opinion). — 2) to attract. Ab. Zar. 27 b P!3"<a TIKltt
conducts water, when they lecture Sabb. 87 a (play on ; bOSJaTl it is different with heresy, because it attracts (per-
"Wl, Ex. XIX, 9, v. 133) ttiWQ fOWnKgD a^"ai words suades, offers inducements). — 3) (neut. verb) TjIBa, ^^
which draw (atti-act) the heart of man like a lecture. Y. to run in a continuous line; to be prolonged, continued.
Ab. Zar. Ill, 42 c top 'SI fil HIIIS^S Wtfja the gutters of Targ. Y. Num. XXI, 35; Ber.54 b fPSWB ^SSJahis teeth were
Laodicea carried a flow of blood; a. v. fr. Esp. (law) to — prolonged. Hor. I2 a '31 'jaaja KTD CtBal "O as the Wl
take possession by drawing or seizing an object, v. hS'n&J. water runs continually, so may the traditions which you
B. Mets. IV, 2 'SI nil^B ISa^P 'a if he took possession of teach be continued. lb. pi-|1P3 -poa "W (Rashi -pitta) if
a
fruits bought of him before paying. lb. 47 p^BOri X5 the light continues to burn; Ker. 5 b .— [lb. WV» "DttJa,
'SI 7|ittJab he had not yet had time to take possession read : p">Da.]— Pes. 8 a PP11P;3 -pttJa the light (of a lamp
of the ass; a. v. fr.— Zeb. 6b yWJ nab *,nsiria "pSO the or a candle) burns steadily, opp. "BllipiX ppp^a. Ab.
slaughtering knife takes possession of them for what they Zar. 2 b in-iinisbaS iSUJa they will continue their ruler-
are to be, i. e. the slaughtering of the sacrifices decides ship; Yalk. Is. 316 lp-^Plsba town; a. e. — 4) to take
their purpose; Shebu. 12 b . — PblS 'a to stretch the pre- possession. B. Mets. 48 a Tpy?a*l IS until he takes posses-
puce, to disguise circumcision. Y. Peah I,16 b a. e. Part, ; — sion ;
"pal IS until he has taken &c. lb. 49 a ITtrtSa he
pass. ?praja ; f . rDWJa pi B'Wnoa, "pSWJa nisinia a) straight-
;
; has taken possession of it a. fr. Meg. 31 a Klin "jlBa 'take ; —
lined, continuous. Nidd. 57 b 'a SX if the blood-stain has possession of the ox' (mnemotechnical words to designate
the shape of a line, opp. VftS. Y. Erub. I, 19 b top 'a rTtt the order of Scriptural readings on the Passover days,
if the wall is straight-lined. lb. 'si 'a mipfi KP.P fctbia ref. to 13115a, Ex. XII, 21 11©, Lev. XXII, 26 &c). ;
that the beam be not prolonged more than &c. lb. "pSllIJaa Ithpe. Tp^a^x 1) to be attracted, carried away, seduced.
'si irw when they are longer than &c. ; a. fr. — Mikv. Ab. Zar. 1. c. Indira ?pi?aab ifttn he may be induced to
108
— — —
SfWQ 854 1?Wtt
follow them (the heretics). Snh. 70 a Kin iMttJJpK tallOa -pMOlOa, Num.XXIV, 5) 'a i3W two pledges (the First and
it is in order to prevent being carried away (led to in- the Second Temple); Num. B. s. 12 ^rvi3310a imp inn hn
temperance) TptttePB vb he will not be carried away (it
;
rpni33l0a &6N read not thy dwellings &c. (v. supra); Tanh.
has no attraction for him); Yalk. Deut. 929. Sabb. 147 b Naso'li. Ex. R. 1. c. (with ref. to Ex. XXII, 25), cmp.
Indira '*& he was drawn after them, he indulged in the nbinn ; a. fr.
(from their participation in the Passover sacrifice), it Targ. Am. II, 8. Targ. Gen. XXXVIII, 17; a. fr.— Gen. R.
would remain fit for the others. s. 70 '31 rvVn 'a ^ inn (Yalk. ib. 125 -paisusa) give me
a pledge that none of you will divulge it; a. e. — PL
r\til2 II, ^Q/llJ^/^iam^precedO^^Hn. :$*3i310a, yaisaa, 'lO^a. Targ. Y. Gen. XXXVIII, 25 (not
Targ. O.'Num. XXXI.20. Targ. Lev. XIII, 8 (ed. Berl. K3T2J^). fc^a ...).— Gen. R. I.e. — Y. Pes. IV, 31 b
bot. "pnTO "Jimi
Targ. Y. Gen. Ill, 14 '3ioa; a.fr.—Y.Ned. Ill, 37 d bot.^'lOa pa 'ia and their children were placed as pledges with
iftlH the hide of a serpent. B. Kam. 66 b , v. TVp$ Tanh. them (for military levies).
B'resh. 7 'a f+m *{0 Op'TS ]"fiTi such a strap from such a
hide (such poor work with such good material) !
; a. fr. anb^mv.^ttia.
t - : : t : • :
PL ytfcta, 'WJO, '% 'ia. Targ. Ex. XXVI, 14. Targ. Gen.
laaa.— [Y. Yeb. VIII, 9 b top 'ai "pVnWj
T'pttJQj v.
XXVII,' 16; a. fr.
read: 'piiaal, v. ?]liJ3.]
T t •: : " t t :
P^Qorpfev.^a.
^^12 m. (b.h.; 3310) 1) couch, bed; grave. Kidd. 31
b
13310a fmilD, v. h*JB8. Keth. 104a a. fr.— Esp. 'a (nxaira) IBIL'jQ (denom. of "jiSlOa) to take a pledge; to seize, levy.
;
the uncleanness caused by an unclean person lying on an B. Mets". 81 b inxibn na>l03 "teWfa he made him give a pledge
object, v. atfta. Kel. I, 3; a. fr.— PL ni3310a. Keth. 1. c. at the time when the loan was transacted na>!03 &6l0 'a ;
Midr. Till, to Ps. CXLIX ; a. e. — 2) sexual connection. '31 he seized it (through court proceedings) after the
Snh. 55 a ; a. fr.— (13T) "HSt 3310a pederasty. Succ. 29 a ;
transaction of the loan. Ib. 113 b 13310a> N310 TO 1*6*1
a. fr. PL as ab. Snh. 1. c. 'a ^310 two ways (the natural when the court messenger comes to seize his goods. Shek.
and the unnatural way) of sexual gratification. lb. 54 a . I, 3 "pa3loaa ia nj< against whom was seizure (for the
contribution of the half-Shekel) executed? —Y. ib.II,beg.
feGSttSQ, '12573 ch. same. Targ. Lev. XV, 4 a. fr.— ;
46 c «W^» »Vl "plOab "pIN") n^nUJ ",1i3a since the court
Ber. 56 6 "ptn 'a'(Ms. M. 13310a h.) (his) couch will be had a right to seize and did not do so (because the claim
upset (his domestic life disturbed). PI. constr. "OSlOa. was satisfied with another man's money). Cant. R. to 1,4
Targ. 0. Gen. XLIX, 4. Targ. Num. XXXI, 17 ; a. fr.' (play on 13310a, ib.) nma "p-m l
'»'<SKJa execute levy
it, 'the bell'. B.J. says, 'the goat that leads the herd'; v. next w. ; a. e.
Y. Kidd. I, 60 b top, expl. 'the staff", 'the pipe', 'the leader'; Hithpa. 13i0ann, Nithpa. "JBiOana to be seized. Ex. R.
Y. B. Bath. HI, beg. 13 d v. ,
hnwaa s. 51, beg. '31 d^aSS iflttJ '310 it (the sanctuary) was twice
NiTpp'DttSQ f. ch. (preced.), 'a K33> the leading flock. seized for their sins, v. "|i3ipa. Ib. s. 35; Tanh. Vayakh. 9
Targ. Y. Gen.' XXX, 40 (ed. '31310a, corr. ace; h. text on^s "(Sipana "pioan Wii, v. lism Ib. '31 ^M feria T*T*i
jttan 13b). and they (the righteous) will be seized &c. Num. R. s. lfi
'31 S3310arY] lOTpsni pioan the Tabernacle and the Temple
"}"©02 m. Cj3ia) security, pledge. B. Mets. VI, 7 imbn
shall be seized &c. ; a. fr.
'an bs if one loaned on a pledge. lb. '31 131310a . . . -ima
man is permitted to hire out the poor man's pledge (for ch. same. Targ.Y. Ex. XXII, 25. Targ.
the debtor's benefit). lb. 82 a (in Chald. diet.) 'a aVia ">110 Job XXIV, 3; a.fr. — B. Mets. 68 a '31 UTS^S Sl"b 'a (not
'31 when the pawn is not worth the money loaned on it. *,l310a) A and then rented it from
pledged his field to B,
lb. 'a H31p 3in b"S the creditor owns the pledge (for the him. Ib. 73 b top '"1 a gentile
'31 Wi
gave his 'a . . . iia
time being, and is reponsible for it); a. fr. — Ex. R. s. 31 house (for occupation) as a pledge, and then sold it to &c.
a
laiarja aba ">33ioa xiip ann bit read not (Lev. XXVI, 11) Ib. 113 &6 131310a 1=3X Ms. M. (ed. 13310a) but to take a
'my dwelling' but 'my pledge'. lb. s. 35 (play on *310ab, Ex. pledge out of his house he (the messenger of the court)
"
XXVI, 15) '31 310ab iai2> Kintt) the sanctuary stands as a
(
is not permitted; a. fr.-Part. pass. ",3l0aa,f. xasiaaa. Koh.
pledge, when the Israelites deserve destruction, it is seized R. to ill, 2, v. xnbsna. B. Mets. 73 b •pioaai ws*n nin ->n
on their account.— PI. nisisioa, niasioa. lb. s. 31 (ref. to '31 Ms. F. (Ms. M." *,310al, corr. ace. ed. ^lOiaa mni) if I ;
— — ;
had known that the house was pledged to you. Y. ib. 2) to compare, to give an illustration. Tosef. Ber. 1, 11
VIII, end, ll d '31 nW'i'aa mm rwa his house was pledg- '31 nab bl!5a ibltta they made a comparison: what is this
ed to Sic. ; a. e. to be compared to? To &c. R. Hash. 17 b bl!5a -jb Mabx
upon;
Ithpa.'&Z'zrii to be given as a pledge; to be levied '31 nab let me tell thee a parable: what is this like to?
to borrow on pledge. Targ.IIChr.XXV,24(h.textnl3.nrn). To &c. Cant. R. toll, is u^x ni^sban nx biria xinirs
Targ. Y. Deut. XV, 6; a. e. CX3 xbx "jbniia when one wants to find a simile for
m hostile governments, one compares them to fire a. v. fr. ;
\Z 312 m. (b. h.; ",r:j) dwelling, esp. the sanctuary of
the desert, the Tabernacle. Erub. 2 a , v. U5^pa. Num. R. s.
— Part. pass, blliia; f. nblltsa; pi. trfcWJO, "pb/iira; rtfrwJB.
p»0O, SWWfo, *a. Targ. Gen. IV, 20. Targ. Ps. CXXXII, 5. Rabb. D. S. a.l. note) the words of the Law are compared
Ib.LXXXIV, 2; a. fr. to fire. Gen. R. s. 41 D^ab TO«Jb3» H TtH the Law which
'
l
landed, property is transferred to the creditor with the the basis of &c. Ib. '31 'a IP 115->1 X*ipa lb U5"', v. n:J"<ba.
privilege of redemption by returning the loan (v. Sm. Ant. Ex. R. s. 40, beg. 'a taffl nimb BIX T^IS man should take
his property as soon as the value of the creditor's usu- parable. Snh. 92 b ITU 'a nax (the viaion of the valley
fruct has reached the amount of the loan, but if the of the dead) was the truth of a mashal, (emended:) naX3
usufruct amounts to more, the balance cannot be claimed. nm 'a in the truth (the fact of resurrection) there was
xm;33. lb. 68 a Xnil5 'a dr© a m. without a
Ib. b top, v. a symbol (for the redemption of Israel from captivity;
fixed term for redemption is meant for a year (during Ez. XXXVH,
11).— Y. Keth. IV, 28 c top; Y. Snh. VIII,
which the occupant cannot be disturbed). Ib. 110% a. e. 26 c top 'a3 nima
rraSOtt nt this is one of the three
. . .
'31 KTlDI 'a the agreement of a m. customary in Sura, in verses in which the Law uses metaphorical expressions
which it is written, 'After the lapse of so and so many (Ex. XXI, 19;XXH, 2; Deut. XXII, 17); Mekh. Mishp. 6
years, the property shall go back without payment'. Ib. a. fr.— PI. n^biaa, nibiaa. Sot. IX, 15 (49 a ) lb^n a"*i naiaa
'-T VTVSV) the document of a m.; a. e. Yalk. Cant. 981, — 'a ibll5la with the death of R. M. ceased the composers
by night.—B. Bath. 78 b (ref. to Num. XXI, 27) B^VttSlah Snh. 38 b (Ms. M. nbllSaa); Yalk. Prov. 947.—Gitt. 35* bot.
filX'M who control their inclinations a. e.—b'lJia governor,;
nibaaai ni^X "SO copies of the Books of Job and Proverbs
HX D"ani3 DnX you write
consul. Yad. IV, 8 '=1 btJTOh (v. infra).—""buia (sub. nabll5) Mishle, the Book of Proverbs
the governor's name and year together with the name of (commencing with the word mishle). Cant. R.l.c. B.Bath.
Moses in a document. [B. Kam. 38 a ^Wfe, tffrffia, cen- 14 b . Y. Yoma I, end, 39 b ; a. e.
sorial emendations for H^cba, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. notes.]
Pi. buia to handle, dispose of, use. Gen. B. s. 20 bl3^ ^nb'iJD tired, v. mbia.
Hif. b^cjan to make a ruler. Sot. 36 b mb^F) . . . *W tion. Num. R.s.14 innbiaaa mi nmi and he(Naftali)was
zealous in carrying out his mission. Koh. R. to VIH, 8
13'1 ?~ a slave whom his master bought for twenty pieces
(expl. nnbllJa, ib.) '31 D1X "px ('there is no substitution
of silver,— wilt thou make him a ruler over us ? ; a. e.
in war',) none can say to the angel of death, let my slave
"ljU II denom. of next w.) 1) to speak meta-
(b. h. ; or an inmate of my house go in my place. 2) letting loose —
phorically. Nidd.V,7 '31 ibllja bira the scholars introduced (by divine dispensation), visitation (of wild beasts). B.
metaphors for designating the 6tages of female puberty. Mets. VII, 9 ; a. e., v. SXY.
108*
; — —
"to*? 856 10121012
S?JS?QOT
T
f. (preced.) 1) (=b. h. r&jf&O) following,
suite. Targ.' I Sam. XXII, 14. Targ. II Sam. XXIII, 23.—
^bfe^jb^tia m. CV4 I) /brft. Targ. I Sam. II,
2)(— MWattS) tradition. Nidd. 20 a rTOSOttfcM nhaVl whose
1 3, sq. (ed'.AVil. JoS^a).— PL MH*^$^ Kr^JlBa, "vtfa. Targ.
own opinion agrees with his tradition(Var.rTT©aU53 T^asi).
I Chr. XXVin, 17. Targ. Y. Ex.'xXVIM (some ed. 'a).
— [Tosef. Sabb. XIV (XV), 3, v. next w.] "OBD, Y. Shebi. IV, 35 a bot., v. iiaaxn.
EVADED f- (preced.) a tool for lifting objects out of a UJUJU m. (b. h.; *)Btt3) 1) guard, esp. a division for
well, lifter. Tosef. Sabb. XIV (XV), 3 (some ed. Mf^ffla, duty of priests and Levites. Taan. IV, 2, v. lasa. Hor.
corr. ace). 13 a 'a tt)jn chief of the guard. Taan. 1. c. im&taia b&OttJi
'a the Israelites attached (as lasa) to that division; a.
D 3©Q, '12 m. (dVJ) completion, end. Targ. Job 1,4. fr.— PI. P/hattja. Ib. Num. R. s. V; a. fr. 2) (= rvniam) —
— B. Mets. 67 a. pVw WW bV$J3 after tbe lapse of
b
, e.
tvatch, a certain portion of the day or the night. Ber. 3 a
so and so many years, v. fctnsa'^a.
'ai 'a b3 bs> at the beginning of every watch. PL as ab.
rmDOT, v. rwawte.
t :
Ib. ; Tosef. ib. I, 1 nb^ba 'a inblU the night is divided into
three watches.
PriiyZjQ pr. n. pi. Mashmahig (P. Sm. 2245), a place
on an island of the Persian Gulf. 'a*7 KrW"iB tbe port of — 11112^12 f. as preced. 2, watch. Ber. 3 a '31 nilia&O 'a
commits murder to save his own life. rflHO? f CWJ -Pa-) filter, strainer.
- Sabb. XX, 1 you
may suspend (spread out) a strainer &c. Y. Ter. VIII, 45 d
EJIIQtlJQ m. (UJattJa) touch. Gen. R. s. 52 d^ 'a an <p Va) 'an a strainer filled with wine; a. fr.— Trnsf. Ab.
illicit touch (of her) with his hand. Midr. Till, to Ps.
V, 15 'a a scholar retaining what is useless and discard-
VIII, 4 [read :] -prWnSK 'a xbi* .... QWbsn (ed. Bub . niU3>a,
ing the useful knowledge.
corr. ace.) those above (the angels) and those below have
only (as much power as) the touch of thy fingers ib. to ; ^J12Vjl2 (v.'tttoPjtfSJO) to touch, feel; to handle, manip-
Ps. XIX waxK 'a "T3 ed. Bub. (ed. 13DSX "*T3, corr. ace.) ulate; examine, search. B. Mets. 21 b UJaiaab iliBS dix
to
d hot., '31 l&^sa a person (carrying money with him on the road)
Yalk. Ps. 640.— [Y. Ber. Ill, 6 v. ttiatia.]
usually feels for his bag at short intervals. Men. 36 a
3?Ej02 m. (b. h.; 9&ti)
T
1) obedience. Sifre Deut. 357
he puts his hand on them. Erub. 54 b top bs
"jna ttJattJaa
ref. to Deut. XXXIV, 9) '31 bVtt 'a *|b fk there can be
na maiaaa U^HW ',ai as often as one searches it (the fig-
no obedience greater than this. — 2) ordinary sense. — tree); 13 ua&aa plS'ip.nttJ T"3 as often as the suckling touches
isa'iiaa in its usual sense. Yoma 6l a 'as FOTa 'altar' in
the breasts. Sabb. 82 a '31 ttJatiia"! let him manip-
llixa
its usual sense (requires no explanation); "jSaiaaa a^jnsn
ulate (stimulate the rectum) with pebbles. Erub. 13 b
'the priests' &c. ; a. fr.
WU3>aa laaiaai let him examine what he is doing, contrad.
to JUSTUS"1 search (investigate) his past doings. Keth. 12 a
j/U\D't2 m. (2>att3 Hif.) intimation, logical conclusion.
PX be around (watch) the bridegroom and
Yoma 42 b , v. Nb'ra II. — Esp. SatiJaa by implication, con-
'31 UJattJab to
—'31
na they (the famished animals) licked them (begging
25T1"1 "'Six . . . iaS08) 'aa by mere logical conclusion (
VIII, beg. 20 d
.
ttjsia v. h.— Y. Ned. Ill, 38 a pBa©a»...rH#"|
'31 1BK3U 'aa when the text says 'the daughter of Am-
,
ina UJaiaaa i^iaiaa he feels for them (to make sure that
yiyyu ch., v. ami i.
he has not lost them). Ib. Ifia Uia'Jaa he has been looking
S20E5D, (^SjQttSa) m.(2>B12JI) hearing. Targ. Job after the fruits (which he was carrying, and found out
XLII.Y Targ. Y.fGen.XLIV, 18 (Y.'ll some ed. niWBB); their loss). Erub. 41 b WHIlt Ihb "VTiadab (not ina) tc
a. fr. make shrouds ready for them.
; —
©EttE 857 nbfetiJE
rllBattJB, ed.
substance remains visible;
Lehm. 'lUiaiaa) of
^m n
D®n, v. preced. art.
s. 6 ram).
srmastfa r t -: : •
v . vsmaw.
t t -: •
nj^jD I m. (b.h.; nsdT I) lieutenant, viceroy. Midr. "")!/"kUQ m. (denom. of TSttJ) market-commissioner. Gen.
Till, to Ps. CXLIX 'a Nbl. ..lb "px n"3pn the Lord has R. s. 98T
no dux nor eparch nor lieutenant.
'lSlpQ f. OBO) wine-sample. Gen. R. s. 38 (play on
TljJl/12 II m. (b. h.; preced.) 1) repetition. hittJa(nfcd) nBtt, Gen. XI, 1) JWPd aVlDI 'a !*n this sample (proves)
niin the Book of Deuteronomy. Gen. R. s. 3 Yalk. Gen. 4. ;
that all the wine is bad, v. N^Fda.
Meg. 31 b '21 'n 'aa«5 mbbp the curses contained in Deu-
nilSpQ f. (b. h.; nSUJ, cmp. n£d) family, kinship.
teronomy (Deut. XXYIII, 15—68); a. e. 2) copy, dupli- — Tanh/ed. Bub., Noah 24 (play on tWO* Gen. XI, 1) nnx 'a
cate. Snh. 22 a .— 3) = next w. Sifre Deut. 161 ; Yalk. ib.
one kinship (all equally bad, cmp. preced. w.). B. Bath.
915 '31 N^a 'a 'a *r& vnn dia^n interpretation (of the
109 b 'a WVyp 3X nnQOa the father's kinship is called
Law, Targum) leads to oral law, the study of the oral
one's family (not the mother's). Eduy. VIII, 7; Kidd. 71 a
law leads to discussion (Talmud).
'31 rvo nnBttJa (not mnSiaa) a family named Beth &c;
Esp. Mishnah, a collection of oral laivs, esp. that a. fr.— PI. a^dpa. Ex. R. s. 30 'si anb nrjTU 'an +f> bs>
>
a. fr.
edited by R. Judah han-Nasi; also a section of the Mish- through the laws which thou hast given to them, they,
nah. Esth. R. to I, 2, a. fr. 'a iTid rtlUia the six Orders having a dispute with one another, go to law and make
of theMishnah; Cant. R. to VI, 4; Pesik. Vayhi, p. 7 a sq. ,
peace. Ib. 'an 13D3 . . . tVTiHn nirVS 'tpda in the morning
'an "Vtf, v. T\*}2. Ned. 91 a H318»1 'a the earliest col- the Law (religious principles) was given, and in the even-
lection, rt*WB 'a the second edition. Y. Keth. V, 29 d bot. ing the civil law (Ex. XXI, sq.). Midr. Till, to Ps. XXXVI
Y. Ter. VIII, beg. 45 a sq.; a. fr.— Y.Yeb. Ill, 4 d a. e. ^3X
, ,
'31 'ab naxp "pX there is no limit to the judgments for
'art, v. VF9&n. Y. Hor. Ill, end, 48 c '31 btt> injUJa the the wicked ; a. fr. Mishpatim, name of a Scriptural lesson
collection made by &c— Y. Ter. VIII, 46 b bot. TViaV'a S&1 of a week (Ex. XXI, 1 to XXIV, 18).
did I not follow the law of the Mishnah?; ib. njtfja 111
d-H^dnn but is this the mishnah of the pious (who must SJ55E3D m. (T]Slz3) funnel. Kel. in, 8. Tosef. Sabb.
VIII (IX), 10; fr.—Ab. V, 15 'a a scholar that learns
act kindlier than the strict law demands)? Erub. 62 b — ,
and forgets
a.
t
IJ ILD f. pi. (ijir) different directions of the axis each. Ib. '31 'an b? "pa^dia you may add to the number
of the eyes, squinting, strabismus. Bekh. 44 a li^da 'a the of baskets (to be put on the dunghills) &c. Y. 34 c top ib.
disqualification from strabismus is derived from &''ewo(Lev. 'an nx pViBi &6 he (the Israelite) must not unload the
XXI, 20). Ib. XWJiaa anua (corr. ace; Rashi KTY^asia). : baskets. Cant. R. to VII, 3; a. fr.
;
"""Hplft? m. pi. (ipttJ) guards; wftn 'a snail-shells. JTTM f. (b. h.; ftyi) infusion; steeping; d^aJ5> W"$0
a
Ab. Zar.' 28 b ed. (Ms. M. a. Ar. npttia). infusion of grapes. Pes. 44 '31 n"i^a *Hft this additional
specification of mishrath (Num. VI, 3) &c; a. e. Tosef. —
HplEQ m. (b.h.;
8
ttJSttf) frtftfe, ftgta'rf. Sifra Sh'mini ch.lX,
Shebi. VI, 25, v. n&*q3. — B. Kam. 102 a
,
a. e. tfVl htefctb
Par. '"pn nt 'a 'drink' (Lev. XI, 34) means wine. lb. 'a 'ab you may use the products of the Sabbatical year 'for
mio spoiled liquid; Pes. 18 a ; a. fr.— PL D^pttja, ?P^a. eating' (Lev. XXV, 6), but not as substances for steeping,
b
lb. 17 fi*f nana "pxan 'a liquids which have become fr—Esp. a pond for steeping flax &c. B. Bath.
v. StaJlVa ; a.
unclean through contact with unclean hands. lb. IXaiiSUJ II, 10 '31 'an nK "ppmia you must keep your pond re-
'a nana vessels which have become unclean through the moved from your neighbor's vegetable garden &c. Ib. 18
b
Kel. XXIX, 3. 'an am plumb-line. B. Bath. II, 13 "IMS the community of M. (to which the adjacent forest be-
as far as theyhang over the border line); Tosef. ib.I, &C"H wE m. (sya) slippery spot.— PL yw-Wto. Targ.
15; cmp. rtaSoa; a. e. — PI. nWpOp. Kel. XII, 8 Talm.
Jer.
r
X XIII,' 12.
ed. 'am wftpttVroon (Mish. ed., a. ed. Dehr. nibp^a) two
kinds of plummets (R. S. weights, v. bpttJa). bCVC'TTlpTQ (preced.) pr. n. Mashruitha, name of a
peak.Varg. I Sam. XIV, 4 (h. text yxia).
^^b^ptL'D,
T
N£)bpCT ch. same. Targ. Zech. IV,
10;a. fr. "HtpQ/Q, ^^12 m.^yd) camp, resting place. Targ.
Y. Gem XXXII, 9. Targ. Ps. XIX, 5 >mQa PTftifyi Ms.
f]ip^Q m. (b.h.; tp9) cross-piece, lintel. Ab. d'R. — PL v.
VCT&Kj). Targ. Is. XIII, 22 TJtfrrOj a. fr.
Vpjty,
N.ch.XXVI, end fffeaWl 'a the lintel, contrad. to hWpSp*.
next w.
Mekh. Bo, s. 11; Yalk. Ex. 197 '31 'an ninata htt&tt) . . .
our ancestors in Egypt had three altars; the lintel and b^^J^l WltiU, *T®Q f. same. Targ. 0. Gen.
the two posts; a. e. XXXII, 9; a.fr.— Constr.n^iua^n^a, 'n^a. Targ. Num.
?1pM> 'ipttjE (z\pyi) knock, bruise. Targ. O.Ex.
n
t.
11,9; a. fr. — Pi. KVfttSft xn^-i^a, y^tta, '"^a. Targ.
Gen. XXXII, 'pin^a, v. preced.). Targ. Num.
XXl', 25 (riot *
8; 11 (Y.
Targ. y! I ib. XV, 25.
. . .j.
XXIII, 10 fr.— Snh. 2#» sq.
; a. n^Ttta iSXa in the face
"'pliJD, fc^p'&ft m. ch. 1) =h. npffia, drink. Targ. of his camps (soldiers); BONH !}r}Wtf|te where are thy
Lev. XI, 34; a.V— Koh. E. to III, 9 D^an -wipiBa in soldiers?
(some ed. ^'p'ia, oth. ""poa) one hot drink.— 2) = h.
fcTIZn^Q, TPtyyfifi pr. n. m. WsharsKya, an
nroa, feast. Targ. Esth. 1,3. Targ. II Esth. IX, 17, sq.
Amoral Snh. 63 b "Ker! 6 a
. ;
a. fr.
s^pizia ; a. fr.
Sr^plZJQ f. pi.
(fp^)
abominations, idols. Targ. rntED, v. pfr&o.
3pt2}Q m. (b. h. ; bpyi) weighing, weight. Tosef. Hull. 'an because he might eventually use a depilatory earth.
T
IX, 9 'aa 13am npV if he bought of him by the weight.
rntpTQ, v. rnoa.
B. Bath.V, 10 'al 'a V>3 \>2 as often as he uses the weights
Sifra K'dosh. Par. 3, ch. VIII 'a 'a b=> ^S> (corr. ace). Ib. ri"i^/2, m. (b. h.; n^ttj) servant, attendant. Y. Ned.
T
(ref. to Lev. XIX, 35), v.
t
y%fm. Ker. 5 a 'an 'a IW i<b IX, beg. 41 b '31 TWa '"i 'a Iwas the attendant of R. Me'ir
'31 he must not use one weighed species as a weight for on both his flights; a. e— [Ber. 63 b "pnnn 'a, v. rrna.]—
the other; a. fr. —
PL nippjra. Sifra I.e.; B.Bath. I.e.; PL DWM. Snh. 63 b Dl"aS TV^tfa idolatrous temple-
v. nna. Tanh. Balak 12 'aa^pttJai 5w|a (not nbisa) com- servants.
mitting wrong and fraud in weights; ib. 'aa 1ptt)a using
false weights; Yalk. Num. 765; a. fr.
VSUjH (b. h.; v. ttfoa) to feel, grope, search. — Palp.
ttjaiaa q. v.
nrT'Dn^Q, prob.toberead:naiF«l3am.(dnb)6orer,
*H\ 'a ninn . . . aisaanm mn ninb "jsoa from here (Ruth
siphon—Y. Erub. X, 26 d top, expl. X?&t*t.
1. c.) this house (of the Nasi) learned to ordain elders
b
at its banquets. Nidd. 16 , v. bai; a. fr.
DD m. (b. h.; Ma) dying, dead; corpse. Ber. 3 1
' i3Bn
nan in the presence of a dead body; na btti 111311 affairs
T^ni^Q m. pi. (v. mnitta) foundations, supports; b
'3)1 nab nal ITOp the
concerning the dead. lb. 18 a. e.
,
S^pint^Q m. (prnc) silence. Targ. Y. Lev.X, 3.—Meg. as a pin &c; a. v. fr.— msa na, v. nixa. PI. aina, constr.
ina. M. Kat. 20 a m^aina, v.nixa. Ber. 18 b Tosef. Sabb.
18 a , "pinn 'a 2>bdn nba a word worth a .
a. e. is Sela, silence
is worth two. lb.; Y. Ber. IX, beg. 12 d 'a Nbl=1 Ka6, v. VI (VII), 1 'an -pdb to the graveyard; a. v. fr.— Snh.55 a ,
. .
MHj f. (=S<nxa; snN; cmp.dipa; Mand. MMtfDj Assyr.
matu, constr. mat land, v. Schr. KAT 2 p. 510; 568) home,
this is my order for my wedding feast. Y.
,
irfinuJial . .
xpiii 'ab. Sabb. i45 b bot. (prov.) '3)1 'an abuj ixattj 'an
Esth. R. to I, 9 (inVilCTUa, v. 115.
Ms. M. (ed. 'a fctbn) at home my name (will give me my
b
Xr^lPlIEQ f. ch.=h. mntia, foundation. Esth. R. to position), abroad, my dress. B. Kam. 113 'a mat 'a in
T
I, 9 (p lay on d5 a. TlWI) [read:] S^n inUDI b\15 'a dil d5 dns^a one citizen may be levied upon for the delinquent
'331 level, level the foundation of Vashti, the time has taxes of a fellow citizen. Snh. 112* 'a isn citizens (tax-
Targ. if Chr. IX, 20.' Targ. I Sam. XXV, 36 ; a. fr.— Sabb. xidna xna, v. aidna.-
t ' : :
thought of drinking; a. e. [Yalk. Is. 289, v. next w.] — disciple of Jesus. Snh. 43 a (in a passage omitted in most
editions), '31 'a IttJib lb nin diTrabn nitfan Jesus had five
"tfilZJQ m. pi. (preced.) horsemen watering their disciples; M. etc. lb. (byway of play on ina, Ps. XLII, 3,
T
horses. Lam. R. introd. (R. Joh. 1) (expl. iniiJ ntt, Is. a. XLI, 6) ina, v. ism.— V. sona. ,
XXII, 7) '331 "pinx 'a "pblK 'a one troop watering their
horses went, another came, so that they appeared to be .D"^rD m. (dxn) twin-; esp. twin-leaf, the central
Very numerous; Yalk. Is. 289 iniBa (corr. ace). rib of a branch of palm-leaves. Y. Succ. Ill, beg. 53 c ; v.
naiin.
,rPrilpQ (denom. of nil), pi. WKJ; tpft foundation.
f.
Gen. R. s". 71 (play on San, Gen. XXX, 11) linstB ia an nQn Sn3 f, pi. nia^^DQ (preced.) twin-teeth (bi-
'3)1 "(r.inaa liab he is coming who is destined to cut down cuspids), molar teeth. Bekh.VI, 4 'an Mish. (Talm. ed. 39 a
: ;
:
SHXPQ m . (= xinna, v. intta* "nrj; Fyr. Nina, patient. Hor. 14 a v. niljpa. Ber. 20 a (a proverb cited,
, when
Nisona, P. 8m. 2256) rate, j>ofcer, s/joreZ. Hag. 4 sq. mn
'3 n*ra 'a NaipS (Ar. niNina En Yakob Ninna) took a
let him bring a shovel and put it over them &c. [Ar. Sabb. VII (VIII), 24, sq.; a. e.—Pl. B^na, "p31Pa f.nisma. ;
fcOSiTlQ m ., pi. fiana (ian) =b. h. a^iairia, breakers, gests yha, corresp. to WHO in Maim. 1. c).
waves. 'Targ. Ps. XLII, 8.
^|1DQ c.fgR, v. XJlna) 1) reeky, foul. B. Bath. 19 b
(denom. of next w.) to bridle. Pesik. Zakh., p. 24 b
«i?jZJ 'aa when the straw is foul. — 2) (noun) 'a, KFl SttTU f. reeky,
•ianaa nx, v. aba II; Yalk. Deut. 938; Tanh. ed. Bab., infiltrated earth, lb. 18 a '31 tVUp 'a ground infiltrated
Ki Thetse 6 lanau; (corr. ace.) (with urine &c.) is injurious to the wall. Ib. 19 a NpTtt
'al the damage caused by &c. Pes. 47 b X3inaa Ar. a. Ms.
jriE) m. (b. h.) bridle, reins. Pirke d'R. El. ch. XXXVI M. 2 (ed. NrOIPaa; Ms. M. 1 fiinnaa) it means swampy
(ref. to'naNn sna, n Sam.viir, i) nan 'aa nnst nax npb earth (which cannot be crushed to powder).
'31he (Isaac) took one cubit's length of the reins of his
ass,and gave it to him (Abimelech) as a sign of friend- PlD^nQ v. -jina II.
Mrffl, n
D ch. same. Targ. Y. Gen. XXVI, 31 (v.
preced.).— [Sabb. 51 b bot., v. Wna.] plHD I m., npJ^nQ f. (b. h. ;
pna) sweet; pleasant.
a.
10, beg.; a.
fr.—Esth. R. to
fr.— PL
I, 9
rrqira ed. Lag. (oth." ed. nnma) constr.— V. Nna^na. Shebi. Ill, 1 ; IX, 6 'an ttJa^tt) 13? until the mathok begins
to dry up; [R. S. a. 1. the juice of the dung].—Y. ib. HI,
S'TirQ,
T T - :
v. aoina.
tt - : beg. 34°, expl. H51pS.
KminQ,
t t - :
v. xna.
T T HpiriQ, v. pina 1.
at a time. lb. IS
for the translator more than one verse HUD ch. same. Targ. Ps. CIV, 2. Ib. LXIV, 4 Ms. (ed.
'»h ~'ZZ~ sVr "H3 occupying no more time (in rolling iniSa, v! fOSn II).— Ib. L, 4; a. e.—Part. pass. rpra, WTW3
the scroll) than the translator requires for interpreting ('ma). Ib. VII, 13 ; a. e— Gen. R. s. 63, a. e., v. VXfn.
the verse last read; a. e— b)=X-iax q. v. Hull. 142 a '1
Af. nnax same. B. Mets. 107 b 'flT'bW ^W^S D11UO for
'Oh rPS2£in. Ex. R. s. 3, end ; a. e.—Pl. D^wywra, "pj . .
pulling their ropes (to drag boats), v. XCre. lb. '31 "'nnaa ^X
b
Koh. R. to VII, 5. lb. to IX, 17. Pes. 50 ; a. e.
(v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) if they can pull their ropes all
<&. same. .
a. e.
Gen.XLH, 23.— Targ' Ex. IV, 16
;'
a. e.— PI. p?OTne.
Ithpe. Waamj to extend, spread. Targ. Job XV, 29.
Targ. IlChr. XXXn, 31.
mnriQ m. (preced.) 1) extension. Targ. Ps. XIX, 5
PTinC, v. y*ii wo. nna (constr.).— 2) tent-pin.— PI. X*nna. Targ. Y. Ex.
XXXVIII, 20 (not srnna) a.fr.— 3) (with KT*) bow-string.
"3iriQ m. (denom. of Sian) a group of nine. —PI. —PI. constr. inra. Lev. R. s. 5 (expl. "VP, Ps. XI, 2) «•«! 'a.
;
VI, 9 '21 nitOU rtjiul I if one trains a vine from one tree
to another. Sabb. 75 a '31 Bin nnian he who pulls the SnntjQ f. (nna) stretching; WlVwi 'a the borders
thread of a seam (bringing the ends closer together), v.
of stretched parchment, distinguishable by their darker
infra. Gen. R. s. 3, a. e. '=1 ITrflO nil bWW laxn b6» lest color. Gitt. 88 a 'al 'a Wa tW'T'l when the borders of the
you Michael stretched (the world) in the south &c,
say, document are distinguishable (evidence that nothing has
d top
v. TJO; Midr. Till, to Ps. XXIV PROS, Y. Ber. I,2 been cut off).
'; btV& ~ma D1X when one stretches a tent-cover, in
m
course of time it becomes loose; Gen. R. s. 12, end; &T2 pr. n. m., v. "WW.
Yalk. Is. 314. — Gen. R. s. 10, end, v. Nif. — [Yalk. Prov. n
961 nrrto rexrb isio v. pra.] —Part. pass, nina; f. nnma; FiD, v. wo.
pi. artynva, 'pwna; nirona stretched, extended; (of a bow) n
riI3 (b.h.) when? Ber. 1, 1 BO Ar. (ed. ma^xa). Midr.
l
56 b ; a. fr.
'zi Wmoi that very judgment which was aimed against
Lord turn and aim against the Egyptians.
Israel, did the S*P.D f. Part. Af. of xrx. Ned. 8l a '31 *!"£ 'a leads to
Y. M. Kat. '31 1333 'a fan judgment is ready
Ill, 83 c top (may cause) &c. ; a. fr— [X*rp, v. WTO.]
against the whole family. Pesik. R. s. 38; a. fr. •
Pi. rr,"a same, esp. to straiten straps; to bring objects fcTFl/C, iTF^
pi. n. m. (abbrev. of IWrP.a) Mattia
closer together. M. Kat. I, 8 yiWU/J rs you may also (Matthew). Shek. V, 1 (Mish. ed. tTVVtQ}. Eduy. H, 5 (Ms.
straigten (bed-straps). Ib.lO a WOO .. DXU3 fWttran 'you M. T*10). Yoma VIII, 6; Ab. IV, 15, a. fr. Win 'a.-Y. p
may stretch', means when it (a strap) is lax, you may Orl. 1, 60 d top nnm=i la 'a 'i.
' ;
R. Hash. 22 ''
nasn bs Trna"] shall be stretched on the
xna^na. Gitt. 6 a 'a X3^X1 "pno because there are colleges
pillory. Y. Hor. II, 46 (1
WDpn IHJFIU? the bow was bent (in Babylonia). Ib. '31 mitJTUn 'a the colleges are en-
(euphem. for erection). Yalk.Ps. 796 3"innnnna3 the sword grossed in their theoretical studies.
(of judgment) was drawn; (Tanh. B'midb. 7 n3UJa3; ib.
ed. Bub. 7 naamj). fctPQ"^^ II f. (asm) answer, argument— PI. xnn^na.
Hithpa.rryyrnsa.me. Tanh.Haye3 pnnaral fbVn Wl Y. Gitt. VIII, 49 c top '31 'a "pV^X ^3 the same arguments
'SI they would have gone on spreading &c. which &c.
109
— I — ;
t • : t
Tl^VD f. (pna) l) swee* taste. Y. Ber. V, 9 a top — on 12313) '31 Tpbra -jxa v. Kni2pi2.— Part, pass. b"ra
,
;
from tirosh, is forbidden all kinds of sweet (unfermented) Af. b^nax 1) to recite a mashal. Targ. Ez. XXI, 5 —
drinks; a. e.
2) to propound a riddle. Targ. II Esth. I, 3.
ivhich makes an object permitted for enjoyment. Zeb. II, 3 — Snh. 95 a nb^naix nsi^b ne>33 the community of Israel . .
'an the blood (the sprinkling of which makes the sacri- iscompared to a dove; Ber. 53 b xb">ra Ms. M. (ed. X^bna,
nibna, corr. ace); Sabb. 49 a b^nax, read: xb*rBX; a. e.
fice fit for eating or for the altar); a. fr. PI. tna, BT
VT^§. lb. IV, 3 ; Me'il. II, 9 'a "ft SPUi b3 whatever may
become permitted through a certain act, e. g. the meal- 5PDI1,X aTG
m. (preced.) l)=h.bda, parable, witty
saying, riddle, comparison; by-word. Targ. Prov. 1, 6 (some
offeringby taking a handful for the altar. lb. Vnipia those
things which cause it to be available. lb. 10 b lb ttTir 131
ed. nxbna, corr. ace). Targ. 0. Deut. XXVHI, 37.— Targ.
'a Wlp-no is 3i">n I3is 'a a thing (sacrificial object) which
I Sam.XXIV.U (Bxt. X*bna, v. xbina). Targ. Num. XXIII.7;
by which made
s. end lax 'a the proverb says a. fr. 2) plausible
48, ; —
•"^""^i until the things
been offered on the altar.
which may become permitted (being prohibited only for
—Bets. 3
it is
b
'a lb W available have
131 a thing
reason, v. xbnax. Y. Yoma HI, end, 41 b iniimb '2 "Xsa
offered good reason for their doing so. Y. Keth. II, 2() (
'
the day). B. Mets. 53 a 'a lb 13"nzj 131 tvb mn it would be bot.— PL pbra, X'bra, ibna. Targ. Y. Deut. 1. c— Targ.
considered a thing which can be made fit (by redemp-
Prov. I, a. ifr— Snh. 38 b
1 ; ICH mn n^pl^SS l-'Xa '1 . . .
E. s. 34; a. fr.— to =r '3 reward. Ab. II, 16; a. fr.— 3TO1 '3
S"rQ,
T T*
v. xrrr.
T T
t sprinkling or smearing the blood (on the altar &c). E.
p t : -
Hash. 28 b ; a. fr.— Zeb. VIII, 10 73-iX '03 rz~X "JWO blood
requiring four applications mixed with &c. ; E. Hash. 1. c.
Dtl-jOS m., p/. bTcn'bna (b. h.; cns.cmp. crt) j?ro-
Y. Erub. X, end, 26 d ; Bab. 33~X ib. 100a . Ib. OffiSi '33 '
"- WUTi
:
sat in their tents and spoke words like sympathizers and ed. nana rr:r--3-x; Ms.M.'rrrro xrpronx, Ithpe!of'-,:p)
formed crowds like sympathizers, as we read (Prov. 1. c.) while his foot is still steaming (from bathing). V. x:"r~.
im im
.; Yalk. ib. 805. 7=--" -"TO (or zr'?r~z, sing.;
lb. '-= fcCrC, 1Z, \12 m.(^;cmp.xrr3. 3ll. tt.rmq) ;
cord,
iot en? r~ZZ) weeping and moving to tears like sym- strap. B. Bath. 89 a x:P"3 Eashb. (ed. P:P3, h. form) the
pathizers. cord of the scales. Men. 35 b top (ma) ifcrfa "', \o Tm
l
Krayo, arena, v.-*roi. '31 nOB Eashi (ed. •BO ; Ms. E. 2 'TO3) whenever it is
VnfVj that they may remain fresh (Maim.). Sabb. r'lTJH, v. x:rm.
XXIII, 5 (of a corpse) IT-"- '"--- Ar.-rro-r, 20/1) that I
it may be preserved. — 2) fo keep, to let (fruits) lie over. n«?113 f. (b. h.; ;":) 1) gift, present, donation; grant,
Tosef. Makhsh. 1. c, v. sup: a. — 3) to wait, tarry, postpone. privilege.Y. Peah III, 17 d bot. '31 'a TO XTi irx what . .
28 d bot.; a. e.
Pi. pPFa 1) to partake with delight, s. supra. — 2) to
sweeten, season. Tosef. Bets. Ill, 15 '31 ppnaa px you
"P^i"Z2 m.^ana. Y. Hag. I, 76 c Midr. Till, to Ps. ; must not (on the Holy Day) sweeten a mustard mixture
CXXVll' 'a nVi IBS fc6 neither a Bible teacher nor a by dipping a live coal into it; Sabb. 134 a Y. Bets.IV, 62 c ;
Mishnah teacher.— PI. "pJ^ra, N*_3^3na, IT*3 Y. Hag. . . . bot. Sabb. 90 a HTTp ptnab to season a dish. Ber. 5 a nba
I.e.; Midr. Till. I.e. p.3na(fr.'wa). Num.R.s.12 rWnWia; '31 PipFiaa salt seasons the meat; a. fr. —Trnsf. to pacify.
Lam. R. to 1,3 N*JSWJ. Y. Ab. Zar. II, 42 a top '31 pnab 3W KWl he knows how
to calm the great Ocean. Y. Meg. Ill, 74 a bot. (in a secret
D n 2PQT m. du. (b. h. ;
)Tm, cmp. S«na) loins. Nidd. 13 b letter) '31 Hpnab ISttJpm .... Ian Tamar still endures in
Pirke d'R. El. ch. XXXI tWD
TtW the girdle of the
'31
her bitterness (hostility), and we attempted to sweeten
loins of Elijah. Ib.ch.XXXtt^nan.v.W'i?. Snh.IX,2;a.e. her (by bribery), 'but the melter has refined in vain' (Jer.
Mishnahs.
Sn^priQ f. (bpPiI)=h. ribipBa, plummet. Targ.
"j«r,!2, *j3rQ, ?)Qpr.n.=h. y!52,Bashan,the country Job XXXVlll, 5. Targ. II Kings XXI, 13. — [Pes. 50 1
', v.
east of the Jordan, v. "jSnin. Targ. Num. XXI, 33. Targ. WT&fcna.]
I Chr. V, 12 (ed. Lag. 'in, Var. ed. Rahmer -j3nann='a Tan)
a. e.
5priD m. (bpp II) stumbling, offense. Targ. Is. VIII, 14
(ed. Wil.'bpna). Targ. Prov. XII, 13 (not 'pa; h. text
S3i"i2, pi. a*33na, v. p^jna.— [KJSSttg smoking, v. UJpia).— [Targ.Ps. CV, 37, read: xbpnab, v. Ppp II.]
w T
XXV, 13. Targ. Y. II Gen. XVIII, 17;' a. fr. — Sabb. 10 b ^r.5piTlC f. same, selling by weight. Pes. 50 -r rx *cr l, ,
fcOim 'a Ti^n the priestly portions from two oxen (Deut. 'a Ms. M. (ed. 'pipna) 'the earnings of his wife' means
XVIII, 3). Hull. 131 b Y. Snh. II, end, 20
.
fl
'a T'3 the when she goes around selling (wool) by weight (but does
twenty four priestly gifts, v. H3l!"p; a. fr. not refer to woven garments). — Pi?, "jbppa, v. preced.
prD (b. h.) 1) to be sweet, palatable. Ukts. 111,4 IS Mishnah) you cannot arrive at a decided answer, but you
sipina^a until they are made palatable (by pressing). Gen. must adopt either &c.
Yalk. Job 910 (ref. to Job XXIV, 20) ana fiai pnaUJ the
n
worm gnawed at them with delight; Gen.R. s.33 IprPaB
]
"iriD, Koh. R. to III, 9, v. *$ Af.
KD^na 865 mas
IHQnriG, Targ. Prov. VI, 30, v. nan, a. tan I ch. SPl^^rilG f. (yyr)) sustained version, a tradition the
objections to which have been met successfully, opp. XPTOS'iha.
Srj^lQnnD f. (anal, Pa/p. of 0*11) subject for self- Sabb. 121 b ; Pes. 99 b bot.
'31 "ja '3 Bashi (ed. only '3) flew off from, i. e. rejected the
J Nun, the fourteenth letter of the alphabet. It inter-
reason given by A.
changes with a q. v.; with b, q. v.; with 1, cmp. )"Ht a.
nil; D^3d a. "pntn; with " as preformative letter, cmp.a^i
nSD m., fl&C (b.h. ;«=h1to, v. Pft«) suited,becoming;
a. 2S2. — 3 frequently inserted, a) in place of Dagesh forte,
handsome. Tanh. B'shall.ll
f.
K39T*.
—
Nun emphaticum, as X^T^^^^T^i esP*
Succah; a. fr.—Ib.1,1, V.MjJ.— PI. DTSO, pi$3; MX3. Sifra
(ref. to Lev. XVIII, 26 CPX DniaUJi) '3 orx
",,
Ahare, end
epenthetic Nun between verb and suffix, e.g. X"2, Targ. "(13
*31D^IEim you are the proper persons to guard them (the
Gen. V, 2; a. fr.
laws of chastity), because you opened (were the first to
observe) them. Tanh.Mas'e4'DTpS<3 '3 on '3 nmimnVl's DM
3 as numeral letter, fifty, v. 'X.
they are handsome, and their garments are becoming,
S3T I, m2T = IK3X. Y.Ter.V,43 c bot. 'SI X3 ^1X1 1, too, they are suited to the land, and the land to them. Ned.
think so. Y. Ber. IV, beg. 7 a '331 mist* N31 and I gave a IX, 10 *y\ nbx. ',n 'a MftXn n^aa the daughters of Israel
beg. 2
(1
'=1 "jTaK "J3
Ma why do we say &c. a. fr. ;
Sifre Deut. 320 (ref. to Deut. XXXII, 19) 15 '3 ano ttaa
'3)1 because they are pleasing to him (he calling them
fcO II m. (also adverb) (b.h.; cmp. S3) \)hurried,half- sons and daughters), they are bold before him. Tosef. Sot.
done. Pes.41 a bot. SO 15SX if he ate it (the Passover lamb) II, 3 '3 rHb'P she will bear handsome children; Y. ib. Ill,
half-done. Ib b X3 JOKTl baa 13ffii is subject to the law (Ex. 18 d bot. a^53; a. fr. — Pri^W f. pi. (noun) beauties. Lam. E.
XII, 9) &c. Tosef. Mace. IV (III), 1, contrad. to "ft Men. to II, 2 (ref. to niX3, ib.) apS« Vltt YTpjO bs all the beauties
78 b N3 nara, v. W'jhj a. fr. — 2) slender, fine, brittle.— PL (excellent men) of Jacob. Yalk. Ex. 244 (ref. to irYOKl,
•p!*3; f. UNO. Tosef. Kel. B. Kam. II, 9 [read with B. S. Ex. XV, 2) 'al Vir Trta®! WWa *ihi» I will tell the ex-
to Kel. Ill, 2 :] p&OrTl iptairl (="pN3 '(fTl) if the vessels were cellencies and praises of &c; ib.VnattJI TTfltCfl "Q1X; Mekh.
heated but turned out brittle. B. Bath, 97 b (expl. niCQiS, B'shall., Shir., s. 3 VOX tTWOSa (corr. ace.) ; Yalk. Cant.
ib. VI, 2) nilSiaal niN3 thin, but lined with pitch; Tosef. 988 maittai W*ba, read Wi"<to v. :
>
^'3. Treat. Sof rim
ib. VI, 3. III, 13 '&& fitea mr*! speak much of his excellencies.
Lam. E. in trod, end, v. <"i3ip; a. fr.— MN3 (adv.) becomingly,
fcO III (b. h.) I pray, prithee. Yoma IV, 2; a. fr.—
well. Tosef. Yeb. VIII, 4, a. e. tfjmn '3 preaches well, '31
Ber. 9 a , a. e. '331 X3X S3 "px, v. ttttS^g,
D^pa and acts in conformity (with his words).
(corr. ace.).— B.
1. note); Arakh. 25 a ^3^53; Yalk. Lev* 677
Kam. 61 b top, v. X3JX2.
mW m., nTifcC
T
f. (b.h.; preced. wds.)beautiful. Naz.
Bab. ed. HN3) I will be
1, 1 '3 Stnx Y. ed (Mish. ed.. IT] 3;
off and fell (at a distance from the body). Ned. 16 a nin and I proved worthy in the desert; a. fr.
:
K0W3 8G6
the real parent; Tosaf. a. Ar. '3 mi and one dog v. Ruth ;
to Job XXIV,
intercourse; to commit adultery. Lev. R. s.23
15) [read:] qxi3 SorTO *a b3U laxn
(ref.
l6ffl
ni&o, v. p«t C]X13 X1p3 WW3 C)X13 '*BX 0X13 X1p3 1E133 do not say, he
only who is unchaste with his body is called a noef,
"S3, JlSD (b. h.; crap. Wis) to be becoming, handsome. f. nsxis adulteress. Ib. Num. R. s. 9 ; Tanh. Naso 4; a. fr.
a
thyself before him &c. R. Hash. 26 rT^SW; ?n XB1H a the lewd men became numerous, the proceedings against
sinner must not adorn himself (when appearing before the b
the faithless woman (MB10) were abolished. Shebu. 47
Lord to ask forgiveness). Gen. R. s. 6 (play on hl^S) DiilO 1
r X33 mx 3pi3> Ms. M. a. Rashi (ed. 0X13) he who follows
(
bxillJia tvittSPM (not nxsn^) they (the goverments) adorn (to procure prostitutes for him); a.
up the voluptuous fr.
the parents insult him, the Lord will &c. Yalk. Deut. 945 ;
DS^I to speak, v. BW. did Pharaoh threaten to do; Yalk. Ex. 249. Mekh. 1. c;
Yalk. Ex. 250 '31 1HX '3331 1313> rm stood threatening at
OCym. (b. h.; "JOK) faithful, trustworthy. Ber. 60 a , the palace &c. ; a. e.
v. XSili; a. fr.— Esp. neeman, one who can be relied upon Hithpa. yxsnn to be insulted. Midr. Till, to Ps. LXXIV,
in matters of tithes and T'rumah; cmp. 13n. Dem.II, 2; end B;i~3 VX3ri3l BirWBC VtMCa t\9S9 do it for the sake . .
Tosef. ib. II, 2 '31 '3 P1T& *r£s bspan he who takes upon of thy great and holy Name which is blasphemed and
himself the obligations of a neeman, must give tithes both insulted in the world; a. e.
of what he eats &c. Dem. IV, 6; a. fr.— PI. 0*53X3, p33X3.
Tanh. Vayesheb v. PM3.
5 ; a. fr.
)*S»
^fcObO f. (a corrupt,from mamma, JJ.au- [at] cmp. Syr. ;
npSD I f.(b. h.; cmp. p3X) groaning. Ex. R. s. 1 (ref.
W3, P. Sm. 2387) mammy, aunty, old maid, slave. Sot. 42 b to Ex. II, 24) B^Vsnn TpX3 the groaning of the wounded.
(ref. to D"C3i"i lU^X, I Sam. XVII, 4 a. 23, with play onnilSB Ib. s. 6 ; a. e. —Esp. n'akah {prayer in distress), one of the
ib., as if ni"p nxa) '3 Xini *BS nxa 13 (Rashi <*ttl . . . expressions for prayer. Lam. R. introd. (R. Hanina);
'3 -ini; Yalk. Sam. 125 *X3X3 ITU; Ar. ed. Koh. s. v. p: Sifre Deut. 26; Deut. R. s. 2 ; a. e.
;
_
nJ^SD II, ISJ>r (nj>r SJ f. (v. preced. ; cmp. p32?)
Lev. R. s. 10, beg.; Yalk. Is. 307 ntBYUD '3 plain words of
"IpSO, Midr. Sam. ch. VII, v. "ip3 L to Haggai &c. (belonging to the twelve Minor Prophets);
a. e.— PI. *,W33. Targ. Ez. XIII, 14, sq.
SrpS2, N£« ch.=h. rip*: II. Sabb. 51 b .—Lam. R.
to I, I.TCTi (Twain 7) K*vrc>*pO snn Ar. (ed. son xpT 3X) KtTftTOD, v. mraa.
a blind camel.
SnS^D, v. nxws ch.
1&0, v.-..:i. k 31 JJT m. (b. h.; 333, cmp. 3^3) hollow; trnsf. hungry.
SrS * T
f. (rnx) T/omf,] scow of a wound, cicatrix (cmp. B. Bath. 12 b (homiletic interpret, of Job XI, 12).
nrrx ll)T B. Kam. 85 d , v. xr-312 (Ar. xrr3; ed. nrx:).
?"Q; m. (TT3) distributor (of royal largessesJ.eAte/". Cant.
S*J eggs of lice, Var. in Ar. for X22X II. R. to "VII, 7 (ref. to -m3T33, Dan. V, 17) man '3 naboz
C"p"22, v. Oip^"".
mi T T
v. "2: I. S J*\22 m. (1j33) mean person, scamp. —PI. fbbX Y.
Mace. I, end, 31 b ftrt "jSW p» '3 W* there are plenty of
—- (b. h.) 1) pr. n. pi. Nebo^ a town un the eastern mean persons who see their fellowmen taken out for
side ot the Jordan. Sot. 13 b (identifying '3 with "03 -in).
execution (through false testimony) and say nothing
— 2) '2 "in Mount Nebo in Moab. lb. ; a. e. — 3) Nebo, name (although they could save them).
of an Assyro-Baby Ionian deity. Snh. 63 b ; a. e. — [Tosef.
Pes. II (III;, 20 p-n ':, rn % v. f^tia] TGw, b'FI '2 (HE!) pr.n.pl. {Kfar) Nibbur Hayil,
v. next w.
I iwviZ - f. (b. h. ; X23) prophecy, inspiration. Y. Hor.
Ill, 48 b bot. (ref. to Zech. Ill, 8) '2 x'rx rfz }"* mofeth &H123I KW'jflKS "?, '3 "S3 pr. n. pi. K'far
means prophetic gift. Cant. R. to III, 4 Gen. R. s. 44, v. ; Xibburaya (prob.=Nimrin, near Tiberias, v. Hildesh. Beitr.
fiBttfT. Koh. R. to I, 1 "|"ir- "~X"22 n';r: their prophecy p. 60, note 444), mentioned as the home of one R. Judah
went b}- their own names ('the words of '). B. Bath. 12 a — and one R. Jacob. Meg. 18 a b"Tl TC3 UTX b"JO '3 '= r-N
from the da}- of the destruction of the Temple '3 n;:;"2 Ms. M. (ed. 3 for 3) of K'far Nibburaya, and some say, of
'331 prophetic inspiration was takenawayfrom the prophets Nibbur Hayil; Keth. 65 a SOT33 (corr. ace). Gen. R. s. 7,
and given to &c. Y. Mace. II, 31 d bot.; Yalk. Ps. 702 tVi«8 beg. X-n33 "1S3 fix (corr. ace.) Koh. R. to VII, 23 Tanh.
"
1
; ;
'z' '2; prophecy was asked, what is the sinner's punish- Huck. 6; Pesik. R. s. 14 "p^ES '3; ib. ^40313 3pr"> (read:
ment?— Meg. 14" ~"~N"2 ~Z"~t: thy prophecy has come
1
*«9aa or tVTKBi) Pesik. Par., p. 35 h p-n33, (corr. ace.)
;
true. lb. -prx*22 ]z~- where is thy prophecy? Ib. nS"fb Num. R. s. 19 '313 ed. Wil.; Yalk. Gen. 11 "niBX '3 (corr.
PPtitca cjtsa xn-> n3 rs-b 'to know' (Ex. n,4) to know ace); Y. Yeb. H,4a top »WPBB; Y. Kidd. Ill, 64d bot.—
what will be the end of her prophecy a. v.fr.— PI. nwo:. ; 1 Y. Ber. IX, beg. 12 H ; Midrl Till, to Ps. XIX, 1 B fttO ed.
— — ;
Bub. (oth. ed. SfhatS, corr. ace). Y. Bice. Ill, 65 d top. 3p2>i
fcT^E^ m. (preced.) Nabataean. Y.Shebi. VI,36 b bot.
'S '3 UTX; Midr. Sam. ch. VII (not '33).
(transl. Wlpn, Gen.XV, 19); Y. Kidd. I,61 d top n^-j3_3;
SI 122 (b.h.) pr.n.m. Naboth, a citizen of Jezreel. Snh.
Gen. R. s. 44 end
H*ffij ;
(B. Bath. 56 a XninB3, hWTipi?,
102 b
, a. e. (ref. to I Kings XXII, 22) '3 bll3 inil the spirit
transl. 'VpH, Gen. 1. c; v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 6). — V.
of (the murdered) Naboth. Shebu.85 b '31 '32...
113113, 60;nE3.
rvratU b3
all names (Elohim) mentioned in connection with
the
"Q3 I, i~QD (cmp. next w.), Pi. nap? to blow ablaze.
Naboth (I Kings XXI, 10; 13) are sacred (meaning God).
Tosef. B. Kam/vi, 22 B. Kam. ;
'
60 a v. nab.
,
' ' T T
NrfiDD, v. ananas.
"DO II, #22 (b. h.; cmp. 533) to burst forth, blew.
SSD2, HBDD f. (—tab), v. nb) present, largess.
Nif. Xap3 to be inspired, to prophesy. Snh. 39 b ... X3"1
Dan.II,6;'a.e.—JP/.-,aTa3. Targ. Jer.XL,5 (ed.Wil. "jST??). 'albs fcOS^lletObadiah come ...and prophesy against &c;
— xrv^3T33 (fr. rP3T33), constr. n^at33. Targ. Y. Deut. a. e.
XXIII, 24.— [Dan. V, 17, v. T133.] Eithpa. X33rn, Nithpa. fcOMina same. Ex. R. s. 4 . . . rraa
'al '31nixasnnb xbia how much Jeremiah desired not to
U22 (b. h.) to bark. Y. Yoma VUI, 45 b top (of the be a prophet, and yet he prophesied against his will. Sot.
mad dog) la tK&atn and the dogs bark at him;
"pr:313 12 b nnSTo xbw nxasro she prophesied unwittingly. lb.
ib. 'al n313 son C]X he barks, too, but his voice is not '31 nsw nxasna she prophesied but did not know what
audible; Bab. ib. 83 b . Ex. R. s. 20, end; a. e. she prophesied. Meg. 14 a 'al DUb lX33n3 D^S3"1X forty- . . .
poured
out like water and illumines the house. 2) (cmp. Y^SK} — '31 '3 lxb Dan 1I3X was a scholar never
a prophet? Ib. C3n
fr. -pS) to look. Yalk. Gen. 76 (ref. to Gen.XV, 5) 133(1 f"tt
'3a Sp*T5> a scholar is superior to a prophet. Meg. 15 a ; a.
'31(Gen.R.s.44rra3rtq. v.). Pesik.R.s.21 [read:] psip^xn v. fr.— PI. aW33, pX"n?. Sot. IX, 12 D'AWtl '3 the early
prophets (of the first Temple). Lev. R. s. 1, beg., v. T'Z.
P»a^ IffTi "Q . .. na D-q">aa ...liria thousand people look
Pes. 66 a -,n '3 133 "p '3 pX EX if they (the Israelites) are no
at a portrait, every one says, it is looking at me. Ib. Bianbl
'anirxi ItW baa and for the Lord to look at every one prophets, yet they are sons of prophets (they will find
of the Israelites and say &c. Ib. ibxa B^S ~jb !"ia why
what is right intuitively); Y. Sabb. XIX, 17 a top. Lev.
R. 1. c; Gen. R. s. 74 bxiSP ""SOaS Israelitish prophets '3
dost thou look up to those men?; a. fr. ;
U22 I (b. h.) pi. n. m. Nebat, father of Joroboam I. of the Pentateuch on the Prophets or the Hagiographa,
Snh. 101* v. t»aa. Ber. 35 b ; a. fr. but not the Prophets &c. B. Bath. 14 b '3 bttJ pID the order
of the books of Prophets; a. fr. Fem. nx h 33. Pes. 9 b "W
132-1 II Nebat, an Arabic settlement south-east of '31 '3 nibin is the weasel (huldah) a prophetess to know
Palestine (v. Sm. Bibl. Diet. s. v. Nebayoth). Targ. Is. LX, 7
&c.? Deut. R. s. 6; a. fr.— PI. nix^S. Meg. 14 a ; a. e.
(ed. Lag. a. oth. tWQD). Targ. Y. Num. XI, 22. Targ. Ez.
XXVII, 21 (h. text -np).
^^3, ^^"33 ch. same; constr. la?, ta3. Targ. Jud.
; — —
n*"*? 869 *
VI,8. Targ. Gen. XX, 7 (0. Ms. II STJ33). Targ.Dent. XVIII,
ZJ
- (b. h. ; cmp. ti52) to fade, shrivel, decay. Y. R.
20; a. v. fr.— Gitt. 57 lj
'31 ',3 run '2 there was a prophet
Hash. 1, 56 d bot. tett fi'rcn , v. 3*12 IIL Erub. 54 a 7*313 ISoM,
among us who rebuked us &c. ; Lam. R. to II, 2 SOUS '3
v. nbrt. Gen. R. s. 53 (ref. to Is. XL, 7) ^1 .. Tvxn 122^
W a prophet priest was ours &c. ; a. e. — P/. ""X":, X'SOSS; '31 IS*^ Abimelech's grass is dried up and his flower has
1
.
Num. XI, 29; a. fr. Kidd. 49 a TH^U the Books of the — faded, but &c; a. e. V. 115213. —
Prophets, v. pieced. — Fern. xrX"23, XrX"23. Targ. Ex.
PL 523 1) to cause fading; to ruin, deface; to disgrace.
Meg. 15 a W
':-... 1ott» (Wpo) 5o (v. Kabh. I>. S. a. 1. v. -03). Y. Sabb. IX, ll' Y. Ab. Zar. Ill, 43 a bot. IttXX1
;
note) wherever the name of a person and that of his *i!~i~3S3! treat him (the idol) like excrements, make him
father are mentioned in connection with prophecy, it is abominable (change his name cacophemistically). Cant.
sure that he was a prophet and the son of a prophet. Snh. R. to V, 16 --32 *3^r rx ':2:3 he begrimes himself by
A --—.--v nsn ITO "fz for what merit was Obadiah working in clay. lb. '31 "5237! 5X do not degrade j-ourselves
granted the gift of prophecy?— Bekh.45 a 11213 Lfl'f'l/l H3SP by any evil thing (ref. to Lev. XI, 43 XIX, 28) Num. R. ; ;
'3they made their verdicts like those of prophecy, i. e. s. 10, beg. Ib.(ed. Amst.p. 24Ob)iTa30 r5333~ whoneglects
they gave no reasons for their opinions. B. Bath. 13*; her appearance, opp. PQVpB. Ber. 63 b (ref. to Prov. XXX,
Erub.6o'"3 *U*1 Vb» 13* fX These are prophetic verdicts, 32 n'~33) '31 to 13S3 5333!-; 53 he who lowers himself
i. e. obviously well-estahlished traditions; a. e. (exposes his ignorance) for the sake of learning, shall
finally be raised; Midr.Prov. to ch.XXX '3- 523 3X; Gen.
Nr"S'33, xetps? ch same - - tat s- °- Ex xi ^, 31-
R. s. 81 "3^" -';z: 3X; Ab. d'R. N. ch.XI D1X 3233 3X
r--~: ed. Berl. (oth. ed. n^ai, Y. 'rW033). Targ. Prov. '31 133£~ if a man makes himself look offensive (through
XXXI, l. Targ. Y. II Num. XXIV, 15; 21 (Y. I TKM); v. privations) be. — Midr. Prov. 1. c. (ref. to Prov. 1. c.) "pi It
xrx^:. -B.Bath, 15 h/ 3l!irr:;sx-23 ~p _ r their main proph- '31yvSl BB =3:'; TtCMO (not 3>333)) that means the Greeks
ffl
ecy was directed to &c; ib.OTnti#D3. Meg.l5 a rrr\x-2:3 who decreed to disgrace Israel's women a. fr. ""Z ". to ;
the prophetic book of Malachi. Keth. 8 b a. e.— 2) (denom. of (1323) to make an animal
;
S* t 2!, r
v. x^z:.
Tosef. ib. V (VI), 3 ; a. e.
• : T * :
N t —t «',
:
v. next w. j2,2 ch. same, to be soiled. Y. Kil. IX, 32* bot. xVi
T3X3 Vr?^"? that his garments may not be soiled.
n"— 2, i~i"23 T
f. (X23) sproutings, leaves and floivers. Pa. 523 to disgrace, make vile. Targ. Am. VI, 8. Targ.
Ab. Zanill, 8 (48'') '31 f&S mOT ':~r -:£3 Y. a. Bab. Nah. Ill, 6; a. e.
ed. (Mish. rr*33n, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 6) beeause the
foliage of the Asherah drops on them &c, v. JO?.. lb. 48 b Jj.m I (b. h.) pr. n. m. Nabal the Carmelite. Gen. R.
'31 '33 ~'-r 3'3 H3 the benefit conferred upon a plant by s. 85. Koh. R. to VII, 1, end ; a. fr.
(cithern) are the same, with the only difference of more '31 1 lUJStt) ^33 'a disgraced people', for they did disgrace-
strings (for the former). lb. '31 yo5n KlrTO Via Kip3 m\ ful things, as it is said (Ps. LXXIX, 2), they made 'the
v. l^lsll; 'SI on account of the un-
HdS> irxilJ 115> VJ disgraced' of thy people food &c. (taking rfcaa as if from
tanned skin and the larger number of strings it shames &c. ST333).— 2) destruction. Gen. R. s. 38; Yalk. ib. 62 (play
Arakh. II, 6 '31 '53 di^lX THI S<b they (the Levite boys) onYlVayj, Gen. XI, 7) '3 (BftBS) MOS» dnBlDd through
sang without accompaniment of nebel or kinnor; ib. 13
'
their own lips I shall bring destruction upon them.
'SI linb '31 fcOtf'ab does this intimate that nebel and
rfi53D (b. h. preced. wds.) obscenity, levity. Sabb.
kinnor are not the same?; a. e. 3) a leather wind-in- — 33 a ilB '3
f.
obscene
;
because the kinnor of the future will have numerous NTuIG, fcCS?, '"?3 ch.=h.Hb33. Targ.O.Deut. XXI,
strings (ten strings), and its sound will be loud like that 23 !T>n^33" ed. Berl. (oth. ed. '>33; Y. ITOWtt nbd3) his
of the nebel, it is called nebel— PI. &*&??• lb. II, 3. Kel.
corpse. Targ. Lev. XXII, 8 (some ed.X3">3:); a. fr.— B.Bath.
XV, 6 mirn "»baj the instruments for secular music; '3
1 1
a
; Pes. 1 13 a (prov.) '31 KplUJd '3 :;HtfB (UJItfS) flay a carcass
^b 1» those of the Levites (in the Temple), lb. XXIV, in the street and earn a living, and say not, I am a noble
14, v. nnsap. priest.; a. fr.— PL !*r^33. Ib. '33 -JlEfi, v. T^Sn.— [Targ.
Job V, 16 Nnb-DS ed. Lag., Ms. W^ili, read with ed. Wil.
J^Z, \&J22, "0 I ch. same, 1) lyre, nebel. Targ. Is.
:
J
V,12r'Targ. 0. Gen. IV, 21; a. e.—PI. T>33, srta?, "'i. t : v :
Targ. I Sam. X, 5. Targ. Is. XXII, 24; a. e.— 2) (from its 3?Z12 (b. h.; cmp.X33 a. 2>3"3) \)to burst forth; to flow,
shape, cmp. Sm. Diet. Ant. s.v. Tela, Amer. ed. 1858, p. 955, gush. Ned. 41 b ?313n "psa, a bubbling spring, v. dTWa.
explaining pecten and jug am) the upright loom. Y. Kil. 2) to give forth, utter. Midr. Till, to Ps. XVI '31 rtisyo Ttn
IX, 32 a top 'Dl laJPl '3 rrjpid Istbl not to put up a loom and they (the kidneys) poured forth wisdom &c; ib.
for wool in front of a loom for linen, on account of the to Ps. I; Gen. R. s. 61, beg.; Tanh. Vayigg. 11 -prdis mi
fringes (which may become mixed). '31; a. e.
of figs. Targ.Jer.VIII,13. Targ! Is. XXXIV, 4.— PI. ^33, does not spoil and cause to ferment the ointment of
'i3. Gen. R. s. 49 '3 Wpmi Nbx d3^i* WT1 d^lS Wl the apothecary, but by a single sin which one commits &c.
Iwished, they were righteous, but they are only righteous (ib. IX, Ik).— 2) to utter (speech). Ib. d">131 d^Sa they
men of an inferior quality (cmp. <"!JB); Yalk. ib. 83 (some utter words (of praise).
ed. ^3^3).
V22 ch. same. Targ. Y. Gen. XXVI, 21 ; a. e.— Part.
&C32,
T •• t
v. &ttn*>33.
Ml ?i33. Targ. Prov. XVIII, 4.— [Targ. Job VI, 10 5*060 some
ed., read: SWSO, v. ?12 a. »».]
n^3D, "Ow f. (b.h.; l>23) carrion, an animal that has
Af. 231* as preced. Hif. Targ. Prov. I, 23. Ib. XV, 28
died a natural death. Gen. R. end '3H IfiX dlfib greedy s. 81,
a. fr.— Taan. 25 b (first time in Hebr. Diet.) -p**a J>2K (Ms.
for carrion. Ukts. Ill, 3 flXEd rrara nbs3 the carcass of M. first time ^X) let thy waters spring forth. B.Bath.l51
b
an unclean animal; a. fr. Esp. (ritual) an animal not — Keth. 91 a Sal 3J2a i6l XlbtQ 13*3 M^fia we shall strike
;
slaughtered according to the ritual rules (v. rt&lfl, ^ai^ you with the thorn which makes no blood flow (i. e. ex-
&c). Hull. II, 4 '3 nniiTnm ttbdSSU: bo whatever has be-
communication). Sabb.88 a Xal ffWOJM "JS? Xpl blood
come through faulty slaughtering, is called n'belah,
unfit
burst forth from his fingers.
b
contrad. to nc-'O. Ab.Zar. 67 sq. '=1 '3 tvHip Ijfc Itnklrl *a
that which ia fit for the stranger (Deut. XIV, 21) is called H2QD, name of & plant (vStco?). Y. Ned. VII, beg.,
n'belah (the eating of which is a punishable offence), 40 b ,
[pro'b. to be read: 1*13)33].
PI. rvib33, r/iVo?. Ib. Shek. VII, 3 '3 Di"CPK if found cut
;
!"D22 f. (b. h.; V»33 ) 1) meanness, obscenity. Treat. corresponding to) fine woolen garments, he showed him
r
Der. Er. ch. II '3 "Haid those talking obscenely. Ib. Ilil
b
the bark of a young palm-shoot. Ib. 90 '3 s6p"H (ed. in
a
iniL'X 33? '33 who lives with his wife in an obscene manner; &ON33) a palm which has only one covering Erub. 58 ;
a e .— PI.
. Pfib33. Ex. R. s. 24 (ref. to Deut. XXXII, 6) OS (expl. xb^ilS) 'a im K^p^l (a rope made of fibres of) a
— —
anas 871 iy.
pile of dried bark, Ave apprehend internal injury (v.p*S"~). Gen. VIII. 13 ; a. e.— Y. Sabb. V, beg. 7
b
*1 JW* 3^52 tO
when it is dry, they name it Egyptian bean; Y. Kil. VUI,
srz:, v. nt-s:.
31 c . — Y. Gitt. VII, end, 49 a Xin2 V\ the canal dried up.
n="i3) wash-pond. M. Kat. Ib. '31 35^1 that the canal may dry up; a. e.
r0")22 f. (v. I, 6, expl.
a
b ;
80 d Pa. 3"<52 to dry, tcipe. B. Mets. 24 'Si SW353 'SI wiped
ib. 8 'r -V, v. X~" ; Y. ib. I, . B. Bath. U, 1 -,-=31= 1;
(his hands) on his neighbor's cloak a. e. Part. pass.-".*: ;
;
a. fr.
f. X3523 parched. Targ. Y. Num. XI, 6.
top bayuo a. s-":~. Hif. T^Jl (denom. of -152) to show; to announce, tell; to
testify. Tanh. Tsav 13 "flnvb r.-"-l nr -1 from there . . .
X7™22, '22 cb. (dial, for '»ba3,fr.«fea; cmp.Targ. Miriam learned it and told Aaron. Ib. Uf'I'IU bzrrs T^ja
Zepb.1, 12) same, lamp, candle. Targ.Zeph.1, 12.-Y.Yoma '31 this shows (intimates) that all agreed as to her beauty.
III, 41 a v. ,
IE-"-.- Snh. IV, 5 '31 TnVftt TWli to show the greatness &c.
b
Ib. 44 , a. e. (ref. to Lev. V, 1) T%Ofl Wl IS^X zYm 'WO "pO
S7H22, Yalk. Deut. 874, v. KtW=n II.
after he has once he cannot again testify, i. e.
testified,
a
is not permitted to retract; a. v. fr.— [Pes. 87 v. 15X.]— ,
S2S32,
T TT
v. x:5x:.
TT T
V. T>3-a.
Z.Z2 m. dry soil. Tosef. B. Earn. next w.) Hof. lain to be told, proclaimed. Yalk. Koh. 989 'MB
(b. b.; v. 1)
Yin," IB.— 2) south (in Talm. 3111).— 3) pr.n.pl. Negeb, in ^i"Oz\ Sis the word which has been proclaimed at Sinai a. e. ;
Gen. II, 18) i~152-2 M31 X2> ttSSD ?"!3T if he is favored, she
2^2 (cmp. 35) [to have a crust,] to be dry. Ab.Zar. V. 3 will be corresponding to (in harmony with) him, if not,
(69
a
) aia" , l . . . dtnarHD '*m
O as much time as would be she will oppose him (Rashi: 'she will be a lash to him', v.
required for a person to bore a hole (uncork), and close K152 II); Pirke'd'R.El.ch.XII FOR 3X V1S& xbx 1152= r"X
it up, and (for the sealing clay) to get dry; ib. nWtt *B UrwA in525 'W& 3X1 T8 "" rYttn read not Wnegdo, but
aWTfl ... (HfWfrl rx) to open the jug and close it up again, Vnagg'do if he is favored, she will be a help to him, if not,
;
ed. Lag. (ed. Wil. fTa* h. text WOT"). Targ. Y. Deut. XVII,
1
;
P352- he scours it; ib. 74 'SI )^':\~ ~~= wherewith does '31 TTO 115 draw (take me away from here), this man does
1
'
a. f r. Part. pass. z\»Vn dry, parched, sapless, bare of. Tern. '; -n 115 lead the way, show it to me. Bekh. 44 b 1155
16 a (play on 355n Josh. XV, 19) '=1 ban 'VOB tTO a house-
X -"V5 frt they spread for him (held up between him and
hold bare of all that is good; Yalk. Josh. 27 131 '2~n 31X the people) a cloak. Erub. 94 .13 m55 . . 'AfpO take a
a
a man bare &c. cloak and spread it (as a partition); a. v. fr. Ab. 1, 13 —
Hif. 3"3>2n 1) same, v. supra. — 2) (denom. of 352) to go ^1 X"aS) 152 he who stretches his fame (is ambitious), will
south.Erub. 53 b (in an enigmatic speech) tWSntxfa 'ill lose his name.—2) to lash, v. Pa.— 3) to guide, rule. Targ.
and went south to the great scholar (v. rrr:"), Ruth I, 1 (h. text »£r). — grow long; to be drawn,
4) to
Nithpa. 35.:r: to be dried up. SifraB'huck. ch.I fi352r:" follow after; to flow. Targ. Job XXI, 33 (h. text ym&).
y~N~ the ground was dried up; Lev. R. 8. 35. Targ. Jer. VI, 4 (h. tex n»^). Targ. Cant. 1, 4 '=1 X2152 we
110*
— 2
"TM 872 mm
are drawn after &c. Targ. Deut. XXXIII, 13; 22; a. fr. is far off.— 2) [lead,] path, pass.— PL *pl33, '33. Targ. Is.
(v.133).— B. Bath. 91 b '31 fctain T\33 a line of honey HW XLI, 18; a. e —Targ. Y. Ex. XIV, narrows 3 '31 11133 his
flowed over both his arms; Y.Peah VII, 20 a bot. '31 Stba '31 in the desert.
—
"p?ai'3(or 8ub.-p* ai)rim--cowses(corresp. i
and honey flowed as much as my hands could hold; a.e. to b. h. D^a ^3i). Targ.Is.XLIV, 4. Ib.LIII,2. Targ. Jer.
Part. pass. l n 33 stretched, fainting (v. Wipe.). Targ. Ps. IV, 11 (h. textDTOD). Ib.XVII,8 "p1313 ed. Lag. (ed. Wil.
LXXXVIII, 16.— Sabb. 152», v. Wipe. "p15_3; h. text ^V). Targ. Ez. XXXI, 3 (ed. Lag. '3p3; h.
Pa. 133 (denom. of 1X133 II) to lash, punish. Targ. Cant. text dT'as).
18. — 2) v. preced.
Af. I h a3it to declare liable to lashes. Kidd. I.e.; Yeb. fc^JD, "0 II cmp. St3U5a) leather-strap, lash;
(133;
52 a , a. e. 21 Bab decreed punishment for
'31 (b?) 1*i33a
trnsf. lashing, punishment. Yoma 23 a '3 a-'ipE (Ms. M.
him who &c. Kidd. I.e. 31 Stb (read: 1->33B, as) IWa StllB) p'ki'a (Shek. V, 1) means lashing. Pes. 52 a "p3aa
Yeb. 1. c. '31 "0St (not ",3iBB; Bashi a.Ms.O.'-l3St; Ms.M.St1133St 13aa)
Wipe, i^asr&t, lasnst, T^^K, IMpa.iasniS! l ) to be drawn, to a vote must be taken on the lashing of a scholar; ib.Nri153St.
extend; torun. Targ.Is.XXXIV.il. Targ. Y.Num.XXV,8. Shebu. 4l a rT«*M "jat ^ai 15? until the time comes when
Targ. Y.Gen.XLV,19. Targ.Is.XLIV, 3;a.e.-2)tospread, he is to be lashed (for not heeding the excommunication).
invade. Targ. I Sam. XXVII, 10 (h.text BU5S); a. e.— 3) to
be withdrawn. Targ. Josh. IV, 1 8 a. e. 4) [to stretch one's ; — SN~JU pr. n. m. N'gada (Long). Lev. B. s. 25; (Gen.
self,] to faint, fall aioay, die (h. S]ft). Targ. Gen. XXV, 8; B. s. 4V StlpB).
to be dead), and when he came to&c.;B.Bath.lO b Snh. 39 a . iS~iw m. (133) 1) (v. St^33 1) one ivho tracks a vessel. —
nan&tl he became faint and sighed; Sabb. 152 a fJ0
'St PL 1153. B. Mets. 107 b v. StBn3. Sot. 48 a,31 SOat the songs
,
n:nW.-5) to be lashed. Mace. ll a Pes. 113 b TUS^a, v. ; of the draggers. Snh. 106 a bot., v. "at.— 2) leader, v. St1l33.
TiaiT.— [Kidd. 12 b
TWftJ, v. supra.]
NFHiU f. l)(collect.noun;v.Nli33)feaders of the flock.
ijj m. (b. h.; 133) Jiwe, direction; prep. % mostly '33 Y. Kidd. I, 60 b top; (Y. B. Kam.X,' end, 7 C a. , e. KlD^n
towards, opposite, corresponding to. Sifra Tsav, Milluim, Stni).— 2) lashing, v. Stl53 II.
Par.l rtt '3 riT .. 311 ^33 K>T1 has not the Scripture, before
this, paired the two rams, one to correspond with the PTJO (b. h.) to burst forth; to be bright, shine. V. FP?
responding direction, but in the ground. Mekh. Yithro, to look over; to revise a manuscript, to correct, restore
Bahod , s. 1 1 (ref. to Ex. XX, 24) 113_33 'alav means in a (when faded). Ber. 13 a GpaHb St11p3 when he reads for
certain direction opposite the altar (not on top of it). Ber. the sake of revising. Y. Sabb. VII, 10 b bot. (in a misplaced
10 a "past in '33 . . iron with reference to whom did David passage) '31 tl^ilb 13 nwft tax (not m3ttb) if (he carries
compose these five psalms beginning with bar'khi nafshi? ink) for the purpose of correcting, (he is guilty when
lb. 26 b "pTian '33 corresponding to the daily offerings. carrying) enough to correct one letter. Keth. 106 a i^aa
Num. B. s. 18 '31 '33 Stbst 131533 WW Wl nplbnatt this '31 D^IEO the official revisers of Biblical manuscripts;
rebellion not directed against us but against &c;
is a. Y. Shek. IV, 48 a top rTTOM ISO "Tnaa (Bab. ed. Var.
v. fr.—Yeb. 63 a (ref. to Gen. 11,18) 11333 M3t s6 .. rttY if KITS, v. Babb. D. S. a. I. note) the revisers of the Temple
he is favored, she will be his help, be
if not, she will manuscript. M. Kat. 111,4 (18 b ) "'Sit nnst nist "ftytoa "pit
against him; ib. il3"\33 "^Ipl 11533 3*VD (missing inYalk. mta'rt i1S02 Ms. M. (ed. Slt3> 1B03, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1.
Gen. 23) following the writing we may read Wnagg'do (op- note) we dare not (during the festive week) correct (restore)
posing him, v. 153), but the Massoretic reading is k'negdo one letter even in the Temple books (ed. in the manu-
(corresponding to him); Gen.B.s.17 11333 1*6 DStl 1t3> rot; script named after Ezra). Meg. II, 2 iHi^Jai !"iT! if he . .
Pirke d'B. El. ch. XII, v. 133. — 'ra at a distance. Num. recited the Book of Esther Avhile he was writing or teach-
B. s. 2 (ref. to Num.11, 2) '3a Irta what distance is meant ing or correcting it ; a. fr. —Part. pass. Praia revised, cor-
a 'a
1SD3 Ifiiab 8inxiB3 when thou teachest
by minneged?. Ib. '31 '3a '3a "^sbiwe draw an analogy rect. Pes. 11 . .
between minneged (Num. 1. c.) and minneged (Gen. XXI, thy son, teach him from a corrected book. Keth. 19 b ISO
16) &c; Gen. B. s. 53 133B 133 13lab Nil. 'a 13 n StU3 an unrevised Bible manuscript.
5Sm4J, -Jj, jJID m. (133) 1) prolongation, length, rUZl ch. 1) same, to be bright, shine. Yoma 28 b "ttrl 1st
distance. Targ. Ps. XXI, 5 (ed. Lag. 'a*>3 h. texfpst). Targ. Mia mb M. fetfJJS, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note) if that
'3 (Ms.
Prov.III,16(ed.Lag. S0313 q.v.); a.fr.— Gen. B. s. 11 PSt '3b is so (that it was the time for working men to go to their
"6 1-133 thou leadest me to a distant place ; i. e. thy evidence labors), it must have been bright day-light (sunrise). M.
—
Kfitt 873 "»
Kat. I6 b W&TO
13 ^ "i"ittJ^ -|i "3 &6 (or *W«^ not '3>1 (ed. Berl. '^33^ = 'a3&6; cmp. Nold. Mand. Gramm.
rT^WQ, Rabb. D. 8. a. 1. note; Ms. M. &oriD a. differ,
v. p. 166, note; h. text D"T3Xb). lb. X, 5 ni53 ed. Berl. (oth.
version; ed. Ven. xrvSO, v. M33) is it (the case you have ed. r>133; h. text "»}*). Targ. Is. LXVI, 19; a. fr.
been thinking of) not yet clear to you? Attend, sir, now
to my case — ?N - LU m. (prob. aBabylonian corrupt, of unguentum;
(differ, interpret, in Rashi). 2) (denom. of
-n;:) to get dark, to be belated. Taan. 24 a '31 Ifib '3 night cmp. '"COISS for "il-D^X) a spiced drink (v. Sm. Ant. s. v.
set in, and no food was brought to them. lb. SOf"i331 iJXri Vinum); [Ar. a cup]. Ab. Zar. 38 b i6m '3 a spiced drink
(differ, in Ms. M.) the reason why I am late. Sabb. 10* of sour wine.
"ibsVi 'a the time for the eveDing prayer arrived (Rashi:
"]]*& v. 11133.
he delayed).— [Y. Dem. II, 22 c ym&, read: yW?.]
Af. PI5N to dwell until late. Nidd.65 b '=1 laa rTQ "fttHM
Var. (v. rra) they protract their negotiations before
NPTUJ,
T T - :
constr. ni133,
- :-'
v. ',1133.
' t:-
the}' sign.
J M2, A J m. (bn)
*
a complainant in a case of robbery.
CM Sf T Jjm. (preced.) I) light, morning. Dan.VI,
ujj, Shebu. VII, 1; a. fr.
20. — PL^n-^ Pes. 2 a »J30 '3 'S T'Op the first im- . .
pression was that he who explained lix (Mish. I, 1) by H1JG (b. h.) to break forth (v. r^a); to gore, butt, fight.
naghe meant really light (morning).— 2) (cmp. lix) the B. Kam. V, 1 '21 '3113 "fill? if an ox gored a cow, and her
breaking in of the night, the beginning of the calendar embryo is found (dead) by her side. lb. PTH33 NbtfJ 13? 3X
JS ) W- ch. same,esp. ruler, judge. Targ. I Chr. XXVII, T"!J£ ch. same. Targ. O. Ex. XXI, 28 (ed. Vien. fi3? Af).
16. Targ. Jud. II, 18, sq. (ed. Wil. XT }?) a. e.—B. Kani.
1
;
—B. Kam. 47 a (11133
"O at the time he gored her; a. e.
52 a (prov.) jtrvrao lb top . . . rm-c Ms. M. (ed. wwi) N3"ip 'S to wage tear. Targ. Y. Gen. XXI, 10 (v. rna).—
when the shepherd is angry with his flock, he makes Part. pass. rp33 breaking through, flowing over. B. Bath.
the leader blind. — PI. V>T33, '153, 1**1133. Targ. Jud. II, 68 b Vjft imsp '31 Ms. M. (ed. ^^np; Rashb. na31; Ms. F.
16; 18 (ed. Wil. '^33). Targ. I Chr. XVII,' 6 ; a. fr. a. R. 1iT"pn331 in one w., Ar. 'pMSSI, corr. ace.) when
their outlet runs inside of the township (v. K^p, cmp.
S^ilJ m. lashing, v. X133 II. xrn3).-Trnsf. enough (cmp."n). M.Kat. 16 b ni-ia^na ... x?
"]3i xrnas ed. Ven. (v. Rashi a. 1.) have you not enough (that
fcH^ ^"]"1^ m. (133, v. faa I) a vessel /)/" Jeaten
I,
I escorted you thus far)? attend now to your business
mefa/.-P/. ^33, 'i;3.Targ.Prov. XXV, 11 (h.textn^a^!).
yourself; v. PT33.
nagu, pi. nage; cmp. iispa) plains, esp. islands, sea- n3j m. (preced.) wont to gore, a butter. Targ. O. Ex.
districts; also inhabitants, colonists. Targ. 0. Gen. XXV, 3 XXI, 29 36 (some
; ed. H33).
: — : 1 ;
1
T i -
874 *M
"jH^J m. h. same. B. Kam.46 a B. Bath. 92 a Y. Shebi. ; ; MJ Ar f. (b. h.; 133) 1) knocking, affliction, defeat. Ex.
v, 36° ynfii &.e.—Pi. nnsj. b. Kam. 39 a '3 ipmin bk if R. s. 18 (ref. to VO^i/Ps. LXXVII, 7) D-nSttMl 13X ttTOfl
they are known as butters. Fern. flPJtlM. B. Mets. 80 a '31 Iremember the defeats &c. ; 13UJ yvib n?N iMftB -px
;
in thy herd. — PL Tjna?. Targ. Ps. XXII, 13 Regia (ed. "G n J0, v. 151SJ0.
•piO3.0).
SST^J!) KW" ?} T"'?) mus ical instruments.
1
f., jtf. (v.
STJD, NFO^D f. (preced.) dry land. Targ. Y.I Ex. HD JD f. (t)33) str iking, injury through collision, push-
XIV, 21. TargT Y. Gen. I, 10.
ing &c. Mekh. Mishp., s. 12 (ref. to Ex. XXI, 35) [read:]
'3)1 i"l)T3.3 '3 b^23 striking includes goring, pushing &c.
1 Am I m. (b. h. ; 155) leader, ruler. Sifra Ahare, ch. Yalk. Ex. 341. B. Kam. 2b : a. fr., v. nmas.
— PI. &T?f
^w
' ' t * ;
lift her (Wisdom) up, and she will raise thee and seat thee
ivD AJ drawing near, addressing, use of
between princes. — [Yalk. Ps. 677, v. ISO h.]
root U533.
f. (W33)
Y. Sot/ VIII, beg. 22 b v. ftmtl,
the
;
KTJ3 III, (*TW, rrVti) f. (133, 133) dragging U *a2 (?) pr. n. pi. Nagninar, home of R. Johanan
out of the grave by necromancy.' Gitt. 56 b Gia^ab JTp&x b. Nuri'. Y. Kil. I, 29 b Y. Erub. 1, 19 c top 13333; Y. Succ.
;
'33 (Ar. ed. Koh. Ill . ..; oth. ed. Ar.&O . . .) he had Titus I, 52 a 13133; (Tosef. Ter. VII, 14, a. e. D^WO PWS).
brought up out of his grave; ib. 57 a top '31 wh fT^pOX
Ar. (ed. bVFUV* Wgft). Sabb. 152 b '32 . . ffTOB WIN how DJ J to break off; to bite off. Ukts. II, 6 bilTB 1" until
could the necromancer have brought Samuel up (if his he has knocked off (a piece of the eggshell). T'bul Yom
soul was not in the grave)? III, 6 'Dl ^Cian p &331H (not D133U3) who took a bite of
some food, and something mixed with his saliva fell on
ST )" 5
Jj f. (v. 1133 1, 3) prolongation, with Win for- his garments.
bearance. Targ. Prov. XXV, 15 (ed. Lag. nVT33, Var.
rYTPJO); cmp. Nni13iK. OJj J ch. same, esp. to break bread, eat. Y. Ber. VII, 1
b
bot. "pD33 YW?1 1^3 ed. Lehm. (ed. "pbsx) when they sat
^n^D,v.n33.
T - • :
down to dine; Gen. R. s.91; Yalk. ib. 148 ",^33. Lev. R.
s. 34 D-1.331, v. "9)). Koh. R. to IV, 6 1»b " pr,v:i ft««Wl
niTJO f. (n_33) goring. B. Kam. 2 b
(ref. to Ex. XXI, D1531 it is his ambition to be called one who works for
28) pJM vbtt 'S y* the root M33 refers to injury by the
a living; e.— [Esth. R. to I,
a. 8 plTO; Lev. R. s.28 ftttrfl,
horn, contrad. to HB^S collision of bodies. Ib. riB^M "Wi DOS, some of the citations
v. in which may belong to
Wii'3 that nagaf(Ex.ib.35) means injury through goring. our w.]
a
Y. ib. I, beg. 2 . Mekh. Mishp., s. 12; a. fr.
b
US, v. nra. Y. Yeb. I, end, 13 b tJ pStt* »*5 TH Kb the Af. Sax to bring in contact. Bekh. 28 yvi) IfiB 'SO he
Shammaites would not take up the case; a. v. fr. V3& — (the judge) made the disputed objects touch a reptile;
WWa an Snh. 34 a YfftK) ^3 %ttBft
interested xvitness. Snh.33 b '31 ^aXT (corr. ace.). Zeb. 88 a inb Saalhe brings
he has the appearance of an interested witness. B. Bath. the blood in immediate contact with the altar; a. e.
43 a top 'jn "(Piinsn TWfa "Xax why are they admitted to Pa. S33 to afflict with leprosy. —Part. pass. 3?a3a. Hull.
a. fr. — 2) (v. Hif.) to arrive, to come to pass. Gen. R. s. one stricken with leprosy a reel &c, v. Kbbvr; Yalk. Ps.
84 S3"V3 S"" mn -j^-rrr for these things (which Joseph 862 MtofKft.
dreamt) shall come to pass; Yalk. ib. 141. Ithpa. sasnx, Sarst to be stricken with leprosy. Targ.
Hif. WI1 1) to reach; to become the property of; to Is. VI, 1. — Hull. I.e. nsaspx she became a leper; Yalk.
obtain ; to cause to reach. B. Mets. X, 5 rjWMl they shall 1. c. nraars;.
a thine
be thine. Arakh. VIII, 1; 3 (27 , sq.) *JWP"W1 it is "33 m. (b. h.; preced.) plague, esp. suspected leprosy.
(Bab. ed. SpPCjan I let thee have it), i. e. thy offer is ac-
what must be the
Neg. 11,4 'an n""it~i *iiP3 patient's position
cepted; Tosef. ib. IV, 20 tfflWWl thou hast acquired it.
when the priest is examining the plague (Lev. XIII, 3) ?
Tosef. B. Bath. VI, he must pay
7, a. e. i^Ml it is his, i. e.
VI, 7 'an n^SOi "OPa what are the proceedings
Tosef. ib.
for it. Y. Erub. Ill, 21 a bot., thou hast a. e. CpO r^an at examining a plague in the wall ? ; a. fr. —P/.B^aa, constr.
been made to reach the final conclusion, i. e. thou must "\>aa. Ib. 1, a. fr. '33 nsaaa is subject to uncleanness from
admit, v. "Tn. Ber. IX, 3 (54 ) fCtfe I33psni WfJI irnnia
a
house plagues. Ib. 7 1"nb ... 'an "pit plagues are the punish-
n;n (Mish. ed. only "QTBTttJ) who hast granted us and life
ment for an evil tongue. Neg. II, 5 las~ "KtfXn "fin '3n ba. . .
to concern. Gen. R. I.e. Vatl nsaa BTran nTWflB that the Toharoth, and of a section of Sifra(Thazri'a and M'tsor'a).
resurrection of the dead will come to pass in his days,
lb. '3- nnbab B-""."*? D^-GlfTO that these things concern H^JD f. (preced. wds.) hurt, detraction. Num.R.s. 14
Bilhah. &c. Gitt. VIII, 3 '=1 "Pixb 7V0 fYta as soon as the (ref. to'Gen. XLI,12) tpV nsaSB . . +6ri he said here three
letter of divorce reaches the space over the roof. Ib. VII, 7 things ('lad', 'Hebrew', 'slave') meant to be derogatory
D^-,'JS^a:sb "r\ if he came as far as Antipatris. Num. R. to Joseph, v. saa.
5 TttJ =-3 Bab S^a^ StblD that the same may not
8. '2"i
they have come to such a condition as to need washing nations shall see Israel in prosperity, they shall say, these
in water; bfrWl insb lSaitt if they need cleansing with are not the stricken, these are not the rejected &c.
natron and aloes; (Yalk. Ex. 381 B^an *S>»*T if they can Nif. q^a to be stricken. Yoma 19 b .
be cleansed with &c, v. ?3?a). Hithpa. Cjasrn to strike against. Lam. R. introd. (R.
Pi. 9KV (denom. of ~a:) to afflict with leprosy. Part, — Joh. 2) '31 B3T:a-| IBiorPUJsb when your feet shall strike
pass. -aiaa; f. rwfOO; pi. fftplWaj niaraiaa. Neg. XIII, 9 ^a against the mountains &c. (fr. Jer. XIII, 16).
'art rrab B333w he who enters a house which is unclean
^33 ch. same. Targ. Ps.LXXXIX, 24. Targ. Ex. XXI,
on account of leprosy in the walls. Erub. VIII, 2 IT^an
35 a. e.
'San n'ab half the time (required for consuming it) is
;
a. v. Rabb. D.
Ar. "jSpSa ninn, S. a. 1. note) until his feet
never occurred &c. Ib. '3a B^BX stones from a leprous
a were bruised (bleeding) &c.
house; Snh. 71 ; a. e.
Ithpa. CfiSrTO, t]?rK 1° strike against, be bruised. Targ.
Nithpa. saans to be afflicted with leprosy. Ker. 3
na~n smaiB a leper that had several attacks in
B^yaa 'SIT
II,
Jer. —
XHI, 16. Yoma 1. c., v. supra.
succession (before being purified from the first); Tosef. 5]JI3 m. (b. h.; preced.) plague. Ex.R.s.15 minb 0*lStl . . .
Neg. IX, 7. Tosef. B. Mets. VIII, 30 lTf9\ "vaiaan if one . . '31 '3n ",a the Egyptians went around seeking a way how
rented a house to his neighbor, and it became leprous; to flee from the plague ; a. e.
Arakh. 20 b ; a. fr.
™)33 cmp. 115) to carry along, roll, v. Nif.—
(b. h. ;
"33 ch. same, to touch. Snh. 19 a "33-ab T* !*b he will 2) to scrape, to saw; v. "•&.
not chance to touch (the corpse). Y. Keth. VII, end, 31
d Pi. *W (denom. of 133) to do carpenter's icork. Yalk.
Saab ",Baba dared to touch, v. "pa^abia; a. fr. Josh. 7 (ref. to Vhtt, Josh. II, 1) "("nasa DT3 l^n m-« ""ba
3 ;
they had with them carpenter's tools, pretending to be like an upright bolt (reaching the top of the door). Num.
carpenters; Ruth R. to I, 1 (Par. 2) '31 Q^ITO (corr. ace). R. s. 15; Yalk. Josh. 32 '31 13133. nim TPT» (not K153)
\ 7*.~.J: (cmp. 15X I, a. -p3) (of water) to be conducted Jericho was the bolt of Palestine; a. fr.
in gutters; to be stored up. Tosef. Par. IX (VIII), 8 C-^n
7--.".:,-" fOWaSh Var. (read: VT53rn; ed. Zuck. "pm^m, N"1JD ch. same. Targ. Y. Ex. XXVI, 28.—Y. Erub. X,
v. ","~3) waters running in channels or stored up. — h 153, 26 c top', v. infra. — PL K*15J, ',1153. Targ. Y. I.e. 26; 29.
"pia; animals in pens, fish in caufs &c. Tosef. Bets. HI, 1 Targ. Job XXXVIII, 10\? Ms. (ed. '53). Targ. II Chr. V,
Bab. ib. 24 b Y. ib. Ill, 62" top; Y. Sabb.XHI, 14 a hot. •)» 8,sq. (h. text Qi13); a. e.— Y. Sabb. XVII, end, 16 Ni*13i3 1
'
'2!"i, opp. to DTTISTan "p those found in traps, nets &c. nrbx '11 the bolts in the house of R. El.; Y. Erub. I.e.
WV* '1 Xin K153 (corr. ace).— [V'153, Targ. Jer. XVII, 8,
UJ ch. same; 1) to scrape, plane, saw. Targ.Is.X, 16 v. X153.]
(ed. Lag. "OS; corr. ace). — 2) interch. with 155) to be pro-
longed, continue. Targ. Prov. XXVIII, 16 "WP ftVft ( ed - £03D,
T : •
preced.,' a.
v. r NI513.
t : -
(Bxt. H132 ;
ed. Lag. a. oth. ni53 corr. ace. ; h. text !iri13).
w^J come in contact; to draw
(b. h.) also Nif. "C53 to
uL IIm. N'gar, legendary name of one of the
pr. n. near. Yalk. Ps. 842 Ps. XCI, 7) nti3 inx ft*
(ref. to U35i,
ancestors of Haman. Targ.Esth. V, 1 Targ. HEsth.III, 1 ;
'31 "i^X £353 none of them comes to thee, none says, provide
(155)— [Targ. Y. Ex. XXXV, 35, v. 8TO.] for me; Midr. Till, to Ps. XVII, 7 "pSX 1T513 ed. Bub. (oth.
(cmp. «Hl) artist, master. Ab.Zar.50'"3l '2 13 xVi '2 n^l daughter).
and there is no master nor son of master that can solve
that Y. Yeb. VIII, 9 b bot. Y. Kidd. IV, 66 a bot. 13 '21 hV«a
; ;
*Da2 (b.h. cmp. preced.) to push on, drive, press. Midr.
;
'31 *|t", 52 something which no master, son of masters, can Till, to Ps. XVII, 7 '31 -jniX teais Qrro inx ftm none of
solve.— PI. ",1152, K*1M, TO. Targ. II Sam. V, 11. Targ. them presses thee &e, v. te55. — te513 task-master. Tanh.
Esth. V, 14; a. e. —Pes. 108 a '31 KiVui)3 we mean artisans' Sh'moth 9 '31 i11i}5> '3 mix that taskmaster was appointed
apprentices.— Snh. 106 a bot., v. ">3T. Y. Yeb. 1. c. ; Y. Kidd. over &e ; Ex. R. s. 1 DiaiE HUBS bs» (13103 '3 one (Egyp-
I.e., v. supra. Sabb. 123 1
', v. XSi^H. — 2) carpenter's axe. — tian) taskmaster was appointed over ten (Israelit.ish)
PI. 1153. Bets. 33 1
'
fl'WTl '31 Stnnp Ms. M. a. Ar. (ed. 15.13) officers. Lev. R. s. 32 (in Chald. diet.) '31 133 '2 y*p Ar.
note 8), v. S515. go and gather thy men &e; a. fr.— PI. 3^513, "pteSVij. Ib.;
Ex. R.l.e Pirke d'R. El. ch.XLVIII TO^B ib313 the task-
m. (preced. wds.) [trimmed chip,] door-bolt, pin
'3»
masters appointed by Pharaoh; a. fr. Esp. to exact a —
fitting into sockets top and bottom. Erub. X, 10, v. Mace 3 b (ref. to Deut.
debt. XV, 2) toW? s6 rTO -,3iip 20
Pnoofts. Ib. 11, v. 115. B.Bath. 101 (inChald. a
diet.) 113S1 we do not apply to him (he does not violate the law)
': "33 he made the sepulchral chambers like an
*,rfe
'he shall not exact'; tt)15i lib T>K C)1& he will finally
upright bolt,i. e. placed the bodies in an upright position.
'S the case for the inscription in Rabbi's house was made ]TO3 m. (UJ53) = 1)153. Targ. Y. Ex. XXI, 29.
—
*TD 877 TfJ
or
"TO ID, v. lis. C*™JU f. (313) willingness, devotion. Targ. Ps. LI, 14
Regia (ed. '(15033; h. text .13'13).
&H3, v. -n?.
J J*T (b. h.) 1 ) to make ivilling, to prompt. Tanh. T'rum. 3 of a certain size (four handbreadths cubic measure), or
(ref. to XXV, 2) J33W 13b pSftt
Ex. sts- this excludes the . . .
a course of bricks &c, used as 'binder' (coagmentum) in ;
insane whom his heart (reason) cannot prompt; (Tanh.ed. gen. a course of stones, layer. Y. Shebi. Ill, 34 c bot. fit
Bub. ib. 2 nVa 3*OW3 iS*S<ia).— 2) (denom. of 11313) to offer '31 "pis "3 baps
he who contracts to build nidbakh,
Nlitia
willingly, donate, consecrate, contrad. to TJJ (v. IW3). must build with blocks of four handbreadths as far as
Ned. 9 b (ref. to Mish.L 1) '31 '3 **1 read tt«tfQ&(in TW5 the space contracted for (v. infra). Sabb. H5 a "S»ab last
place of nadar), he made a noble vow &c. Ib. 10 a ''Sin
'3d rnn he said to the builder, sink it (the trans-
IfiS-'pttJ
'21 3113 read «orfe& (in place of 1113), he dedicates the lation of the Book of Job) under the rubble; Y. ib. XVI,
sacrifice and fulfills (offers it). 15 c top. Ber. II, 4 mechanics at work may read theSh'ma
3ns 'Sfi IB SOB while standing on top of a course of the wall.
Nif. :iy»3, Meg. 1, 10 bs
fo be donated, dedicated.
'31 1T3 SOiTiJ dependent on vow or
whatever sacrifice is Sabb. 125 b d"33X blB '3 a mouldful of stones (v. "|B1;q);
dedication; Zeb. 117 a '31 Tl3n b3 Ms. M.; Sifre Deut. 65; a. fr. —
2) a frame carried to the building ground with
Tem.l4 b .Ib.SOiV31 TO ls*b Tt3 the sacrifices of theNazarite tools and vessels above and under it. Tosef. Ohol. VII, 1
are not to be classified among the vowed or free-will H« "proro l"i11B rwaiK if four persons carry
'31 pStl 'Sfi
offerings; a. e. a frame the poles of which have not the size of a plough-
Hithpa. ai3_tTi to be prompted; to vow a free-will of- handle; Ohol. VI, 1 (ed. Dehr. 1113; Ar. 111*13, read:"}}'??,
fering; to donate. Tosef. Ned. I, 1 D-WSPM BTStthh "pM TpJ13;Maim, a bier). Zab. V, 2 'Sfi nnn at b^ lBBSsYif
wicked men do not vow offerings. Ib. tllTtS 3*313na used the gonorrhceist has his finger under the frame (while
to vow to be Nazarites. Men. XII, 3 EPBISrvafi *pl3 71 S<b it is carried).— PL ',"3313, ni'3313. Ohol. XIV, 1 '3 IliablB
he did not make his vow in the ordinary way of vowing '31a distance of three courses of stones which is twelve
31X 3~iSrva a man may vow a meal offering
people. Ib. 4 '31 handbreadths; Tosef. ib.XlV,8; Y. Shebi. III,34 d top. Ib.
of sixty &o. Tanh. ed. Bub. 1. c. 13b3 313rra is prompted
'31 fiUBB '3 JilBbtt) three courses of trimmed stones making
by his heart, v. supra. Arakh. 6 b '31 fiTSd 71® 3"133> if ten handbreadths, v. MlSn'p.
a gentile donated a lamp to a synagogue. Sifra Tsav,
^|3 J I, J
J ch. same, a course of stones, tier. Ezra
Milluim, Par. 1 '31 3l3_rnb HIS® rwtt» when the Lord . .
j
6 ' '=1 &c. mountain among you (David) a bird has shaken it. Esth.
S312, '^2 R. to VI, 1 '31 1XD3 d"»lB 1113 the heavens shook the
ch.=next w. Y. Pes. IV, 3l b bot.
f. pis
'3 "jSSI the Rabbis were in need of contributions.
throne of &c. Sifre Deut. 38 '31 n3lB 11131 and chases away
the sleep of his eyes (watches constantly) over it; a. e.
M J jj f. (b. h. ;
preced.) free-ivill offering, donation. 2) to be restless, flee. Meg. 15 b (ref. to Esth. VI, 1) fills
Kinn. 1, 1 '31 '3 int*SO . . . TO "JrTPS a vow is called neder, '31 13ba nsiB the sleep of the King of the world fled ; ib.
when one says,I vow to dedicate a burnt-offering; ni'dabah, 'Bl d"31"bB 1113 those on high were agitated; Pirke d'R.
when one says, this animal is to be a burnt-offering. Ib. 3 El. ch. L; a.e.—Tosef. B.Kam. IX, 27 .11131 and the tooth
'331 H31M3 when an obligatory and a free-will sacrifice —
was loosened. Part. pass. 1113 f. tilllS. Ib. 13"-1» Wfftl ; . .
are mixed up. Men. nTOQ, opp. to Ndlfi nfiSa. Ib. 2 a '31 'S (not nH3) if his tooth had been loose, and he (the
1, 1 'S
rYtniriti Win provided it (the bench) be not shaken (when '31 ntv>n &6 '3h "PS» a case of a condemned city never
rn")2, '"0
f.pl. constr., XWIB '3 (preced.) wakefulness.
a town astray; nb nsin rVftaa if the seducers were W
outsiders; D^lttDX rWT"*niB 15> unless the seducers are men;
Targ.Voi) VII, 4 (b. text tPfti).
a. fr.
rrc, *«. Hof. rnin 1) to be led astray. Ib. Siaisna 'n if a minority
v.
TT
of the town was led astray. Tosef. ib. XIV, 3 m33> *rWI
PHD f. (b. h.; iTO) 1) (v. ^TTS) isolation, condition of
they were led astray along with the inhabitants a. e. ;
b
xmcleanness, esp. period of menstruation. Sabb. 64 a. e.
2) (interch. withnn^) to be banished. Yalk. Num.739
,
"Tirnin
(ref. to Lev. XV, 33) '31 Nnn rtWS she shall remain in
•snsn '|S I have been banished from the Tabernacle.
her isolation (from her husband) until &c. Ib.VI, 5nDipnnil5
nm33 which she has prepared for her menstruating time. rHD ch. same, to cause to slip. Targ. Ps. LXII, 5 (some
lb. II, 6 'Sa (='3 msan) in the observance of the laws ed. 3H3ab, corr. ace).
connected with menstruation a. fr. 2) (sub. nto'3) a ; — lthpa. miVtkto be banished. Targ. Job VI, 13 MTHPH*
woman during menstruation, menstruant. Nidd. 1, 7 yin Kegia (ed. nn"nnX; h. text WHS).
':n jo, expl. ib. ll
a
nnT3 "]ina during the days of ^
actual menstruation. Treat. Kallah beg. nb3a &6ia '3 a "'"ID, HID (b. h.; cmp. preced.) to be restless, flee.
woman after menstruation before she has taken the ritual Pi. fns to banish, excommunicate. Ber. 19
a
W? 15a nx
bath; '33 is to be treated like a woman during menstru- whom did they (the scholars) excommunicate? Ib. Y'3
ation; a. fr.— PI. HH3. Nidd. IV, 1 '3 are to be treated 3"in 1133 b$ ywjSB the court proclaims the ban to protect
the Order of TohSroth, of Mishnah, Tosefta and Talmud communicate for disregarding the second Holy Day ob-
Babli and Y'rushalmi (fragmentary).— Ab. Ill, 18 ms Tins served in the diaspora; fr.— [Yalk. Is. 287 "W t&tt,
a. v.
»*T^: 879 W*
ed. Lag. (some ed. ftW], corr. ace; ed. Wil. "j^^ni). the Messiah) which shall be moved about as if to go
3) to throw, pitch. B. Kam. 98 a , a. e. *Hn& tVHf&, v. ^X. into exile, but shall not go. Ib. 'dl Sdsd BiftJ^iajTSa moving
from journey to journey; a. e.
*fc^T"P m. pi. (-ni) fugitives. Y. Sabb. IV, 7a win
"pbpUJXI (ed. Krot. '"V^S) is tbere not against thee the
'3
l""lj m. («T^5) nadyan, a species of edible locusts, wrong. Tosef. Yeb. IV, 8 Pes. 50 b (Ar. fi-QSb '^3).
;
'3D "]ia)d a well the waters of which are conducted in Y. Ex. XL, 5 (ed. Vien. ft^ftj.
channels radiating like the feet of a centipede. Erub. 8 b *lthpe. &HF* it bloics. Ab. Zar. 55 a &6l NdbSd tpfla *
,
v. '"faOi
SOd^d iMK Ms. M., when a wind blows in the world and
no rain comes, (v. C]t5).
TTl ch. same. Targ. Y. Lev. XI, 42.— Y. Sabb. I, 3b
bot. '3 "PdStiit .
*Q the skeleton of a fish changes into
"Hw (b.h.; cmp. ST13) [to keep off,] to vow (abstinence).
.
VPHmytO give ; to place; (neut. verb) to be given. Y.Snh.X, bttJlddfi "|d *rt13fi who vows from whatever
to abstain
b 'dl B"3*K Tn)n bd) whoever vows, even
29 b bot. (ref. to -p-P Kb,Gen.VI,3)^fi1^ 15 ^Kiy ...",i^ s6 is cooked. Ib. 77
'^ my spirit shall not be given to him, (which means) if he fulfills his vow, is called a sinner. Ib. I, 1 I^Sd '3 . .
I shall not put my spirit into them &c. (at the time of the jdlpdl his is a valid vow implying nazariteship and
resurrection) : Bab. ib. 108 a ; Gen. R. s. 26 ; v. next w. sacrifice. Naz. IV, 4 *H3d fi^iaffl who vowed to be a
Nazarite; a. fr.—Imperative TH Snh. Ill, 2 ""fid 4 Tn:
his own vow is forbidden any benefit &c. Naz. 9 Tip! '3
,J
Abraham, i. e. never before was there such a festival at
the weaning of a child. he is under the influence of a vow (of abstention from
Nithpa. li^ana to be moved, stirred up. Ex. R. s. 20, dried figs) and is also a Nazarite a. e. ;
end "jVi&tti '3 Joseph's coffin (sunk in the Nile) was stirred Nif. *&% 1) to be made the subject of a vow; to have
up (and came to the surface; Tanh. Ekeb 6 aWTd; Tanh. one's personal value dedicated to the sanctuary. Arakh. 1,
B'shall. 2, a. e. ?p). Cant. R. to VI, 10 (play on nisrna'd, n"^" ?! d^TTtt are entitled to dedicate (v. supra) and to
1
ib.) Ifiibab iiiinsttJ TTTd like the generation (of Hezekiah) be dedicated. Ib. 3 '3 xb cannot be dedicated (has no
that was stirred up for its exile; ib. &6l rvfefc '3UJ WIS value); a. fr. —
2) to be vowed for a sacrifice. Meg. I, 10
fiV^ (read : fi3>:n &61 . . . lyWTO) like the generation (of "tgrtj X.WB V>33, v. 3TI3; a. e.
Ill*
— — 8;
27t/". Hp*h to put a person under the influence of a of the Order of Nashim, of Mishnah, Tosefta, Talmud
row; to prohibit, forbid. Keth. VII, 1 lniBS fW T*Oh Babli a. Y'rushalmi.
lb nw^ba if one vows that his wife shall derive no "0 ch.same. Targ.Jud.XI,36.
I^lan if a man
T\2 III, &*"J"P> Targ.
benefit from him. lb. '=1 dlS-'an sbr . .
*famh to be forbidden by a vow; to be subjected Yalk! Sam. 143; Midr. Sam. ch.XXVI '13.— Fern. n^311S.
Hof.
Gitt. 35 b tnra 'n» "TO a Keth. 71 a a. e. '3 n'US3 ^UJSS ">S I will not live with a
to the influence of a vow. ,
expl. 'forbidden ,
if) subjected to a vow of thine forbidding me any benefit 3HD (b. h.) [to drive an animal,] to lead, conduct •
to
a
at thy hands. Ib. 5 '31 SS^niUa sb 1,aa "AS Ilia 'I will demean one's self; to be guided by, be wont to; to apply,
b
be muddar (kept distant) from thee' may mean, I will be practiced. Keth. 103 Sins, v. d-W. Hull. VII, 1 SJrjiS,
not talk to thee; a. fr. v. TO. Sifra Tsav, Tar. 11, ch. XVIIl'nilllb lain SinyVD
which intimates that this order should be preserved at
"H? I ch. same. Targ. Num. XXX, 3; a. fr.—Ned. 22 a all times. Pes. IV, 1 '31 WnStt) dlpa where it is a local
Kyn "»a . . nSI" nin ib^S
1
if thou hadst known wouldst . . .,
usage to &c. Meg. 6 b '31 "0U53 niS.ni3U) nisa b3 all laws
thou have vowed? Ib. b "Oftl nj-'IS nils
wouldst thou have
that apply to the second (Adar) apply also to the first.
made the vow, if thou hadst known this. Ib. ^VTS sb I Ib. 5
b
a. e. , 1WS
"]ria ttTO d^insi d^131 things which . . .
should not have vowed. Ib. 9 a RtTiJ sb I will not vow; are permitted, but which some treat as forbidden; a. v. fr.
a. v. fr.
—1133 % v. tfe3B.— («W>) nibp % v. rtfeg.—Ab. Zar. 54 b
Af. US
as preced. Hif. Ib. 21 nniab WWW^I who b
STO .. dbl3>, v. 1TO.- Yalk. Num. 764 '31 BlBdtt '3 he
a
forbade her daughter all benefits from her. Ib. 24 rVlftfc
applied oils and baths.
'31 S3ata the host urged the guest with a vow; FIT*
Hif. WOri same, esp. 1) to drive, direct; to take pos-
'31 S3"vat the guest caused the host to invite him with a an animal by driving. Kil. VIII, 2 JPnsnb, v.
session of
vow. Ib.22 a firms ">a wouldst thou have forbidden her?
IllJa. Ib. 3 Jpnpan the driver of heterogeneous animals.
Gitt. 36
a
sns *1 rT'l'Wl whom R. A. forbade to teach.
B. Mets. I, 2WOO in SI 3311 ins one rode (the animal
Keth. 7
1
' *|ni1S thou hast put me under restrictions afr. ;
was found), and the other directed it (by leading).
that
b a'Ttia
dlpaa 3131 the rights of the driver as against
1*12 II (transpos. of TO, cmp. Iia) to run down (v. Ib. 8
v. isitt I.— V. '.ilia, siia. ship; a. e., v. S^nsa. — 2) to lead, conduct. Ber. 35
1
'
insn
VIS "jll 'na combine with the study of the Law a secular
"f!D m. (b. h.; Trt) vote. Kinn. 1,1, v. .1313. Ned. 11,3 occupation; Yalk. Deut. 863 ainsn. Snh. 92 a dSlS ^3
'3 "jin3 '3 tt5^ there is a vow within a vow, i. e. if one '31 dS^nsal . . i^nsaUJ a manager that leads a community
repeats the vow to be a Nazarite, it is a double vow. with gentleness, will be privileged to lead it in the days
Ib. 8 a '31 "ins bill 'J (by saying so) he has made a great to come (of resurrection); a. fr. —Tosef. Bets. II, 15 ns 'n
vow to the God of Israel; a. v. fr. Y. Sabb. II, 5 b bot. — '31 lail 133 made it a custom among the Jews in Rome
':n inin the vow is annulled, i. e. the ban is rescinded. &c. —ni3313 lass? 'n to assume airs of superiority. Sot.
PL tt*hfr constr. "*m Ned. 1, 1, v. Ilftf. lb. Ill, 1 3>31S 13 b ; a.fr.
'31 'S four sorts of vows have the scholars declared not Hithpa. 3nsna 1) to conduct one's self. Sifre Deut. 323
to be binding; '31 ptrt ""TO, v. HTT*, ^San &c. Ib. XI, 1, '31 nT ns nt 13nsnn conduct yourselves towards one an-
a. fr. £E3 ">13iJJ ''IIS vows referring to privation of the other in charity; a. fr. — 2) to be conducted. Y. B. Kara.
necessaries of life; a. fr. N'darim, name of a treatise, VI, 5 C top la ansna abiynil) mi a wind by which the world
;
from tent to tent. — V. 5rr:. because he enlightened &c. Naz. IX, 5; a. fr. — [Y. Ber.
AT]2, FT]2 ch. same. Targ. Lam. I, 8. Ruth IV, 7. Ill, 6
a bot. 'SI pmrw '3 N., sister of &c, v. "^JTJW;.]
the world follows in practice the opinion of these three expl. np*n3.n, v. pia (Rashi xn^ins, Ms. R. 2 xnpin?).
elders &c. Gen. R. s. 33 Klpi !TO SVO " - he began to
do him honor (= b. 1133 3S12). Part. pass, as ab. ac- — SP^inO II pr. n. f. N'horitha, legendary name of
customed. Y. Pes. IV, 30 c sq. »T3a ID"* ... •jJTT *^® : one of queen Esther's maids, attending on "Wednesdays
(not "paWl) that custom of the women not to do (v. Gen. 1, 14). Targ. Esth. II, 9.
d b
is no binding custom; ib. top fSjm Y. R. Hash. II, 58
top '31 pb'QJl ': "*rx psn is that your custom, to annoy
^nD I (b. h. nn3; cmp. dn3) to move; to be in com-
motion (cmp. Syr. "»l*W, P. Sm. 2295).
your superiors ? ; a. fr.
Ithpe. "W«J to follow eagerly. Targ. I Sam. VII, 2.
)riT\2, v. 3MT»J. Targ. Jer. Ill, 17 -pniP^I (some ed. VinST^I; h.text 11p31).
Ib.XXX, 21 (h. text WS1). Targ. Ho's. II, 1 8 ib. Ill, 3 ;
D ri5lD, constr. of VXta. 76 a '31 1301 '3 granted that R. S. holds &c; a. fr.
'-n:). Targ. Ps. XVIII, 29 (ed. Lag. ttt*0). Targ. Prov. ^Sbn H3 pi. n. m. N'hilay. Taan. 6 a (Ms. M. W&W;
VI^ 23 'ni3; a. fr. Pes. 2 Gen. 1,5) — a
(expl. Mom H**p v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note).
; ':'; the Lord called the light and appointed it over
the service of the day. Ib. 7 b nplliti '3 torch-light; 1 D*n:, v. ow.
BOnWI candle-light; K31E3 '3 83"V31 whose light is very
TV2^T}2 f. (cn3) cooing, expression of love. Pesik. R.
strong *£12 '3 1I31T1 whose light isvery small (of limited
LI, 12) arwrrett ':n [nniS3]
;
dream) means light &c. Ber. 52 b K1133 K3^ "i Xin fire
b nn"3n3\a (corr. ace; v. Bub. a. 1. note).
contains only one sort of light. B. Kam. 83 'S WaV»1
'31 """ - ;-pr perhaps the law says (Ex. XXI, 24), he S£n P3 f. (pn?) braying. Targ. Y. Gen. XXX, 16.
a . e> —P/.plinS, X;lin;, "nfrO. Targ. Gen. 1, 14; 16 ; a. fr.— 3rp (b. h.), Pi. 3>rp3 to quiet, support, lead (v. Del.
Ber. 1. c. K1132 SCW '3 Mia there is a combination of Proleg.I p. 17 sq.). Num. R. s. 12 (interpret. Ex. XV, 13)
lights in fire, v. 11S02. Pesik. R. s. 21 'pin -j3> Tf"10 Kn '31 nimn nisn tbtr*} he supported them for the sake
; 6TW13 I created two lights for thee, thy father and of the Law which they accepted, until the sanctuary
thy mother; a. ft".— «Tf« (fc^O, v. supra. Y. Peah V, was erected.
end, 19 a (ref. to Prov. XXHI, 10, quot. in Mish. ib. V,6
0rW>j Ms. M. a. Y. ed. dVlS) '3 X;*3 .. fttfiTa 1TVUJ 1^« jT\j (Syr. ^13, P. Sm. 2336; cmp. WO I) to shake, sift
b .'inn'OI the wife
(cmp.Am. IX, 9). Bets. 29 '31 sbns
by 'those going up' are meant those who went down .
from their estates (reduced to poverty), as the blind are of R. J. sifted flour (on the Holy Day) on the back of &c,
euphemistically called rich of light. Y. Keth. I, 25 a bot. v. IWlWW I; a. e.— Part. pass. V<n3, X^ns. Hull. 51 b .
[read:] 6O3.0 '3 IfWOfib ymiSI "»»«0. Y. Peah VIII, end, T Xiasp sifted ashes (which bake and harden when piled
21 b '3 tl in one of the blind men (whom the charitable up). Ber. 6*. Taan. 9 b 'S (m)
'a sifted cloud', a form
DH^, D'HD ch. same. Targ. Prov. V, 11. Targ. Is. thou not remember (recognize) that student &c? lb. 93 a
XXXVIII, 13.' lb. 14; a. e.— Hull. 59 b xbp in dtij (not WWS I remember. B. Bath. 91
b
a. fr. [R. Hash. 34 ;
— 1 '
Xanbd). Ber.35 b (Ms. F. Nanb); a. fr.— Constr. WM3. B. ninsa SOni 'pSBID we hear that when he entered the
. . .
Kam. 97 a Gitt. 12 a;
trW
'3 (Ar. dns), v. Kdl?. Trnsf. — Temple court, it used to shine; ninsxi bx2> he entered,
(with ref. to dnbn, Gen. XXXIX, 6; v. Gen. B,. s. 86, end, and it shone. Cant. R. to V, 11 '31 ib Xinsa mn it (the
a
quot. 8. v. "jViJb) marital intercourse. Nidd. 17 .
Law) brightened my countenance by night. Sot. 6 a 'XI
'31 "piij "jb and he enlightened our eyes (by evidence)
nQnj f. (b. h.; dti3) excitement, shrieking, roaring.
from our Mishnah a. fr. 2) to recall to memory, re-
; —
Lam.R. to
(passed through the
1, 19 *ni33 nan3 the shrieking
fire). Midr. Till, to Ps.
of their children
CVI, 9; Yalk.
member. Y. Peah III, 17 d bot. '31 la^X '1 whereupon W
R. I. recalled (that he had heard the same tradition), and
Ps. 864, v.driS. Yalk.Prov.959 (ref. to Prov. XX, 2) frWrtS
rescinded his decision. Y. Kidd. I, 61 a bot. 'SI p">S31 'K it
n"3pn bltt the roaring (anger) of the Lord.
struck him (that he had forgotten to hear his grandson's
Sr^DDSJlp f. (T^) perversity. Targ. Prov. I, 32 (ed. you do not remember that poor man, I will remember him.
'
Pa. pns to bray. Y. Dem. I,21 d bot. hjttgd nwiUJ (the PI. diins , niins. Gen. R. 1. c. (ref. to Gen. II, 10) WM1
ass) began to bray. '31 "pX '3 hs3ixb it does not say, 'and it divided into four
rivers'but 'into four heads'. lb. '3 bll) fdjnilK, v. "OSWW.
"IllD (b. h.; v. -ffl) to break forth, shine (v. 11X1). Bekh. 55 a '31 ndab '3n b3 all other rivers are lower than
Hif. "WSrj to enlighten. Erub. 13
b
; Sabb. 147 b 1"<n?aUJ the three (mentioned Gen. II, 11, sq.), and these three are
'31, he enlightened the eyes &c, v. itfMhS. lower than the Euphrates; a. fr. ins in pr. n. of rivers, —
e. g. 11p& '3, v. respective determinants.
"li"0 I ch. same, to shine. Targ. O. Gen. XLIV, 3 (Y.
nn?). Targ. Job XVIII, 5; a. fr.— Taan. 10 a '31 i33S 1*13 "inj II,
I, H^Vl? rnrp
ch. same. Targ. Jon. II, 4.
when the clouds are bright, their waters are little. Pesik. Targ. Gen. fr.— Gen! R. s. 16 nS2 '3 ni3S>X build
II, 10;"a.
">BX3 na 'S iSDblst how my learning shines on my face nidttJBI every river has its own course, i. e. each place
(makes me look well); Yalk. Prov. 964 1SN3 *H3 (corr. has its own usages; ib. 57
a
; a. fr.— PI. "pins, N-ins. Targ.
ace). Y. Sabb. VIII, beg. ll a -J^VW 1BK (p"fl3) his looks Gen. 1. c. Targ. Ex. VIII, 1.— Y. Sabb. VII, 9 a top, a. e., v.
—; —
*r.n: 883 TO
"131; a.fr.— Fern, forms: KhJTB, W*W. Targ. Is. count were the inhabitants of Nob, the sacerdotal
-,lir:, /
city,
XLIII, 1 9. Targ. Ps. XXIV, 2 ; a. e.—Taan. 25 a '31 '3 "ncrbn massacred; a. e.~ 2) a place in the district of Tyre (v.
thirteen rivers of balsam oil; a.e. — Iri? in pr.n. of canals Hildesh. Beitr., p. 22, note 167). Y. Dem. II, 22 d top.
or places, e. g. X3X '3 N'harAbba, Sabb. 140 b ; v. respective
determinants (v. Berl. Beitr. Qeogr. p. 47).
Dip '^1 mliJ m. (Numidicus) a Numidian ass. Y. Kil.
VIII,31 C Ar. (some ed. 13^3; corr. ace); Y. Sabb. V,
*ia'i3
sleep, of prophecy, dream &e; ib. s. 44; Yalk. ib. 23; 77;
judges of X.' is meant &c. '331 '3T ifcniax by 'the Amoraim
;
R. s. 20 '3S1 33313.
SID I (b.h. N3) pr. n. pi. No (Thebes), in Egypt. Pesik.
Vayhi, p. 63 b X"m3Cob!K HI '3No is Alexandria; Pesik. R. rw"lJ, SnJJID ch. same, '3 3313 the planet Venus;
s. 17 i-i-t3D3PX -,113 (corr. ace); v. Targ. Nahum III, 8.— v. N3313.
V. "ji^X II.
"|nj|i3, v. -jms.
Nl3 II, "NlD beauty, v. *&. SHJ^D m. (133) prolongation. Targ.Prov.111,2; 16 ed.
n Lag. (oth. ed. XWI3); v. N$£.
S]3 pr. n. pi. N'vay. Tosef. Shebi. IV, 8 '3 Dinn ed. '
ya ",OT Dinsn (Ms. M. .1133) R. Tanhum of N. (?). nD (b. h.; cmp. 113) to move, be unsteady; to escape.
Hif. S^fi to cause to floio, be fluent. Lev. R. s. 16, end (adapted from II Sam. XXIII, 6) 0132 'a yip 1*3B3 they
(ref. to Is. LVII, 19) '331 W^il t3K if one's lips are fluent took a chip (of a pillar) removed from there (the palace).
in prayer &c. (Y. Ber. V, end, 9 d fi313ti . . . IKES).
"I'D ch. same, 1) to move, be unsteady. Targ. Is. XXIV,
JIJ I m. (preced.) growth, bud. Targ. Hos. VIII, 7 19 ; a. e — Part. T»B, 1^3 ; f. Kf*}3 ;
pi. fW 1
J IJ II (b. h. 33) pr. n. pi. Nob, 1 ) a town in Benjamin. in motion. Keth. 15 a l" "^ MH these (the caravans) are 1
Zeb. 73 b T^W
Snh. 95 a
Nob (I
'3 wis
the (unexpiated) sin committed at
bttJ
Sam. XXII, 19). Ib. *31 '3 -pi on thy ac- m &
unsteady, opp. n3 h 3p stationary (v.^11
v. infra.—Ber. 59 b ITW *r*Wl "Wl and the reason why
ch.). ,
*Tb 884 Vn3
their eyes are unsteady. Kidd. 72 a K311 IB***! . ... IWI « hand is permitted to destroy). Ib. 47 b (ref. to Hab. II, 5)
SO**3 when he saw a Persian on horseback, he said, this ibttJ '33 '*BX ni3* xb he will not be pleasing (popular) even
is a restless bear. B. Bath. 25
lj
n*31EX KTTJ3 IWI his cottage in his own household; B.Bath.98 a ; Yalk. Hab. 562. Keth.
shook ; a. e. — 2) (with "V) to shake the head, sympathize. XIII, 9 '31 nB*n '3 Win '32 pK"tfra a husband may compel
Targ. Job II, 11. lb. XLII, 11 fTfi. his wife to move with him from a worse to a better
Targ. 0. Lev. XXVI, 1*32 (Y. house (and style of living). lb. p113 *lB*n '3*1 v. pis.
Af. Tttj 1) to scare. 6 ,
•J"3T3); a. fr.— 2) to sftaA-e, (with Ktti"i or !SUJ*13) fo shake lb. 110 b3>m '3b •"*in*xb including even a change from a
.
.
the head; to nod. Targ. Zeph. II, 15. Targ. II Esth. I, 2. better to a worse household; Arakh. 3 b Trnsf. climate; . —
Targ. II Kings XIX, 21 ; a. e.— Snh. 95 rTittTO a
tWl and health. Gen. B. s. 64 [read :] WStt '3*1 b*> TK»S xb Tvo "OBd . . . .
shook his head (in derision). 5>1 why did they not forbid (as unclean) the air of Gera-
rike? Because its climate is bad; Y. Shebi. VI, 36 c bot.
IfApa. TfFS *° ie c/tased, scattered. Zeb. 73b m3*AU33*3
ll** !*?*1
1
TlD c (b. h. 1X3; preced., v.Ges. Thes. s.v.ixs) leather makes the neighborhood unhealthy ; v. *13 2.
being filled with water). Ab. Zar. II, 4; a. e. CsD I J J m. (nauta, vauTTj?) seaman, sailor. — P/.L*31'2,
fVNft. Gen. B. s. 12 '3 n*bs> 1"d2>d K*tt 3"nxi and finally
fcOlD ch. same. Targ. I Sam. XIX, 13; 16 KWW '3 a (when the ship is finished) he places sailors upon her;
cushion of kid-skin (h. text d*tsn 1*23;). 3*n3 dn*dll31 dn*al3l v'notehem (Is. XLII, 5) allows the
reading v'navtehem (and their (the heavens') sailors); Yalk.
| . |
U m. pi. (perh. from their shape, v. preced.) Nodiin, Is. 314 ""OT*i (corr. ace.). Chald. pi. IWjYlJ. Koh. B. —
name of a superior variety of olives. Y. Peah VII, 20 a to III, 6.
'3 »TYn (not n**). lb. '33 "jro-b ")311 (not '33) they are
usually examined to see whether there are Nodiin among ^liJTID m- (v. X^"J33) Nabatean. Gen. B. s. 48; Yalk.
them. ib. 82.— V. *Fil*3.
ing (the Temple); Midr.TUL to Ps. XVIII. Mekh. B'shall., are handsome, it is only poverty that makes them appear
Shir., s. 3 (ref. to 1.113X1, Ex. XV, 2) '31 xbx '3 "pXl (not homely. Sifre Deut. 240 (ref. to nb>33, Deut. XXII, 21) xb
nx3) naveh means the Temple (ref. to Ps. LXXIX,7, a.e.). '31 nbl^S 13b3 n^2J35 she has disgraced not only herself
Sot. 9 a (ref. to Ps. XXXIII, 1) nbnn Irfla xbx "flB *lpn bx but all virgins of Israel; a. e. —Part. pass. bl13ri; f. nbl1373;
read not ndvah (becoming) but n'veh of glory, i. e. a dwell- pi. 'i"b^3^, nib*»*o. y. Pes. vi, 33 a , sq. '12 n3t' (not nam)
ing of glory is that of the righteous (which no human a repulsive (putrid) sacrifice (Sabb. 116 1
'
nb333 f^BIO).
— — ;
3112 rm
Naz. IV, 5, a. e., v. ttJW. Tosef. Sot. II, 3 MpTO BNh "nil
pimTD, v. pipa.
'2131 she (by refusing to drink the searching waters) is
mortem examination); a. e.
fcOIIO, Snh. 95 a early bV3
Ithpa. VWW to be disfigured, disgraced. lb. xp Xfi
ed., v. II.
sword) is disfigured &c. lb. 154 b bl13ibl VfljlV) let him be "j (b. h.) to rest, lie; to be at ease, rest satisfied. —
disgraced (by autopsy, v. supra); a. e.— V. XPbllSO. Sabb. 7 b '31 fifiSI fisbfil . . pT( if one threw an object
higher than ten handbreadths, and in its course it came to
>" ]J> ~jJ II (denom. of next w.) to weave. Snh. 95 a
rest in a little hole. Ib. VM bs H31 p"rt1 and he threw an
»Vf« nii-H (Ms. M. «*IO Xp; early ed. xbt13 Xp; Ms. F.
object and it came to rest on it. Gen. R. 8. 25 la3>U5 "pis
xbw Xp, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) was weaving. Gitt. 34 a
*iri3 fii when Noah rose, they rested (submitted to man's
fibl131 X^n^ she was sitting and weaving.
rulership; Yalk. Chr. 1072 W'S/; Yalk. Gen. 42 "JOTO he
JTO, Tti III, S5T13 I m. (v.bs. ch. 2) loom, also Me appeased them) ; ib. 1fi3 na laSttJ ffQH and when Noah
rose, they remained undisturbed in their graves; Yalk.
web on the loom. Targ. is. XXXVIII, 12 SpHftl blisa Var.
ed. Lag. (read: bllS^S; ed. bfi3, corr. ace; oth. ed. bias)
Chr. 1.c. 1fi13^3.—Meg. 25
b a. fr. '31 rYCIS lb
, blessings *W
restupon his head. Sabb. 152 b a. e. '31 rain let
as from the loom (as the web) of the weavers. Y. B. Bath. — , nrtifilH . .
II,
b
I3 hot. '31 bl!3 Tfi IjCVa to place one loom in the space
thy mind be at rest, for thou hast set my mind at rest
a. fr.— Part. H3, fii3, f. finis Vrfa, prYbj nifiis a) rest-
pi.
between two neighboring walls. Bab. ib. 13 b Xsb^S X3JT 1 ;
" '
i ' ?
T
1
'
as 'thou and N. are relatives' is used, the seller relies on v. supra; (Snh. 30 b nfiSniTJJ, v. fi3fi; v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1.
it &c. [Oth. opin. '*, a colloquial expression for 'a certain note 20). Hull. 91 b '31 pi*lS tffl ^bSJ let this righteous
person', as our 'N. N.', both male and female; v. Koh. Ar. man rest his head on me. — B. Kam. Ill, 1. B. Mets. VI, 6
Compl. I, p. XXI]. *>3Bb fiSfi put it down before me (I will take charge of
it). Sabb. 21 b '31 fifiB b3> fifi^fib to place it over the en-
ntTO f. h. (a Chaldaism) = xbl13 1. Me'il. 18 a TOW pW trance &c; —
a. fr. 2) to leave; to leave alone; to alloiv.
'3bfor it (a small piece of cloth) may be used to tie
B. Bath. IX, 1 '31 t«a 'fil rratt; "vo if a person died and
around the weaver's frame (Rashi: to tie around the
left sons and daughters. Ib. 3 '31 13b 'filU fia 1X1 see what
weaver's finger when he puts up the frame; Var. xbllib,
our father left us. Snh. 30 a T5W lb 'fi© fil3>a money which
v. xbia).
his father had left him (without telling him where it was
"jYlj, Pesik. R. s. 17, v. X13I. deposited). Pesik. R. s. 26 ; Yalk. Ps. 884 ilfi TW"
I 13"OX
C3123 Wnsa fifiX J., our father, wilt thou leave us there (in
fcO"flD, Gitt. 69 b bot. '3 scraps some ed., read : X3113, Babylonia, without a prophet)? —Bets.30 a
, a.fr. dfib fiSfi
v. x^x. bxmpb leave Israel alone (let them do as they please).
sDTjD,nDii:,v.^i3. Yoma 1, 4 '31 mix t«T»MJ Y\fi xb they did not let him eat
much. Ab. Zar.l0 b fi3fi/^ V.*rai3. Ib. 17* '31 fi31T Tl xb he did
j"P" JJ m. pi. (va5;) ships, ship-building. Gen. R. not forego a single prostitute &c. Ex. R. s. 30 xbl!5 ti xb
s. 16 Ar., ed. pfeWtt, v. Ofott II. mSJSa fi^fi he allowed no opportunity to pass without
112
;
rw 886 •jip^ttSs
tormenting him; a. v. fir, — 3) to relieve, remit. Ab.Zar. 13 a frt xrun^X "TV^N it was agreeable to him. B. Bath.
'31 13 nrisp K"y«J t3V a day on which the idol grants a 129 a Km )i
nnjrSx Ms. B. (v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note 60;
remission of duties. lb. '31 fi^ . . rnj^l . . . "va b3 to him ed. nnn3X, v. nns) one of thy arguments has been satis-
who will take a wreath and place it on his head (in honor factorily disposed of for us.— Contr. ns^X. ripp, njipn ( a —
of the deity), he will allow a remission &c. a. fr. 4) to ; — dialectical term) this might be right, acceptable, might
wish rest (to a deceased); to bless the memory of Yalk. . do well. Sabb. 5 a '31 TITtl nn»nn Ttfl this might be ac-
Ex. 411 "TPSOl ytOfla there are those who are mentioned ceptable with regard to a covered private ground, but &c.
and blessed (opp. ppW8»)} Ex. B. 8. 48 yirW pTOTPj I lb. 132 b '31 Vm Ti this may apply to an adult, but &c;
pleasure. Gen. E. s. 16 '31 in^nb to give him pleasure, XIV, 10 bxil^b '3 "pXI and there is no rest in the
DVl3>3
to protect him &c. world for Israel; Sot. 47 b bblM '3 "pX there is no satis-
Hof. Pism to be put down, rested. Sabb. 4% a. fr. nulbp faction (to the Lord) in the world.
for. Erub. 13 '31 inv 8*13.3 xbltf bixb lb '3 it would have
1
'
v. supra; a. e.
been better for man not to have been born at all than &c.
l}
TyO ch.same. Targ.Gen.II,2 H31. Targ.IISam.XXI,10 Sabb. 56 '=1 bxi inixb lb '3 it would have been better
. . .
Targ. Job III, 25 IW*} (Ms. mns); a. fr.— B. Mets. 86 a temple, only that it might not be written about him &c.
KB51 n.3 the storm subsided. lb. miaBS K>T|S rttfl 13 when a. fr.
his soul was at rest (when he was dead). lb. FWDS3 til*T\
'31 let me rather die, than be delivered &c. lb. XOli xinn
n*D III pr. n. m., v. ni.
h*<Bna n3*i on the day when -he died. Keth. 104 a a. fr. ,
I2Jn*13, pi. D^iinis, v. dn3.
-1 i-PltfB3 ri3— is dead. Yoma 20 b 10 POP'? leave it alone,
sir (be no longer my interpreter). Sabb. 3 hot. nSTa 1B13
a
T2f\2 ch. (b. h. ; cmp. Bio a. 113) to shake.
PT^a Ms. M. (v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note) his body had been
Af. B*S* to scare. Targ. Y. Lev. XXVI, 6, v. 113 ch.
resting (and he lifted it from the ground in moving). Ib.5 ,J
clerks. Sot. 35 b '31 dnbtt) '3 liynu (not p-|iai3) they sent
(store them); a.fr.— Part. pass, nso; f. xnso;^/.in?p. Hull. their clerks who peeled off the lime and copied the in-
46* bot. '31 ma 'al, v. XTil. Keth. 84 1
'
X3*n Tilth where scription ; Y. ib. VIII, 21 d 1^-11313 ynblUO, Tosef. ib.VIII, 6
were they placed (at the time of death)?; a. fr. fWB inbffil ed. Zuck. (Var. Vilas, corr. ace.).— [Sifre
Ithpa. ni»3nx to be relieved, recover. Targ. Y. Lev. Num. 157 B11B13, v. 1^3].
XXVI, 35.
Ithpe. ns.nx 1) to be laid down, placed. B. Bath. 14 1 '
j
lp jI3 U m. (votaptxov, sub. u.e8ootov, S.) steno-
'31 mb nsnpT (Bashi nttfi, v. supra) it was placed by the grapher's method, abbreviation. Sabb. XII, 5 nns nix nns
side; a. e. — 2) (v. xm3) to be satisfactory. Kidd. 45 b '3 if one wrote (on tbe Sabbath) one letter as an ab-
— ;
breviation (e. g. 'p for pip), lb. 105* '3 ",vrb the acrostic XIX, 17; a.e. —Esp. WtnDV a gentile woman. Targ. Prov.
aflri, -jbB, pT.", -,-X:). lb. ': ^:s, v. -::S; a. fr.—Trnsf. XPprrB), ed. xrv*-i-=3.]— PI. ffr&a, Rrrman, Targ. Gen.
'3 firrb by a mere hint. Deut. R. s. 2, v. TBTT'p XXXI, 15 (not ttttnaw).
b
"'ID, ""J I (b. h.) to be becoming, pleasing. Sot. 47 , fctrf^C^* v. preced.
a. e. n*:-, v. rv: II.
Hif.n'lT) lj to beautify, adorn. Y. Peah I, 15 b (ref. to STTlD-13 f . (r3)3)=h. T|'S3, tour^. Targ. Prov.XXVUI, 8.
"'13, M"l3 m. (!T3, rtX3) 1) beauty, ornament. Kel. m-TO "£E":m y^CPB/n who make motions with their hands
when speaking.— [Tosef. Ohol. V, 12 TWaa ed. Zuck., oth.
XIV, 2 "'"cb ",X-*r (ed.Dehr. "XBb) he attached them for
ed. T*a, read: "tTWJ, v. n:r II.]
ornamentation. Yeb. 39 ". DWb 1
•WOT' rx 03T3H he
'
. .
nm
s. ':
Tiro the slave was overcome with drowsiness and fell
Cant. 988 (not TVP0CI), v. nx3.— 2) *n or »$
asleep.
(=,Ti-3 II) dwelling, climate. B. Bath.'24
T
b
"W&1 "« ffNSB
because of the health of the town (which suffers from e.—Part, trse, D^3,
D13 eh. same. Targ. Is. V, 27; a.
trees; Bashi: because of the beauty of the town which tW. Targ. Ps. CXXI, 3, sq. OW Ma. (ed.D^S^ B-W5).—Erub.
requires an open space all around); Y. ib. II, 13 top WWB
c
65 a XrilS O?"*^ i*J "SB xb would you not take a little
5-,; Y. Shebi. VI,36 C bot. BJW, v. W3J II.
nap? Ib. XB1B BVri XT.'Cn soon will come the days
. . .
n which are long and yet short (of deeds), when we shall
]3, pr. n. pi., v. -X-:. b
have a long sleep. Pes. 120 IB B^XS xp B3T2 were you
iT^3, v. IT"33. asleep?, v. infra. Yeb. 24 b , a. fr. '=1 3*Wl tt*Q "O Rab
TT :' t: T
must have said so when he was sleepy and going to bed
a
JI13 m. (f"C3)
T
diminution, lesser portion. Sifra M'tsor a, B. Kam. 47
b
65 a (Ms. M. ^XS, v. "^a). Snh. 7 XB^: XT,
;
Xeg., Par. 3, ch. HI (expl. -*CP, Lev. XIV, 14) tyi '3 -jfr.
v. x'«p^.
inside of the lesser helix, which is the anti-helix, v. X"i*h:>.
Palp. B3B3 to be drowsy; to doze. Pes. 1. c. ""B^b: "px
"B3B3B Xp Ms. O. (ed. incorr.,' v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note 90)
b
t t: : tt: :-
no, I was dozing. Kidd. 17 , v. XBm*T.—Esp. to be in a
comatose condition, be dying. M. Kat. 28 B3"S3B Xp WPi
a
*ra3, n*ra3, nw, kh?-3 m . ch.=h. -.-=:,
a
Targ. 0. that he was dying. Kidd. 72 bot. "OT\ 'Vd Xp JTM "B Ar.
strange; stranger; gentile. Targ. Prov. VI, I.
(ed. ""PEES xn*3) when Rabbi was dying.
Deut.XVn,15; a.fr.— [Targ. Prov. XI, 1 7 XVH.ll KTO-U ;
some ed., v. X'j'ip:.] Sabb. 65 b nX"Ol3 XB-3 another — Ithpaip. zi-'.r"X, '2-x to be drotcsy. Targ. Ps. LXXVI, 6.
Fern. nx-;*:, X^n=«, xn^rtt. Targ. Ex. n, 22. Targ. Job drowsy. Y. Meg. II, 73 a bot.'; a. fr.
112*
7;
away. Hull. S7
1
'
rrbim !-i31*3Td (Tosef. ib. Ill, 9 rWTtffl)
NQl3, v. -wb.
if the animal loses flesh, opp. nnaittd. Sot. HI, 5; ib. 6a
a
HDiO, v. bo i.
xsiisnd (corr. ace), ib. 26 cna^x "\~r\ nsisnaa when she
is ailing all over the body (not suffering locally as predicted
jTnai3, v.-,™. for the faithless woman, Num. V, a
27); Y. ib.lll, 19 bot.
VJ U f. (vofiir), nome, j)£. nomae) corroding sore, ulcer. (before the serpent)? Yalk. Ex. 237 insa WTO Olpd baa
Ab.Zar. 10 b '31 1 lb hnb51tt "na Ar.ed.Koh.(ed.Xd''3 .. fibsia, '31 D3 withersoever an Egyptian fled, the sea ran against
corr. ace.) ifone has an ulcer on his foot, shall he have him; Mekh. B'shall. 6 0^03 O^nsd; a. fr. .
Eithpalp. nsisnn, Nithpa. fisisrc to become delicate, the priest places his hand under those of the owner of
be failing, to fall awag. B. Kam.91 a rlfi'JSro WW mildX the offering and waves. Ib. "pB^Sd Q1"35n "px gentiles
-jbim (Ms. M. !-!3.1l_3rra; ed. Sonc. HlSpd) if the experts are not permitted to wave their offerings; O^ttJSJl *pX
declared his injuries as curable (and the court assessed niB^Sd women are not permitted &c. Ib. a nitm CfJJ bl31
the damages accordingly), but he continues to be falling 1
t]' 3"'1 I might think that he must wave twice. Snh. VI, 1
*e 889 nsi:
c!"P213"lb and fan their masters. Pesik. B. 1. c; Yalk. Ps. her in addition a consideration (a small coin) out of
1. c. rnbs "pB^a 33tt1 and all fan her (are subservient to his own.
her); a. e.
';
SD13 ch. 1) same. Targ. II Kings XIX, 30 (h. text^lB). the day of the Nazarene (Sunday).— PI. d^SIS Christians.
Targ. Ez. XIX, 10; a. e.— 2) = &OB3, q. v. Taan. 27 '3n iJBia Ms. M. (ed. 01"33>ti; in some ed. the
1(
— —
'H« 890 ^TD
&GJ3H3 II rQj?U WJJRU f.ch.=h.nap3, /"eroa/e. iISTI '3 311 Ms. M. (ed. xaro, v. Rabb. D. S. a.l. note) a
Targ. Gen. I, 27. Targ. Lev! XXVII, 4; a. fr. — Y. Tiian. layer of wheat of the height of a nizba; [for oth. vers.,
IV, 69 a hot. Gen. K. 8.33, v. "OTII; a. fr.— PI. T3p>3, V. NpS^II].
•
(
3p13, xrap13. Keth.IV, 11, v. lall. Y. Kil. IX, 32 b ; Y.
Keth. XII, 35 a hot.; Gen. R. 1. c, v. "CI II, a. e. T T
ponderi niimmus) a stamped coin. Par. 1,3 ini*p "W3> "j3 Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) the cry with which to chase an
'31 '3 Ben 'Azzai called it (the sheep between one and ox away (or goad him on); nn&tl '3 the lion-hunter's
two years of age, when it is neither 12)3.3 nor ?"K) 'a cry; 831X1 '3 the sailor's cry, v. X"^n.
distinct coin ;'
R. Yishm. called it 'counterfeit;' v. WMISIB.
SS^2, constr. C]lt3 m. (C)t3) rebuke. Targ. Koh.VII,5.
lIPlD, fcClj^ v. sub -ip?.
]\2 (cmp. tit I) to be unsteady. Lev. R. s. 10 13? '323
3p"0, Y. Yeb. X, ll a hot., v. 5. lip» Ar. (ed. fISIM; Ex. R. s. 37, v. nit I) whose heart
within him was unsteady (whose mind was unbalanced,
i ip'jplw in. (lucanica) a sort of sausages. Y. Shek. who was wanton).
c
VII, 50 bot. (Bab. ed. VII, 2 np*3!p3, Var. 8p ^3 Xp3,
Hif. t^n to make unsteady. Part. pass. Wa, pi. pjte
Stp "O IPWpS, Ms. M. Kp "<3Xp3, read: Xp^Np^S).
staggering, reeling. Pesik. Zutr. Haaz., ed. Bub. p. 115
(expl. an TO, Deut. XXXII, 24) 32>m "ViSa ... 'a Vntti
jnpij, v. Tips.
they shall be reeling and shall fall on the dunghill from
fconpiD, v. sonps. hunger; Sifre Deut. 321 3S13 D^liNtt (or nilfctt), read:
D^Via) staggering in starvation; Yalk. ib. 945 yJTj'm,
n^p'lD m. (irrp) (yon) a leavened
old, spoiled, esp. '3
v. n».
substance unfit for food. Pes.43 a IT, 3' S3 '3 spoiled leavened ,
substance in its natural condition, opp. ration "<"S in a TTJD ch. same. Part. !**», p/. ^f3. Yoma 78 b '3 "0XO
mixture. Men. 54 a ; a.fr.— [Ar.: N^plS.] Ar. shaky vessels (that cannot stand, and are used as
toys), v. Ita.
nJ as a verb, v. "PS I.
,
•pirin. Keth. 10 b rWH (or rVtjP) ; Hull. 7
a pni-ta (or fWTO),
(gheber). lb. '3 "Q fire temple, gheber-service; a. fr.
v. nit II. Part. pass, n-tio, pi. "pntio unsteady, reeling.
[Lev. R. s. 27, a. e. natal 1133, v. niairyo.]
Yalk. Deut. 945, ^nt, Deut. XXXII, 24)
v.tt3. [Ib. (ref. to
T
1SS3 'a tfW, read with Sifre ib. 321 T^ntWB dragged
T T ' "T along in the dust, v. ^nt.]
pin"n3,pniUv.p^3. him &c. Par. XII, 8 '31 tfih K? he must not sprinkle upon
— 1
the spindle and the wliorl separately ; a. fr. — Trasf. to 1300 I will abstain from this (cup); a. e.—PL BWJS,
havr a cleansing influence. Tosef. Dem.1,1 4 Tosef. Makhsh. ;
"pTTS. Lev.R.s.24, end, opp. D^lia^.— Esp. nazir,Nazarite,
111,15 '31 bs ri-tp 1HX 1MO one clean person has a cleans- one bound by a vow to be set apart for the service of God,
ing influence on one hundred unclean persons; Y. Dem. and as such to abstain from grapes and all productions of the
Ill, 23 c hot. vine and from intoxicating drinks, and to let his hair grow
Hof. fiWi to be sprinkled. Par. 1. c. rWO tttrt 0X1 but (Num. VI, 1—21). Naz. 1, 1, a. fr. '3 Ml ?*! he is aNazarite
if he has sprinkled (on each separately), it is sprinkled (his words mean the vow of nazaritism). lb. 2 "pttJOttJ '3
(the lustration
an&rw,
t
"HD
t:
m.
•
v.
(b. h.j
m
is valid).
W)
»••
I will
'3 "flrnri It
be a nazir, if I stand up
ms
he is a Nazarite by
; a.
niOX
; obl3>'2 a nazarite for life; a. v. fr.—
fr.— Fem. rTW3. lb. Ill, 6. lb. II, 2
H»
if he said, this cow think3
. . .
for the Nazarite, Num. VI, 3) ^(b) "plox "jb *jb lax xbr.a
SDTC» v. xnt-np.
'31 "lino the proverb says, go, go, they say (to the) Nazarite,
ITJD naziah, a substitute for'VM (v. **&*$). Ned. 1,2. go all around that thou mayest not come near the vineyard;
Sabb. 13 a a. fr. '31 'S iiax *]b "jb BllCa as a measure of
,
'31 (=1 "ab) he burst the vat open and drank the beer, ri")"?D II f., v. tn. a. wrwj.
and was cured.
I^JD, v. xnvws.
nD^Jj anger, rebuke, esp. n'zifah, a lower
f. (C]]3 )
degree of excommunication; v.
t
'31 !"PU5B33 '3 3ns he considered himself under the minor his father's money set apart for the purpose. Ib. l^lEn
ban for thirty days. Ib. ,J ; a. e. ini^3b ... (Rashi to ib. 30 a ;
nwn3) he had set apart
n
money for his nazai*itic expenses without mentioning
p tD nazik, a substitute for W3, v. ^S. Ned. I, 2.
special items; Tosef. ib. Ill, 16; Tosef. Meiil. I, 9. Ned. 3b
'3M bs bn 'art vow may take effect
(sub. 113) one nazaritic
lTOv.pt?. on top of another, vow taken within the term of i. e. a
"HD m. (b. h.; v. 113) 1) abstinent. Naz. II, 3 '3 iJPiri '33 '3 0«"i3^3) the substitutes for nazir are as effective
— —;
KfA-PT: 892
r*5
as the word nazir itself. Tosef. Naz. I.e. WiftJ IKiab jury in moving ^be an active agency of damage); ib.
for his other nazaritic expenses. Naz. 14 b '3 *4"iU) two '31 3n and when one of them caused damage, the
'niE31
nazaritic vows. Y. ib. V, end, 54 b m*V"1S . . . jfiOh and offender (p* *^?) is responsible. Ib. Ill, 6 '31 ni 1p*>*ni and
1
all of them must observe nine nazaritic vows in suc- hurt one another (by collision) ; a. fr.' —V. p" 1
*^?.
cession; a. fr. Hof. pvtn to be hurt, injured, damaged. Ib. Ill, l,sq.
Ib.31 b 3^333^3 IpwnttJ vessels (belonging to one person)
&<n"P?3, TV)} ch. same. Targ. 0. Num. VI, 2 ed.
were damaged by collision with (another person's) vessels;
Berl. (oth.'ed. a. Y. K1*<13).—Naz. 14 b Kin one Nazarite
'3
a*, fr.
vow. Ib. 3* nWl*"!? b>5 135*i»b to violate his vow; a. e.
Nif. pr? same. Ex. B. 1. c. end siplS*) Kbtt) that they
be not hurt (by the wolves). Deut. B. s. 7 ISIIBS p*sn xbl
5JD cmp. blK) to run, melt, be distilled.
(b. h.; Gen.
Bnro mat bltt rather than a nail of one of them be injured
B. s."l3 Job XXXVI, 28) d"pnUJ3 *f>li3 Dn ptl
(ref. to 9b
;
55i ch. same; part, (or adj.) pi. K*bl3, *V6 running p :OT; Ithpe. p" !?*^, p^p* to be
Ithpa. pttnx, Itf a/". 1
waters, rivers; v. preced. Targ. Y. Ex.XV.S (0. SOblK). hurt, to meet with an accident. Targ. IlChr. XXXII, 31.
Targ. Ps. LXXVIII, 16; a. e.
Targ. Job V, 24.—B.Kam. 13 b K»b5» pin"* lb*-X if he had
been hurt through any other cause. Ber. 9 b "'p'PPKI and
DC m. (b. h.; Ml II, cmp. HVtt)nose-ring, earring. Kel. I met with evil; tlpffPX iX23 what was the evil thou didst
XI, 9; a. e— PI. BW3. Ib. 8 '3 earrings; 5)Kn ^l? nose- —
meet with? Lev.B. s. 24 *pp*3r,a "jinx n*>bl and you have
rings. Babb. VI, 1 '33,'expl. ib. 54b B|Kh "WtS. Ex. E. s. 48, never been injured. Kidd. 29 b * p*n' » im they used to be l 1
pass. 5)113, ^/.d^BUS, fBW reprimanded,placedunderthe ban which the public may be injured. B. Kam. 1, 1 3n . . .
(v. nB^13). Tanh. Ki Thissa 16 '31 *0Bb Kin '3 he is banned '31 '3 *>Elbffin dbuib the offender is bound to pay indemnity
in the sight of the Lord; Ex. B. s. 41 n"3pnb '3 --in; W with the best of the land (out of his best lands, v. nil* *"). 1
Ab. VI '3 K1p3; a.fr.— Sabb. 115* 3n *,3m*> Joh. the ex-
Ib.2 ipi3 ni£p03 ^niU53n I have been partly instrumental
communicated; Tosef. ib. XIII (XIV), 2 '3n *,3 (Var. 5)-l"0
in injuring him, v. HUsn. Ib.II,5, a. fr. '3 i^n indemnity
Nif.), v. l^n. Taan. I, 7 Dlpab ':n nix "033 like men ex-
up to half the damage, opp. EbUJ '3 full indemnity. Ib.
communicated in the sight of God. Yeb. 72 a ; a. e.
VIII, 1 '31 15S3 '33 (has to pay) damages (for the maimed
fpC limb), an indemnity for the pain inflicted &c; a.fr.
*]I3, ch. same. Targ. Gen. XXXVII, 10 (h. text
153). Targ. Ps. IX, 6. Targ. Num. XII, 14 5]** ?? 1
ed. Berl.
PI. 3*^13, *ppl3; constr. *ip!3. we Ib. 84 a '31 '3d 'S pi
a may draw an analogy between different cases of mayhem,
(Y. Cfnitt, not 'a); a . fr— Part. pass. CftS. Hull. 133 K31
mil but not between mayhem and homicide. Ib. 1103 1H2J '3
'3 (Bashi 5)113) Baba was under the ban.
damages for an ox injured by an ox; a. fr.— "pplS, "pp* !? 1
(fr.
I%?e. Pf JpS '
*° & e chid, chastised. Ab. Zar. 55 a 5)l|""3
P">!})ca8es of damages, laws concerning injuries; damages.
bftfctf, v. 5)13.
Ib.1, 1, v. 3K II. Mekh. Mishp. s. 14; a. fr., v. *,-p*"'3.—Esp.
p| J flt/. p^n (denom. of pita) to hurt, injure, damage. N'zikin, (Seder N'zikin) name of the fourth Order of the
Ex. B. 8. 20, beg. ip^n RVl . .. abl stepped over the child Mishnah, Tosefta and Talmud, also of a section of M'khilta
and did not injure it. B. Katn. I, 1 p**nbl *^*<b to do in- Mishpatim. Sabb.31». Lev. B. s. 19 C*p1E 'h '3 N. which
;
893 nnn:
pJD, Spp/r?
T
ch.same.Targ.O.Ex.XXIV,ll. Targ. PlD (b. h.) pr. n. m. Noah. Ab.V,2. Snh.l08 b ; a.fr.—
Y. ib. XXX ,12 krvral ^
(h.text E)»). lb. XXI, 19; a.e.—
rj3 ",3, pi. H3 "\32 Noahide, the human race; '3 '3 nnso laws
B.Kam.84 a NpT373 13^> Ms. M. (ed. pt3S) except indemnity obligatory upon mankind, con trad, to such as bind
all
for loss of limb. Ib. rligpa tvb ldHU assess the damages
Israelites alone, universal laws. Tosef.Ab.Zar.YIII(IX),4
due him for the loss of his hand a. fr. ;
'3 ">33 112X3 by the gentiles have been commanded seven
. . .
a. e.— Ib.
b '31
rep ...*W0W1 3>3 the gentile stands fore-
warned concerning all that is said in the section on
~l|2 (b. h. ; sec. r. of "iTj) 1) to surround; to keep off;
sorcery (Deut. XVIII, 10-12); Tosef. I.e. 6. Snh. 59 a niira ^3
to set apart. V. mt3, "its. — 2) (denom. of W!) to voiv to
'31 '3 'lb nidiCttJ whatever law has been published for the
be a Nazarite; to dedicate one's self to nazariteship. Naz.
Noahides (prior to the Sinaitic legislation) and repeated
Ill, 2 '31 VN8 '3',3 who vows to be a Nazarite for two terms.
at Sinai &c. Tosef. 1. c. 8. Ab. Zar. 64 b '3 '3 .. ^pltf *J3
Ib. 5 'd! Kim '3'U ^2 if one makes the vow while in a
(a gentile entitled to citizenship in Palestine) is he who
burial ground. Ib. n^lTS^n xb thou must not vow (while
obligates himself to observe the seven Noachidic laws, v.
in a burial ground). Ib.I,5 "*nta tfah* nnx I meant by
1&; a. v. fr.
my vow one nazaritic term which I consider a long one.
Ned. 3 b inrb XTp Wfffl the text (Num. VI, 2) ought to read 3n J (b. h.) pr. n. m. Nahbi, one of the twelve spies.
of
"riWB) unless he vows abstinence from all
them (mentioned Num. VI, 3). 2) to impose the vow — nnD
TT
i,* v. m
of abstinence. Sifre Num. 22 d"nnst nx DK "Wfi I'hazzir HIT] II = nn3n, rest, relief. Gen.R.s.10, end
f. (ni3)
(Num. VI, 2) includes also the imposition of nazariteship '3 Dills -,ni3 . . . IWU
yro when the hands of their Maker
on others (one's son &c). Ib. '31 mra T33£3> tTK himself he left off from (extending) them, they were given rest
may obligate, but he cannot obligate others; Num. R. (permanency); Yalk. ib. 16 m^sn.
s. 10; a. e — 3) to be a Nazarite. Naz. 19 a ionn kVsj S"sx
Dinil, dims.
v.
'n even if he did not bring the due sacrifice, he must
resume his nazariteship. Ib. '31 'n ^n^K when can he U*nj (b.h.) pr.n.m. Nahum, 1)N. the prophet. Pesik.
resume &c? After he brought the sacrifice (Num. VI, 12). Nah., p. 127 b ; a. e. — 2) N., name of several Tannaim a.
Nif. "i?3 1) (with b) to dedicate one's self to. Sifre I.e. Amoraim. Peah II, 6; Naz. 56 b "kdbn '3.—Sabb.II, 1, a.fr.
Wiib iTsrt mx^n the merit of nazariteship consists in "nan '3.— Taan. 21 a a.fr. IT da ttPSt '3, v. ira&.— Y. Taan.
,
the dedication of one's self to the Lord (in the sacred I,64 b top '3; (Y.Ber.IX,14 a topdin3Pi).— Ib.VIII,12 b bot.,
motive). — 2) (with 72) to abstain from; to renounce. Ib. a. fr. "fiktf'O "1 Ta '3 (Pes. 104 a Ab. Zar. 50 a "Wa^d '13 dH3d;)
; ;
ariteship. Targ.O. Num. VI, 3 IT (ed. Berl. "Wj Af; Y.II fcTD'irD, fT'O'lPD pr. n. m. N'hunia, 1) son of one
"pm
t:: tt t v
"Ml* Ithpe.). Targ. 0. ib. 5 ed. Berl. (Var. »«, Joseph ben Pakhsas (Paskas). Sifra Emor, beg. (also JTOin)
d
-1T3^, v. Berl. Targ. 0. II, p. 40). Y.Naz.I,beg.55 ;a. e.— 2) name of several Tannaim. Eduy.
Af. "UK, T9», TtSK same. Ib. 12; v. supra. VI, 2 )«•£« "|2 '3.—Ib.VII, 9 Kiatia '3 (Gitt. V, 5 pm"').-
p
Ab. Ill, 5; Ber. IV, 2, a. fr. H3pH ",3 '3; Meg. 28 a Ib. "3 .
Ithpe. "IT3PX to abstain, v. supra.
blian (Ms. M. Win, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note).— 3) Y. Shek.
1)2 m. (b. h.; preced.) 1) croivn, esp. the Nazarite's V, 48 d ; B. Kam. 50 a '=1 ISltt '3 N. the well-digger. Cmp.
hair'. Num. E. s. 10 (ref. to Num. VI, 7) nidS Siren WTp i3in, kwx
ITlJSl'b the text calls it (his long hair which defaces him) TTOirO pr. n. m. N'hunion (Onias, cmp. 1^3 in). Y.
a crown on his head. Ib. *|3"ip3 Y"iT3 his hair is as sacred Ned. VI, end, 40 a Y. Snh. ; 1, 19 a top I^Sim?.
as the sacrifice; a.fr. — 2)=nwn3, the Nazarite'' s voiv. Num. tt5^H3, v. dim?.
R. I.e.; Tosef. Naz. II, 6 (ref. to Num. VI, 21) b$ '3 K3>1
1331p but not the vow to follow the dedication of his nEJirO, n^JnD f. (b.h.) I) copper. Zeb. 22 a (ref. to
sacrifice ; Y. ib. II, 52 b
top '31 tflTJ dllpitt} his vow must Ex. XXX, 18) 'si'Tnbpn '3? I compared it (the foot of the
precede the dedication of his sacrifice &c. Ib.V,54 a b3b'1 5 laver with the laver itself) with regard to its being of
1"IT33 he turned around (trifled with) his vow. Ned. 90 a copper, but not with regard to anything else. Pesik. Ekhah,
T«3 by bKUJD, v. btXS3; a.fr. b copper coins. Keth.
p. 122 '31 '3 blU niS>23T3 silver-plated
113
— —
•jnfcirra 894 **
VII, 10, v. Dial; a. fr. — 2) bronze, v. next w. — 3) copper ib. 629 nibna. MU5 b». Midr. Till. 1. c. '31 13bn3 '3 V^a two
vessels. Y. Keth. X,33 d bot. '31 '3fi *,a "paia. fttrb to seize inheritances: we inherited thee and inherited theTorah.
(for the widowhood) copper vessels and dining plates.
4) the (copper) bottom or rim. Sabh. 41 a Rmwnauj ^3Bd
D n n!D, v. tans.
rifiaorts because its double bottom gives out heat to nj2 MJ driving on. Num. E. s. 10
f. Cpri3) pressing,
warm the water (even after the removal of the coals). (ref. to Jud. IV,
dBiaal dSlfia rWTCJ "^sb because
3) '33
Kel. VIII, 3; IX, 1; 3 man bl2J '3 the (copper) rim of the he railed at them while driving them on to labor.
stove. [Yoma 38 a , v. next w.] — 5) the polished, smooth
side of skin (dbp). Y. Meg. I, 71 (1 top irdins dlpa on "PHD m.,pl. •pifia (b.h. d^ris; -in;) nostrils; trnsf.
its smooth side, opp. "WIS dlpd the hairy side. owMete. Tosef. Mikv. V, 1.
I^IDIHD, 'Ejn^ I m. (preced.) bronze. Midd. II, 3; 5tfHT!D ch. same, nostril. Targ. Job XXXIX, 20 a. e.- ;
nrvn nanisa "jHOTr^W (from niOlria, v. preced.) because silk out of his nose (Eashi: fl^nsa, v. preced.); a. fr.
the bronze of which they were made was goldlike). PL •p.ifiS, nrcis. Targ. Ps. CXV, 6; a. e.—Y. Yeb. XVI,
Tosef. 1. c. nvt bWflVp '3 (Var. Ninons) it was Corinthian beg. 15 c prT*J*fl3 by . . . "pani put plasters on their noses
g
bronze; Yoma I.e. WVh fcmaibp rWirt) (Ms. M. NrVObp); (to disguise themselves); Y. Sot. IX, 23 c bot.; v. ^abB^d.
Yalk. Cant. 985.
ni^TO f. (Irt)) l) stabbing. Hull. 17 a '31 -jribw '3 the
jSTOrp, 'EJPU II m. (b.h.)Nehushtan, name of the stabbing of them is named sh'hitah. Ib. '3 111)3 flesh of
copper serpent erected by Moses. Targ. II Kings XVIII, 4. an animal killed by stabbing (instead of ritual cutting).
Ker. V, 1 '3 dl blood of a stabbed animal; a. e.— 2) the
NTflrU, nrfiPG,
:'
v nmnax.
' - .
mucous discharge of a healing wound. Nidd. 64 b
r t : t :
.
Rfcl "nj, nln inj m. (nn3) one going or coming down, rprp, v. nna.
esp. one coming from Palestine to Babylonia. Y. Shek. VIII,
51 a , a. e. '3 tearfpX (not Nalld!*) A. who had been in Baby- tfniHTO, v. xnn.3.
lonia. Y.Kil. IX, 32 c bot. ftp 1 Kbiy UHa had gone to Baby-
lonia ; Y. Keth. XII, 35 b bot. (not Nbby).— P/.constr.^rvins.
Targ. Ps. CXV, 17 ed. Lag. (ed. "WJ3)j a.fr.— wqi '3 sea- nSTHD, v. anna.
farers. Ib. CVII, 23. Targ.Is.XLlClO^m.— Sabb. 20 b ;
5Ilj m. (b.h.; bin, bbfi; cmp. hSVno) wady, river-bed,
90 a *» '3 bob WtklB, I inquired of all sea-farers. B.
ravine, stream. Sabb. 56 b (ref. to I Sam. XV, 5) ipoy by
Mets. 85 a (not fWtyj a. fr.
'3 (he was discussing) the subject of waAa£(Deut.XXI,4),
"TO, nilD (b. h.; cmp. WD) to bring to rest, to lead. i. e. the regard due to human lives. Cant. E. to I, 2 13
Ex. E. s. 20 (ref. to Ex. XIII, 17) 'SIdilXda d*3 i& he yai3 '33 rittjysiu until he (through his erudition) becomes
did not lead them from Egypt to Palestine by the route like a bubbling stream; a. e.—PL debris , fbf»9. Ib. fra
of eleven journeys; Tanh.B'shall.l 05(13 EH3 naham means, '3 '3 "piayai . . d^d as waters come down in drops and
he led them; v. dlrVa. grow to be torrents; Midr. Till, to Ps. I. Ber. 16 a (ref. to
Num. XXIV, 6) '31 debris t]K '3 rid as the waters of
"nDT m. (bsin, bbri; cmp. bri_3) 1) basket for catching streams raise man from uncleanness to cleanness, so do
. . .
fish. Y. Sabb. XUI, e'nd, 14 b [read :] D^l btt) '3 mbynbl the tents (of learning) &c. a. fr. ;
HTrii
land (of life everlasting). Sifre Num. 133 niaaruo . . bW
f. (homilet.==fibna_) inheritance.— PL niVw. nibnia Moses knew
that daughters (in the absence of
Midr. Till, to Ps. V, 1 (ref. to ft&Wft ib.)bn3tt) W\ TUB by sons) are legal heirs. Midr. Till, to Ps. V, beg. (ref. to
'31 111 ed. Bub. (oth. ed. *QQ, corr. ace.) for the two in- Num. XX 1, 19) '31 dl-rby N3 t"y ibrtiwa when they adopted
heritances, because David inherited royalty &c; Yalk. idolatry, the angel of death came upon them. Ib. lbri3
—
xbm 895 nittn:
'31'3 XTfi rvbvb na"pnb they adopted the Lord as bread) with her own hands, she has no comforter', but
God, and he adopted them as a people ib. *vbn nsnaa ; if she had a comforter, the comforter would break it &c—
bxb through the gift (of the well in the desert) I adopted PL BT rO a,
ffl "pansa. M. Kat. 27 a 'San tvn the room where
God; mix mbns is:n n"3pn "b msia -pna (ed. Bub.) the comforters meet. Ib. b MSP3ti) "jVO as soon 'ST "3a *px . . .
because the Lord gave me the well as a gift, I adopted as the mourner nods with head (indicating that he his
him; Erub. 54 a bx ibns nsnBB lb rWTOttJ paa and since accepts their consolations), the friends are no longer per-
it (the Law) is given him as a gift, the Lord claims him mitted to sit with him; a.fr. Sabb. 152 a/3B lb TX £ na — 1 ,
same law of succession applies to sons and (eventually) on earth. Ex. R. s. 45, beg. I^bs '3na ""3X1 and I am sorry
we read fins xbl (perhaps meant for fin? Nif.). Ithpa. finsnx as preced. Nif. Targ. Job XLII, 6 a. fr.— ;
Pi. on^S to comfort, console. Pesik. Nah., p. 128 a b"x Y.l. c. nansna lbs b^ap xbl and would not allow himself
nsanssi crxi "CX n"3pn the Lord said to them (the
"jbs to be comforted ; a. e.
comfort thee. does not know) 'sn BT what day his relief from trouble
J
Ib.' ">as iJians ^Manj comfort me, comfort
me, my people. Pesik. R. s.30 RJJrpfc m"an 1033S1 and
will come ; a. fr. —Esp. 'sn the comfort (of Zion), resto-
ration of Israel. Mace. 5 b a. fr. (a euphemistic affirmation)
his friends came in to comfort him ; fi^ansa VH15X bs DX ,
mains).— Y. Peah 1, 16 r bot. ppiS 13 '3 *i; Y. Yeb. XIV, fcCnnD f. (preced.) wrath. Gen. R. s. 67 (ref. to Am.
b
beg. 14 'S 'TO 13 '3 "\ — Y. Shek. V, end, 49 h
;
a. oth.—
1,11) '31 n^rnnsi nT\131> his anger and his wrath do
b
V. Fr. Darkhe p. 137; p. 176 ; M'bo p. 116 .
not cease &c; Yalk. ib. 116 n^mnn (corr. ace).
I, 70 b top ",an3 13 'UJ '11 rtna "jan3; v. preced.—R. Hash. who rejects divination. Mekh. B'shall. s. 2 W&ny; Kara
'31 lltni lest they consider it a bad omen and go back.
34 b , a. fr. '3 13 HB*\
Ib. '31 TOn? "pla ">3pn and the Midianite elders con-
^fJQn? ch.=h. nan.3.— P/. MnoW, ",an_3. Targ. Y.
f. sidered (Balaam's death) a bad omen and went home;
a. fr. — B.
W
Gen. £ 21. Targ. Is. XVIIl' 4 (ed. Lag.' TOTW ) ; a. fr. —
Sifra Vayikra, Par. 9, ch. XHI (ref. to Lev.
Kam. 38 a *, s633T '3 SOS ^ n"W "^a what do I care for XVIII, 3) [read:] tinn kVhU thou must not augur (v.
b
the consolations of the Babylonians? B. Bath. 14 '3 n^B-DI however, 1p3 II).
and ends with consolations. Ib.ab 'av.'^aaD we join... the
consolations at the end of one book to those at the be- )25rO I, Pa. ti^n, '3 same. Targ. II Kings XXI, 6. Ib.
b
ginning of the next, v. JOaiin.— Y. Snh. X,28 bot. bai XVII,~17 (ed. fr.— Hull. 95 b tfrnSI
Wil. WJ'TO'I Pe.); a.
'31 '31 "J3I3 and all the good times and consolations (pre- because he had made his movements dependent on an
omen. Yeb. 120 b '31 iiBSifit "titnyq D^a as to purse and
dicted) in the world have come true in my own days.
. .
a sign by means of a nasal sound. lb. 68 a '31 31 IT% '3 Pl.^tin. Ib.s.84 D^aipSI 'S snakes and scorpions; a.fr.
R. H. uttered a sound of warning behind him. Sabb. 2) a pungent (poisonous) fluid in the leaves or in the
152 b '31 in3 '3 R. A. (who was buried there) snorted at stems of onions kept for a long time in the ground. Erub.
them (warned them off; Ag. Hatt. b
ans). R. Hash. 34 ^3 29 b —
3) a disease of the eye, v. f fbn. Bekh. VI, 2 'itbn
.
-|b JO^ns (ed. fcOTTlS v. Rabb. D. , S. a. 1. note 8) when '31 % expl.ib.38 b as identical with "jUbn; Tosef. ib. IV, 2;
I give thee a sign. Ber. 62 b . Sifra Emor ch. II, Par. 3.
Pa. in_3 to rebuke. Kidd. 81 b n^a inns they rebuked
him (for his misbehavior). ti5r0, Ntt5n.3 ch -h. tin. Targ. Y.II Num. XXIII, 23.-
—
on: 897 Dinn:
Snh. 19 a lfiP "tOPI Np '3 (by saying to his comforters, 'be ting their hands on the sacrifices). Ber. 17 a 1 '3 hBJWl
comforted') does he not cast an evil omen on them (that IISTp and acts so as to please his Creator; a. fr.
they would suffer bereavement)? Gen.R.s.87, \.)T\;a,.e. —
riMJ (b. h.; sec. r. of ni3) to be put down, to go down.
PI. 'ptim, X'TZJm, m. Targ. Num. 1. c. (0. ed. Berl. "am).
Targ. 0. ib.XXIV, 1. Targ. Y. Lev. XIX, 26 ; a. fr.
Nif. nm same, to be humbled, boio. Y. Ber. IV, beg. 7 a
(ref. to Mai. II, 5) SOrt '3 . . . . Ollp before he mentions
the Name (in the benediction), he must bow. — V. S<nn.
XV, 20. " Targ.Vum. XXI, 9 ; a. fr.— Y. Kidd.I, 58 d "f^p ':
ilnj, il 'MJ ch. same, to go down. Impf. nim, inf.
b^bl '3 copper rises and falls (silver being the standard),
v. WyR. Esth. R. to 1, 22 (miW '1) '21 '31 Sttimp fW 770
rttW, tPtr% imper. tl'H Targ. Ex.
XLIV, 26; a. fr.— [Targ. Y.H Gen.XLIX,23 Nnmob, some
XV, 5. Targ. Y. Gen.
the sea. Gitt. 56 b '21 D*Oia 1 T^BJ 1235 a nahshol in the Targ. 0. Deut. XXVIII, 56 (h. text asm. Targ. Y. I Gen.
sea stood up against him to drown him; Yalk. Koh. 972 XLIX, 23, v. supra. Targ. 0. ib. II, 5. Targ. Ez. XXIII,
o^ bus '3. 15; a. fr.— Part. pass, nrra (mna); f. xnrra; pi. yrrra;
)T\trq placed, resting, lying; inlaid. Targ.O. Gen.Vni,ll
^I^JtlD,S^i^nDch. same. Targ. Jon. I, 4. Ib. 15; (ed. Vien. mm ; Y.mrra). Targ. Jer. XXIV, 1. Targ.Esth.
a. e. — Lev. R. s. 22 tvm ana a nahshol smote the sea; '3 VIII, 15; a. fr.— Pesik. B'shall., p.91 a Kim and ",12b trttfa
Gen. R. 10 SW^ Kpiam rVWra (corr. ace); Koh. R. to
s. he will take bread down out of the oven (cmp. nil II).
V, 8 Kai ia '3 wra. Taan. 21 b '21 125 JVTra mil used to place men apart &c.
of Judah. Num. R. s. 13, v. bidm h. Snh. 12 a (in a secret Ithpe. nnsmx, Ithpa. rnmx 1) to be brought down.
letter) '3 '©^f VtOB the burdened (the officers) of the Targ. Gen. XXXIX, 1. Targ. Ez. XXXI, 1 7 a. fr.— Y. Peah ;
offspring of N., i. e. of the Nasi of Palestine; a. fr. XIII, 21 a bot. 1102^3 "pa nn3mx became poor, v. 11*; Y.
—
Keth XI, 34 b bot. 2) (of an argument) to be settled. B.
"JDTEJTO* '"j^nr (not TVBffi) m. (Pers., v. Nold. Bath. I29 a xin * b nnmx, v. nis Ithpe.
(
Mand. Gramm. p. 63) hunter; a shrewd man. Targ.
Gen. XXV, 27 (h. text ms Jfti; cmp. Gen. R. s.63; Tanh. ^rinD f., constr. nnm (preced.) layer. Targ. 0. Ex.
Tol'doth 8). XVI, 13 (Var. nrVTG, nnm ; h. text n221T). Targ. Ps. CX, 3
(Bxt. nin*m).
fc^tBrtt, v. abium.
D"l7lP0, Di/TO m. (onn; cmp. 01BO) baker of bread
2, v. i^m-rm. in moulds, professional baker. Tosef. Hall. I, 7 inx '3
img,
.
the resting of the ark (Gen. VIII, 4). Yeb. 103 b bttJ 5130
'21 "pOlSO m32 a baker makes several forms, while the
t"35 '3 Ar. (in ed. our w. omitted) a sandal used as a rest
dealer deals with one baker; a. fr.
— '3H i"Him '1 R. Judah,
for an idol. — 2) ease; gentleness; comfort. Erub.83 b PrtPlD
the baker, prob. identical with R. Judah ben Baba. Y.
'32 Vj^attJn which one neighbor can make use of with
Hag.II,77 b bot. Tosef. Ohol.XVHI, 13; a. e.— PL trawn:,
ease, opp. nup2 with difficulty. Ber. 56 b '32 at a slow
prirtm. Y. Hall. Kel. XV, mux I;
1. c. 2, v. a. fr.
trot, opp. 0,1112 at full speed. Snh. 92 a , v. Stj£ a. fr.—
mi '3 gratification, pleasure. Keth. 95 a
VWS 1 1 BCT DiFllTlD, NQTinD, 'inrOch.same. Targ. Gen. XL,
">b3»2b she may say, I did it only to gratify my husband 17; a.fr.— PI. T^inmf^ainm, "'pinm. ib. 2. Y. ib. l.
(but did not mean Hag. 16 b 0*12)3? '1 "3 nilDSb "H2
to sell). Targ. Jer. XXXVII, 21; a. e. — B. Bath. 20 b '312 of the
to let the (offering) women have the satisfaction (of put- bakers' ovens.
— —
i-ffiwo 898 it33
b
R. s. 12 '3 ",a "b "*1B6 I am afraid of the guards (to open
Y. B.Bath. II, beg. 13 .
DfrnD, v. ninn3.
SHITDD m. (preced.) [that which is reset ved,] reward.
b^TQD m XXVII, left of his own accord (not carried away by force); Y. Yeb.
-
fa?}) heaviness, load. Targ. Prov. 3.
'31 '3 .. "|3n SOU) why are these called n'tushim, and the
V. VJ3.
others r^ushiml 3"3>*ai '3 n. are those who emigrate
NDlED pr. n. pi., v. nsias. against their will (fugitives from justice).
n
m Targ. O. Ex. XXX, I2D, HI3D (b. h.) 1) (cmp. ra3T ) to stretch; to pitch a
XSjIlM - ch - &&-*> *F&i halm -
Targ. Chr. 54 (Var. ed. Rahmer tent. Yalk. Gen. 67 '31 nbnx '3 PWITO (Gen. R. s. 39 3?B3)
34 (ed. Vien. '3). I II,
"nSiaS). Targ. Ruth IV, 20.— Gitt. 69 b WDB» VttW let first he pitched Sarah's tent &c. — 2) to hang over, incline;
to decline. Macc.11,7 nai3 1S131, v.f)i3II; Kidd. 40 1
'. Ned.
him knead it with balm.
IV, 5, a. e. niaisn overhanging fruit. Y. M. Kat. Ill, 82 l
riD"ft25 I pr. n. m. Netofah. Targ. Ruth IV, 20 (after niai3*a mustache hangs over the mouth.
when one's
I Chr/ll, 54 TlBIM)- Snh. 6 b Iia13 "pin pTlb which way the judgment will
b
incline (in whose favor the verdict will be). Ib. 3 (ref.
nSDlDD II, NDIDD (b. h. nsa3) pr. n. pi. Netofah, to Ex. XXIII, 2) fiai3 "p n*D -531 niZ)3> arrange for thyself
near Bethlehem in Juda! Gen. R. s. 79 '3 rVtfl xrspa the a court which can lean towards one side, i. e. of uneven
valley of Beth N.; Yalk. Koh. 972; (Gen. R. s. 10 KEla); numbers. Gen. R. s. 96, a. fr. mab '3 one inclines towards
v. nsia. — '3(n) ni name of a species of olives, Netofah dying, feels death approaching; a. v. fr. — 3) to bend,
olive. Peah VII, 1 an olivewhich bore at one time a pervert judgment. Mekh. Mishp. s«20 "^"W .. laxn Staiz?
special name irffttn '3 ni3 pSX) Ms. M. (ed. 'an) (even "pin riX nai3 lest you say, I will take a bribe but will not
if it be) like the N. olive; Tosef. ib. Ill, 9. Y. ib.VII, beg. pervert the law. — Part. pass. 11B3; f. h?ID3j pi. B*»W3,
20 a '3 -(STJia TO if two of the trees were N. trees ; nn*>n "p""iB3; ni"«lB3 a) hanging over, threatening, inclining.
'3 initiJ b(9 if all the trees of his field were N. lb. (defin- Snh. 109 a '3 i^p a threatening wall; R. Hash. 16 b ; a. e.—
ing '3) "pia 5)1313 one dripping oil, contrad. to "013 BIZ)
Gen. R. s.49 nials '3, v. supra. —b) spread; pitched. Ohol.
(pouring), yielding large quantities of oil. Ib.nfi"^ isnni VII, 2. Tosef. ib. VIII, 2; a. e.
(corr. ace.).— Denom.: Eif. napn l) (neut. verb) to incline. B. Mets. 59 'B*n
1
'
I Chr. II, 54); 'Tosef. ib. IV (III), 8 'asn "<KabD Var. (ed.
"paa one is inclined (in favor of R. Akiba's opinion), i. e.
b
Zuck.'ViSiron) Y. ; ib. IV, 68 bot. "niPren ""a^O (ed. Krot. nsbn definite decision
the presumption is in his favor, opp.
'3*1; corr. ace).
for general practice. Y. Snh. 1, 18 a bot. (ref. to I Kings
NflSiED,
T •' 1
v. vetffri.
t
XXII, tpb
19) '31 ni3T yw
1?X these argued in favor, and
those against. R. Hash. 17 a '31 naa ion 311 and He who
:
fcTfTJ^ m. (la J) watchman, observer. Yalk. Koh. 989 na is abundant in kindness inclines (the scales) towards the
'31 '3 ">xn 5pxn "HI""! wherein lies the power of that sheep
. . . side of kindness; a. fr. —
2) to decline, move sideways. Keth.
(Israel), that it can feed among seventy bears (nations)? 10 a a man walking in the dark, niPB lUda Ti if he moves
Said he, strong is the watchman that guards it against sideways (towards the door), he finds it open, if he does
all of them.— PJ.-pniaS, K**3fo'3. Targ. Y.Deut. XVIII, 10 not (but strikes against the door) &c. Trnsf. to perform —
"pttjns
*
,
*7*"iI33 (ed. Amst. 'as) observers of omens (h. text coition without violently tearing thehymen. Ib. 3) (act. —
OTtta). Targ.Y.Gen.XLH,6 (not'-ia3); a.e.— Y. Hag.I,76 c verb) to bend; "pi 'n to wrest judgment. Mekh. I.e. Kfe9
snip snrtoj *£ "pffnn bring before us the guards of the 'pin rx Th9 nas< laxn say not, because he is a wicked
. .
town; Lam. R. introd. (R. Abba 2); Midr. Till, to Ps. man, I will turn the verdict against him. Peah VIII, 9
CXXVII; Yalk. Ps. 881 ; ib. '31 &*p,1p '3 y^N are these the pin HK naal ... y^l ^3 a judge that takes a bribe and
— :
for a verdict against the defendant a majority of two is (on the eve of the Sabbatical year) ; Succ. 34 a , a. e. 11U"
required, v.rnofi. Mekh. 1. c. "pOO *2 bs aiin put to death '3 the law concerning young trees in a Taan.5 field &c.
1 '
on a majority vote; B^aiM 'poa C]X 6f*t9 rraas incriminat- . . bot. '31 "pS>Ol3tt5 '3 b3U> yah W
may all shoots taken
ing witnessess must be two, so must the majority be two.— from thee be like thyself. Y. Yeb. I, 2 b 3>03 '3 UJan he
Part. pass, fioiO; f. ."Join reclining, bending over. M. Kat. planted five shoots, had five sons; a. fr. — Hag. 14 b a., e.
'21 a ; a
Yeb. 103 'a "pa .. 131S *p3 standing, sitting or re- '33 y&'p he mutilated the shoots (of the garden of religion,
clining. Kel. IV, 3; Tosef. ib. B. Kam. Ill, 10 ba> *« t*im v. Oils), i. e. became irreligious, v. "p?p. Mekh. B' shall., —
'31 ms if the vessel was misshaped so as to bend, side- Shir. s. 10, v. napra —
2) pitching a tent, putting up a
ways like a sedan chair. Ib.; ib. 5 JTlS ba> !"!03. —V. fiols. temporary structure. Meg. 5
b
, a. e., v. XJ53113X, a. 203.
n
IQ5> ^T3?i H23J oh. same. Snh. 26 a IHjBS .. *oVl HS'TM, v. nsioa
t :
II.
Bab. ib. 13 b ).
rn^TSD f. (1133) guarding, esp. (with ref. to Lev. XIX,
("TOD, iTJED f. (preced.) spreading. Ohol. VII, 2 18) bearing grudge. Sifra K'dosh., Par. 2, ch.IV 'p^ft 12
bniKn n*033 as a tent is spread; Tosef. ib. VIII, 2. '31 '3 bll5 iin3 howlaw forbidding to bear
far does the
grudge extend ? If you ask your neighbor for the loan of
b n ^D m. (bo?) heavy. Y. Snh. VI, 23 d bot., v. bbp.
an axe, and he refuses, and the next day he asks thee
say not, I am not like thee Yoma 23 a .
btTEQ, v. xbos.
;
34 a
Macc.*14 b naE3 fib/oa death penalty. Sabb. VII, Y.
42 a , v. NrWas. B. Kam.48 a M»V» b"Op he assumed the
'3
;
duty of guarding. Ib. '3 "vol n^Y* ST ?!? the duty of guarding
1
take. B. Mets. I, 1 '31 boia <Tr the one (of the claimants)
22 a nibo2 they abolished the washing of hands (before
'Sb
gets three shares &c. Y. Sot. 1, 16 d bot., a.e. "CIS rrai
prayer or studying the Law).
-p b3> what reward did they get for it?— SifraSh'mini,
iboa
T1^122 f. (SOS) 1) planting; plant. Cant. R. to VI, 11 beg. t3iib lbo3 "^Da they got (their punishment) from
b
)PT*n Muta when you plant them. Ber.35 a '3 13 that which Sinai. Sabb. 151 '31 fro bio take away what thou hast
belongs to the vegetable Kingdom. Snh.68 a "pKHlTp ItPM put into me. Arakh. 16 b ; B.Bath. 15 b -pa^S "para fits^p bio
planting of cucumbers; a. fr. Esp. young tree, shoot. — (Ag. Hatt. ^^ly) remove the chip from between thy eyes
Bets.25 b '31 "op"2 '3 the law concerning young trees (nbis) (teeth); '31 fillpblO remove the beam from &c. Gitt.VI, 1
cuts off the feet of the butchers (ought to teach them ""oa ''b bio nialNn PjX even if she says, get me my letter
a
patience, so as not to use meat before flaying and dis- of divorce (instead of 'receive for me'). Ib. 78 "pO'tt ''bo
secting). Shebi. I, 8 M73UJ3 '3 by 'a young plant' (with '31 take up thy letter of divorce from the ground. Pesik.
reference to the Sabbatical year law) we understand what B. s. 28, end W9 I lifted up my eyes. Ber. II, 8
h nbo3
its name indicates (during the first year). Y. ib. 33 b bot. bio"? Dtsn nst lb bir^b nsinn b3 Kb Y. ed., not every one
1U5S "pSJa '3 as to young shoots the proportion of ten to who desires to assume a name, may assume it, i. e. not
— ;;;
every one has a right to consider himself superior to the perat.) ; a. fr. — 2) (corresp. to h. SD3) to move. Targ. Gen.
masses (v. K^n/P); a. v. fr. — Part. pass. bias; f. nbsia? XX, 1. Targ. Ps. LV, 9 8<ba3 (Bxt/hVtM; h. text WO);
removed. Ned. XI, 12 (if a woman says) tfWlTl ',a 13K '3 a. fr.— 3) to wash the hands. Y. Ber. VIII, 12 a bot. '3 mn
I will be removed from (keep no company with) Jews; ..."lE"1 tV*P is he had washed his hands.
to be considered as if
'31 '3 xnni the husband may forbid the vow as far as it Pa. Vn» to lift, carry. Targ. 0. Deut. XXXII, 11. Targ.
concerns himself, and (for the rest) let her be isolated &c. Is. LXIII, 9; a. e.— Part. pass. ba3a, xbasa; f. xbasa pi. ;
Snh. 21 b bina "'bias persons who had their milt cut out T^OSa, N*ba_3a; Nrbasa exalted, high. Targ. Y. Deut.
(to make them fast runners). V. i~!bl23. 2) (sub. d^a) — — XXVill, 13 (opp. "pOixa). Targ. Y. I ib. IV, 7. Targ. Is.
to pour water over one's hands for purification d^b '3, ; LVII, 15. Targ.IIEsth.1,2. Targ. Prov.XXX,13. Targ.
(ellipt.) d" T '3, or only '3 to wash the hands before and
1 1
Y. Ex. XV, 1 (not 'basa). Targ. Is. II, 14.
Hif. b^an l) to throw;to put; to hang on, attach. Gitt. fctrPblGD, Targ. Prov. XIV, 30, v. XPrjba.
"V, 9 d^aP b^aPffla from the time she pours water on the
2 d"va b^aap who urinates. Men. 40 b 'P
3?t33 (b. h.) [to fix,] l)=Pa3, to pitch a tent; put up
flour. Yoma III,
a temporary structure. Meg. 5 b '3 FlrratK blU P3PB3 he put
'31 Pb?db he attached the fringe (Pb3P) to a three-
if
up a temporary structure for a festive religious occasion,
cornered garment. Sabb. 42 b PPSPd b^aPb to lay her
— v. XpS^ISX. Ib. '31 P3P03 '3 "Wl how dared he put up
eggs; a. fr. 2) (of plants) to assume the shape of, to
develop. Maasr. I, 2 11K1S sb^lBO, v. IINC; ib. 1TJ*B^Pa
a temporary structure on Purim? Snh.lll* dipa lUp"G —
ibPX siasb (Ex. R. s. 6 niasb) he wanted a place to put
yn% v. n**.
d^btwa.'pbya; Pibaia a) b Kil. II, 4 WBisb "pa31 nsilt if a field was sown, and he
pi. /y%. Kidd.82 d3>ia 'sties
prostrated from starvation. Ber. Ill, 1 P3Sb 'a lPattJ "W
resolves to plant trees in it, 'dl Sax lax" xb he must
1
a not say, I will first plant and then &c, v. "?5<. Ib. I, 8
he whose dead relative lies before him; ib. 18 'aiU fPS
'31 mpl"* "psais "px you must not plant vegetables &c.
'31 '533 vbs since the duty of burying rests upon
1"Q1pb
him, same as if the body were lying before him.
it is the
a. v. fr. — Part. pass. ?ia3; f. Wla3; pi. aisia3, "p?la3
2b a. e., v. ny^as.
garment provided with show-fringes. Men. 1. c. 'ab b^aP ,
if he attached additional fringes to a garment provided Nif. ?&:, 3?a3 to be planted with trees. B. Bath. 24 b ;
&c. ; a. fr. Erub. 23 b Idll '3 if the larger portion of it was planted
with trees, opp. *m Ohol. XVIII, 3 3>a3 b3 nsa3 W«
>il2j ch. same, l)(corresp. toh. Nid3) to take, lift, move, must not be planted with any kind of trees; Tosef. ib.
carry. '
Targ. Ex. X, 13. Targ. Ps. CXXXIV, 2 ibla (im- XVII, 10; a. fr.
yu3 901 to*
— Esp.
crows by night and holds guard for men;
'=", v. "13 II; a. fr. — OTDB/ia, "pSaiS dripping water, collected
Lev. XIX, 18)
a. e.
v. HSati. —
2) (cmp. ">Z'^ III) fo be too long, protrude, hang
thou takest revenge and reservest wrath (Nah.1,2)?; Koh.
R. to VIII, 4 "riax sb I will not reserve &c. Yoma 23 a
b
over. Bekh. 43 C]a^3 "raain one whose nose overhangs ;
still overflowing; a. fr. Targ. Y. Deut. V, 10 "Pa?* read: "P33.— B. Bath. 74 a "B33
Kat. 1, 1 V\ mm HBHanp rcnn (Var. ed. Zuck. man, J03.X I.— Hag. 5a , v. infra.
Y. 1. c. ':• -t": rtfiWSB . . n*TO a field dependent on read as Hag. 1. c. Cg?©.] — Part. pass. 1333, f. X"iB33, v.
another field (and there formed a pond). Ithpa.^i^, Ithpe. "TCfirK, I33rx,'rx l)to be guarded;
to be reserved. Targ. Hos. XII, 14. Targ. Y. Ex. XXIV,
Hif. Sptjh to cause to flow; to drop. Y. Gitt.II, 44 top 1j
from thieves. —
not form letters by dropping; Y. Sabb. XII, end, 13 d Y. .
(Deut. XII, 27), but he must not let it fall in drops. Tosef.
-•jp"? 6t3 "Wl Ms. M. a. Rashi (ed. pB5, corr. ace!) these
Sabb. XV "pTS he must cause a few
(XVI), 9 '31 CpBrjb
(the unripe figs) can be kept, but those (the ripe) cannot;
drops of the blood of the covenant to flow; Gen.R.s.46.
Midr. Till to Ps. LXXIII, end ; a. fr.
Yalk. Job 898 pD3U
1HQ, v. fro.
*]« ch. same, 1) to drip. Part. tpas, C)»3. Targ. Prov. T
.. -T
XXVn, 15. Targ. Ps. LXXII, 6 fVqsn (ed. Wil. 'KMI).— STt33 m. (preced.) ^wartf. Targ. I Sam. XXVIII, 2.—
B. Bath. 73 b '=1 xrr-j-: X233 S3 not a drop fell to the PJ. T*?*i *?yfl' Tar &- Is LXI1 6 Targ- Jer LI 12
- . - - » 5
ground. — ^S'^: (=h. CBaiS, v. preced.) dripping rain a. fr.— [jr.;:; f.," part, of "ia3.]
water, contrad. to *3£'i3 rain water collected in spouts
11™1I30 m. (vixpov) nitrum, (prob.) native carbonate
(v. 3ri3). Ib. 6 a "31 '33 p^nK if one has the right to
of soda '(v. Sm. Ant, s. v.). Y. Sabb. IX, end, 12 b (expl.
let the dripping water from his roof run into his neigh-
bor's yard, he may make spouts and gutters &c.
— *2) (cmp.
nr3, ib. IX, 5).
114
; — :;
man's (Titus') insult and blasphemy.— PI. fiiJfWS, 'pWW). Meg. I, 72 a top; a. e.— 2) musical accent, melodiousness.
b Cant. R. to IV, 11 13W331 laiSTfla, v. SWW.
Lam. R. introd. (R. Joh. 1) ,n '3 . . "pain^ these con-
solations ... are insults; Pesik. R. s. 28; Midr. Till, to Ps. fcCliPD, 33 ch. same, music. Targ. Is. XXXVIII,
CXXXVII ; Yalk. Ps. 884 tHHtii.
20; a. e.
'3 i33b '?N1 *toam Ar.'(ed. '3K *53l .. Wax 'i) four cubits
"I&TD, pi. rriiafs, v. i^3. on the shores of a dyke belong to the owners of the dyke.
Pes. 113 a 111©n Kb leap not over a dyke (oth. opin.,
mS 1
], Tosef. Kel. B. Kam.V, 8 ed. Zuck., v.nillS. v. infra).
'3
B. Bath. 12 b '3 mx
"Win two fields dependent
on one dyke for irrigation; a. e. PL ^ISIS, '33. Ib.— [V.
2"0 to flow, v. WS,
also N1J3.]— 2) track, step. Pes. 1. c. '3 ill©n Kb do not
leap in place of walking (v. supra).— PL as ab. B. Kam.
J 'J m. (b.h.; preced.) /?om>, overflow ; that which hangs
57 a «n"«13 '3 inb i»p3 Rashi (ed. sing.) they adopted the
over. —n^ns© '3 (borrowed fr. Is. L VII, 19; cmp. next w.)
habit of running out into the fields; ib. 118 '3 nap3X 1
Hull. 128 b
'
upper lip. . Gitt.56 a .
'31 (not i»p3X) he taught her the way out of the fold
CO J I ch. same; (cmp. ^Sli, a. C]tfi3 s. v. fc)tti) tusks, B. Bath. 88 a '31 K1313 TBtJpSK he taught them &c. —
canine teeth; also pi. "O"'?. Targ. Ps. LVIII, 7 (h. text Sabb.51 b i12>© Klani '3 the gait of the ass is (in accord-
M2>nba).— [Targ. Y. I Deut. XXXIV, 7 nin&b '3 his motor ance with) the barley (which he feeds on). Ib. 66 b '3 bp
teeth; (h. text nnbl).] — B. Kam. 23 b
. Hull. 59 a '3 J*ba5. the sound of steps. Pes. lll a '3 "jin© sixty steps. Ber. 41 lj
nTO, v. rm S5*!*'*0, '*l*0 ch. same. Targ. Lam. Ill, 51.— Ned. 80*
'3 hb n^X it would make her repulsive.
"•H'j, *U m. (n*i3)
T
banishment, isolation. Num. R.
s. 10 '3D Win (Sabb. 64 b a. e. hHPtta), v. n*3.—Esp. ea?-
, *tt?3*i*0, v. -witty*.
communtcafion, of a higher degree than US' !? and lesser 1
than cnn. M. Kat. 16 a '31 nins '3 *p« nidduy lasts no t i • : •'
Y. Snh. Ill, 21 b '3*1 -,33-1 the rabbis of N. fctt*|E*i*0, '*F? f. same. Targ. Prov. VI, 4 ed. Lag. (ed.
whom you are speaking). Pes. 104 a a. e. '31 *j3*3 '3 *ji<"Q ,
(Ms. M. W3, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) who is (are) meant p-Pj»p*U m. (v. pt3) one who claims damages; pi.
ppji?, '« cases of damage claims. Gitt. V,
by 'the son of saints'?; a. fr.—Fern. tPS. Ber. 44 a .— PI. 1 ; v. n"*^*?.
W*i *ih33. Hull.38 a '31 t3*n*3-i '3 *«« what are the move- B. Kam' 83 b ; a. fr.; v. pt3.
t
\V2, v. nw.
suffixes: "fcrpa , *|ifrt, h**IT*3 &c. (to) myself, thyself,
himself &c. Hull. 59 b "^tV hip I
'
'31 "i'sHi? -piTH blessed be the Merciful who returned '3 when a gentle rain has fallen. Fern. Wqi3, Wp3. —
thee to us and not to the dust. Ned. 41 a Erub.lO a a. fr. ; , Targ.H Esth. VIH, 13.— Sabb. 7 b '3 it is con- nTraW
'31
"fim nnnx r*rt thou didst cite it to ourselves &c. Keth. venient for use; a. fr.
92 a W-IH «TwbrT»*! Ifi!*" *"333 he will give land in payment
to the very claimants, and then seize it from them; a. fr. SlTO II m. (preced. ; v. ni3) ease, satisfaction. Yeb.
118 b '31 NB131 'S bodily comfort (even in an unhappy
#l!T0, #1513 m. (M-fl) leading. Mekh. B'shall. beg.;
marriage) is preferable (to singleness). Snh. 45 a , v. X31'"l*a.
Yalk. Ex'. 226, v'fflff).
Sabb. 132 a
",
'31 h*>b '3 Xp *<*2 Wip'tta what satisfactory
943 3*113 bttJ D"*in a hideous life (without enjoyment). Ned. '31 if you say, sacred vessels are consecrated at once (as
80 a (in Chald. diet.) '3 tVUM f*P ***31"> mi '3 a neglected soon as finished), it is right; but if you say, they are not
appearance for one day (by not bathing) is not considered consecrated until they are used, it would be right as far
self-neglect in the sense of the law ; a. fr. as the Mosaic vessels are concerned, but &c. Hull. 56 a —
114*
' — ; — —
arrc 904 a**:
"106**1 "jNds '3fi this would be right according to lie opinion rest and repose you will be redeemed. Gen. R. s. 87 (ref.
of &c; a. fr. — Cant. R. to I, 6 '3 (an editorial gloss, as a to Ps. CXXV, 3) '31 '3 lb "pX (the evil spirit) has no satis-
punctuation mark) as a positive assertion, opp. NTOnN. faction in the company of the righteous; Midr. Till, to
v. rrwj. Ps. 1. c. ; Yalk. ib. 880; a. e.— 2) gentleness. Snh. 94 b '3a
M3, Gen. VI, 9) '31 '5 lb '3 (ed.Wil. xnTO) he was a comfort
nirPi m. (b. h. ; rtO) pleasing. Koh. E. to IX, 7 rV"0 to himself, a comfort to the world &c. Yalk. ib. 48 Yalk. ; ;
'3 like the pleasing flavor (of a sacrifice) ; a. e. Chr. 1072 WT«3. Gen. R. s. 25 (ref. to MS, Gen. V, 29, a.
ni3\ Ex. XXIII, 12) '31 11» nrpi3 t ps TWO here
DITTO) nD m. (b. h.; dH3) comfort, consolation.
ease mentioned, and so there: as there appeasement
is
Mekh. B'shall., beg. (ref. to fins", Ex. XIII, 17) IB! fK of the ox is meant, so here (the ox submitting again
5iri3 xbx this (naham) does not mean comforting but
to man's control, v. TO); ib. "Op rTP*0 rest in the grave;
leading (i. e. the d is not radical); Yalk.Ex. 226 'n pM
Yalk. Chr. 1. c.
5H d"33 (corr. ace), v. dH5 a. fiW.- P/. tfWfj fSjW'S, J!
T!3. Pesik. Shim'u, p. 117 b '5 1131 comforting words, opp. NPQ^D,
T t -
v. wraw.
: t : •
307 '3 1131 DWQ 31131. Lam. R. introd. (R. Job. 1), v.
Nj^O, NJJS;? pr. n. = Xp ^38<; T
v. VOltX.
""P"
Ab. IV,' 20 lain '3 \>y nairo ink on a new blank, opp. m
pITO '3 palimpsest. Gitt. 9 b pbn '3 blank paper, v. SV^. lb.
SHUTO f. (TO) 1) mildness, gentleness. Targ. Job 19 b pbn '3 rib -,na if he handed her a blank sheet. Tosef.
XXXI, 18 (v. tripsin). — Taan. 4 Arakh. 17 a
a
, v. 6)b« II. Kel. B. 11 Kam. VII,
Kel. X, 4. Sifre Deut. 160 '3 bs? xb ;
'SI NBpin "jiissb as regards ruling with rigor or with not on a loose sheet, opp. rtbiJd; a. fr. PI. rli"iTO. Pes.
leniency. B. Bath. 25 b '32
MUTO) xin&tl when the rain 42 b 5jnWh*WJ inn fpain dilBlO scribes glue' their . . . . .
comes down gently, opp. NTOiSim. Sabb. 34% a. e. "pIS parchmentsVith it (Ms. M. IrtiiniliiS ch. form). Kel. II, 5
[Pesik. R. s. 31 '3
f»3 hop, ed. Fr. '1313, read: rt33p 113,
v. iV3; Fr. emends: 115*51 "pas rt3dp 1113.]
T"0, v. TV ch.
IT^ TO ch.
O"D"0 pr. n. (NT^o;) the Nile, also the godhead Nilus.
I, v.
Targ. Y. Gen. XL VII, 7; a. fr.— Sot. 13 a . Gen. R. s. 87;
n"^D II m. = h. his II, kind, gentle, pleasing. Targ. Pesik. R. s. 6, v. Vwj ; a. fr.
(Y. Sabb. XIV, 14 d bot. rrWa flirt ibiJK rf»V rtfl rjfa). Koh. a. e. (expl. d3d3P\d) '31 '3 tfbl '3 a sleep which is no sleep,
R. 1. c. '21 dunm rtlrt '3 it would have been better that a wakefulness which is no wakefulness.
his head were taken off than to do this a. e. ;
Targ. Job XXXVI, 16. Targ. Lam. I, 3; a. fr.— Y. Taan. of 3i3, N313) [hanging over,] 1) fringe, cord, hair (of the
I, 64* (transl. Is. XXX, 15) 'si '31 hSWSa through Sabbath eye-brow); bristle; fibre. Bets. 14 b '31 '3 "]13ri JWtt lest a
7 P — ;
905 ygfq
fringe (shred of the garment used as mattress) wind BWD$ff»3. Targ. Ez. XX, 25; a.fr.— Y. Ber.V, 9 a IfO'l '33
itself around his body; Y.Kil.IX,32 a bot. Nidd. 67 a, a. e. 'ri (ed. Lehm. sing.) he is engaged in studying the laws
hTW '3 one single thread; Y. Sabb. VII, d top X"33 (corr. of his Creator.
ace). Gen. R. s. 93 '33 '31 b3H3 ban liap (Ar. K^-'S) he tied
rope to rope, string to string. lb. 13b3 lb iiT^il nnx ': p11iP2, v. ppa.
he had one bristle on his chest; Yalk. ib. 150. Gen. R.
plETJ, 122 m.(contr. o{p^yi;p->X)depth,penetration.
s. 65, end '31 '3 fi3 Tap (Ar. X*:-:) he tied a string to it ... .,
Ab. d'R. N. ch." XVIII; Gitt. 67 a la? ipW? H31i '1 gave to
and hanged himself. Tosef. Sot. I, 2 '3 Tfltt llffipUD *T3
R. Jose the surname, 'His depth is with him', i. e. he has
as much time as the weaver needs to knot a fringe; Y.
a deep reasons for whatever he says. Ib.ias 'J lPHJt") Stbabx
ib. 1, 16 bot.— B. Bath. 16 (ref. to ITWG, Job XXXVIII, 1)
c
ifthou hadst seen him, (thou wouldst have seen) his depth
'=1 '31 "3 bal for each hair (of the eye-brow) &c, v. X^5.
was &c. Erub. 51 a Bekh.37 a 113? '3 Xainl Via you might
.
Sabb. 30\ a. fr. '3 xbs a thread's (or hair's) breadth. Erub.
have thought, we must adopt R.Jose's opinion because
X, 13 CnptD were permitted to knot a
'3 "pTC-np they
he is known to have deep reasons.
broken string of a musical instrument in the Temple
ib. 102 b 1131= rcM; a. ir.—Pl. "pOi?. B. Bath. 1. c. Shek.
D"]1Q^J ("HQJ cmp. R^OSt) a detachment of troops
VIII, 5 ed. (Ms. M. IT?); a. fr. 2) (cmp. 2.13) — pi. yuM
f.
read
^TiTS, Pi. of vm
oiai?ix, v. BrharaaK.
njj"-i (b. h.) Nineveh, the capital of Assyria. Yoma
10 a ; Gen! R. s. 37. Sabb. 121 b ; Y. ib. XIV, beg 14 b rWMI
D*1/G*J II m. (v6}xo;) usage, law; religion (v. Dials).
'33U5 the hornet of N. a. e.
Meg. 12 b tetania TTOtO, v. iro. Gitt. 65 b '32 rtb lttJS deal
;
p0123n bWPfl read: *,i3iaiuh, v. bfeia.] nirife. Gen. R. s. 71 (play on ibinsi, Gen. XXX, 8) rtVJ '3
'-1 tiUDSib ib (not MS ...) I ought to have been made a
/?
SplQ^D, IE n 2 ch. same. Targ. Ps. 1,2. Targ. I Sam. bride before my sister; Yalk. Gen. 127 !"i£3ib (corr. ace).
II, 13; a. fr.— Gen. R. s.48 (prov.) Wia*?3 "jWl ampb nbs Ex. R. s. 36, beg. (ref. to 5)13 tttft, Ps. XL VIII, 3) "jlttjb
nymphe. Ib. s. 52, end (ref. to Ps. I.e.) 7H "*Vp ed. Const, lb. '3d 1i6 (read '313, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 60) it does
(missing in ed.) xaXt] vu|x<fY), the beautiful bride; Pesik. not mean fruits of the n. — [Ms. M. ^npS, Var. *M^S,
B. s.41 iB'O'llsp (corr. ace); Tanh. Ki Thissa 18 (ref. to Ar. ^6W, v. Rabb. D. S. to Erub. I.e.— The Var. 13X0*3,
nar, Cant. IV, 11) *B13 n^3; ed. Bub. ib. 9 tiinJ'fep, read dialect.for'nOi3(cmp.n03 a.2>03) gave rise to etymological
'3 'iip.- [Yoma 10 a v.,
IB""?.] derivation from pi?.]
N©T n D, •
v. K&3.
T- SnTD^D, v. Nw^iw.
^©"0, fct©3 m. (an adapt, of vrjao;, as if fr. «t33 = 5?t>:
Gen. X, 32, Mand. JW*D3, v. Nold. Mand. Gr. p. XXX) >© J or 2©D m. (v. xbpN II) easy-chair, (royal) arm-
settlement, colony, esp. island (v. "p}3i3). Targ. Is. XX, 6
chair. Tosef. Snh. IV, 2 ibOBO 'ftp"* b'J (strike out ibOBO,
(ed. Wil. Kd3). Targ. Jer. XXV, 22; &.e.—Pl. constr.
"
1
d">3,
as a gloss; Var. ISdD); Y. ib. II, 20 c bot. (Var. 1803).
iD3. XXIV, 15.
Targ. Is. Ib. II, 16 (ed. Wil. i&3; h. text
HP3K). Targ. Am. IX, 3 (h. text Splp). Targ. Y.1I Gen. ]©"0 (b. h.; v. Fr. Del. Proleg., note) Nisan,
p. 138,
X,18 ifdlN '3 (belonging to ib. 5, as quoted in Ar.); a. e. the first month of the Hebrew calendar, containing thirty
Hebr. form, pi (of GiD^3) WFi, 'pen? "pd3 v. "pd^K.— , ;
days, varying between the sixteenth of March and the
[Deut. R. s. 2 03 ; Yalk. Is. 369; Yalk. Deut. 825 ^?3.] eighth of May. R. Hash. 1, 1 '31 U3K1 '3d inN3 on the
r first of Nisan begins the royal year. Ib.2 b '31 '3d .. '3d rra
S©"0, J "In pr. n. (v. 03) Mount Nissay (Miracle),
if a king dies in N., and his successor ascends the throne
a substitute for Sinai, introduced for argument. Sabb.
89 a (against one explaining "O'VS in as d^S Id "nastttt) in,
in N., we count a year for the one, and one (the first
year) for the other; a. v. fr.
the mount whereon miracles were wrought for Israel)
it"k iJDid '3 in then its name ought to have been Har n
3 ch. same. Targ. Y. Ex. XII, 8; 18; a.e— Y.Maas.
]©
Nissay; v. "'Ma^d.
Sh.IV,end,55 c Ber.56 b Lam. R. to 1,1 *P31 ('dbndin),
; ;
nD' ? 1
1
f- (W3) /%7t£. Sot. VIII, 6 n?"B3 '3 nVnn^J, cor- V. K03.
rected ^^. 44 b (as in Y. ed.) '3 n^BS nbnno for the be-
n
ginning of falling (in slaughter) is the rout ; Y. ib. VIII,
3©^,
••t •
v. asnois.
t t : •
end, 23 a Sifre Deut. 198 n^B3 '3 nbnnttJ for the beginning
;
N|2©^ m. (transpos. of K0pi3), v. saps.
of flight means falling.
*n©^, v. mw.
TV
Sp©" !}, '©3 m. CqW)
1
njJdltt the water libation (on the Succoth festival) is con- TTt4f.w«p, * - 1
-
tinued for seven days. Y. ib. 54 d top; Tosef. ib. Ill, 15
nttJTipd iasife^ at its libation the laws of sanctity must "Hl©^, Targ. II Esth. Ill, 8 '3d ed. Lag. a. oth., read
be observed; (Tosef. Meil. 1, 16 frO*t?3). Zeb. VI, 2. Snh. iiiip iaa, v. xiip.
62 a '3 libation to idols; a. fr. — A BteWJ, f***?, 'S3.
libations. —
2) the manipulation by an idolater by which
Sr©^0,
t : •
v. wnos.
t •• •
', v. rP3; a. e.
n
?p© 3, fcC*!©"^, '©J ch. same, the act of libation;
w>^ »» &V;\ m. (S13) [something hanging, cmp. Syr.
(in Targ. Y. also) the liquid used for libation. Targ. Num. T
K"3 lobe of the liver, P. Sm.2403,] 1) fat-tail, rump. Targ.
XXVIII, 7. Ib. IV, 7; a. fr.— PI. JtfHTi, (WWI* '03. lb.
Y. II Lev. Ill, 9 (h. text n^N).— 2) breast of an animal.
0. some ed. Targ. Y. ib. XV, 13 (not X^rttdS); a. fr.— V.
aodsi.
lb. VII, 30 (h. text nm); [Ar. Vty, v. Koh. Ar. Compl.
s. v.].— Midr. Sam. ch. XIV njpsi nplIB the shoulder and
SDriQ'O m.; pi. "\3ndi3, '03 (MM, v. Af.) [despaired the breast.
of, given up,] palms which never mature their fruits,
male palms; '31 fruits of nishane, stunted dates which n"*J, v. preced.
.....
"•:r:,^:r:,v. S ub'r:. "IS J
T
pr. n. pi. (Assyr. Nipur, modern Niffer, v. Schr.
KAT. 2,p.572)^/ar.YomalO a (identifiedwithn3b3)^3Ms.
f] 1 !, Tosef. Arakh. V, 14, v. Cp':il. M. 2 (Ms. M. 1 13E3 for 11E3, v.Eabb. D. S. a.l. note; ed. "lBi3
Lev. XI, 32) of a limb detached from the body. Hull. 74 a note 200) ; v. JOISTS.
*51 ': FiElS Firms the natural death of an animal causes the
hanging limb (bl~2~) to be considered as if detached (in wE" m. (rE:)=h. r*"_, vacant space. Targ. Y. Gen.
life-time, so that it does not come under the law of <"t3213), XXXH, 17.
but slaughtering does not &c. (and the dangling limb is
"p2, "p2 (Trl) l)*o sprout, blossom. Targ. Ps.XC,6
considered as a part of the slaughtered animal. lb. 129 a
b
* pyj. Ib. CXXIX.6 ftf" Ms. (ed. •pS' ).— Snh. 18 '{??;
1
"<3 i-n nr?D (Ar. &-tm) SaTam (Lev. XI, 22) is nippol;
Sifra Sh'mini, Par. 3, ch. V 31B3 fiT smn. "^STO, '2B m. pi. constr. pXi) strife, rivalry. Meg.
24 b top, v. "W.
S™"2, fcCIS" ch. as preced. 2. Targ. Y. Lev. XI,
22 (Ar. X:r:, corr. ace; h. text Ja*ffl). CtvtSfOj v. next w.
PIT1D", Sifra B'huck., Par. 2, ch. VI, v. fc*W. H^iSTC, '222 f. (bs3) rewJManfs, re/i<se. Gen. R. s. 67
(ref. to n-JSX, Gen. XXVn, 36) '3tt "JE ed. (Ar. ttWljri) of
rrb"©^, v. next w. the leavings (of the poorest kind). Ib. s. 74 (ref. to bs", 1,
Gen. XXXI, 9) ';n "p V«0 KHT8J rTO (Ar. niPlSSfi) like
"it; J pr. n. pi. Neajwlis on the site of the ancient
one that saves things from among the refuse. PI. niVi5P3,
'
XX,
niVi2l -Si) the leavings and the rotten fruits &c. V. VS3 —
7) 'S3.
a. rfttS?.
':1two sparks of fire &c. Ib. '21 *|Tanp^ 'S3 ""W two sparks
of Orion (h. ires). Targ. Job IX, 9. Ib. XXXVIII, 31.—
preceded them. Y.Ab. Zar.V end,45 b (v.-,«:ib) KMittJ -ji-is
PI. ",^83, constr. ^E?, ^B3 Targ. Is. XIII, 10 (h. text
;
b
'31 '3 it must be so heated that sparks burst forth from
ni-nb*Wi).—Snh. 96 -;E3 *C son of giants {?), surname of
it. Tosef. Sabb.VI(VH), 2 '31 IWl "3 Wfl lbE3 if snuff
the Messiah (with alius, to rf*3t1, Am. IX, 11); Yalk. Am.
falls off the candle, and he says, we shall have guests &c.
549 (some ed. ;' B3). >1 ,
S5D"0 II m. untimely birth, v. x'^BS H. *2) shivers scattering from the broken sledge-hammer.
Babb. 88 b ; Snh. 34* (ref. to Jer. XXIII, 29) ffl H)"OE no
T niasb pbrno as the sledge-hammer (when shattered by
— );
urine) squirt upon his feet. Yoma 29 h sq.; a.e.-4) (cmp. , the poor man's share, gleaning, opp. to P^pa "TV^T. Hall.
Arab, nudadah) residue. Sabb. 139 b '3 KiWl but there Ill, 9. Peah VIII, 3. Yib. 20 d bot. '31 '3 '1 . 'woffl Blpa
isthe residue (the last drops percolating through the where the custom prevails to take down the gleanings
dregs in emptying liquid from vessel to vessel); "1 "Ob '3 (instead of leaving them on the trees), the poor man may
'31 that residue was not cared about in the house of &c. say, this oil is from gleanings; a. e. [Comment. '3 T^T —
olives which are knocked down, v. preced.]
fcCSp^ri ch. same, X*V0 ^iSPS spark. Targ. Is. I, 31.
A hare, p. 168 b ;
Lev.
R. s. 20; Tanh. Vaethh. 1 ; Koh. R. to VIII, 17.— tl^ntf '3
piSTO, v. p%3.
chiselling of stones. Sot. 46
b . — Esp. the picking or biting
il2r!i, '2 "I? pr. n. m., v. 1JB IV.
done by &c, traces of biting. Ab. Zar. 35 a
birds, snakes
(U3H3) '3 Gi^a because a serpent may have touched it. Y.
pn-r:, s:nr:, sn^nro, v . sub. mx Ter. VIII, 46 a top '3 3,1 a fish showing traces of bites
a. ir.—Pl. d'nip' 1
?, T"!^, 'p3. Ter. VIII, 6 Ei^xn "n^3
T i. t t : • » »'
'31 figs &c. which appear to have been bitten at (possibly
by snakes); Tosef. ib. VII, 16 '31 Wnn '3 a dish &c. showing
traces of bites. Kidd. 80 a , sq. '31 '3 '3 INKS the dough
shows that it has been pecked at (by chickens) a. fr.— Esp.
W^T?' '^? m - ffaO)-*. h. 'S3, blossom.— PI. R*5(p5,
;
'31 ""sri Xli~D ": those nikkadim are half the size of eggs.—
resembling a icooden leg. Kel. XV, 6.
'21 D^abp^S (corr. ace.) retain for thyself such and such D2bp311, v. Rabb. D. S. a.l. note 400; Y. ed. D^bp-O). Ib.
a man as pleader, and thou shalt be acquitted Yalk. Num. ;
14 b obp3(Ms. M.011*>p3); Y.ib.I,39 d bot. '"OPpS. Y. Sabb.
782; Yalk. Lev. 645 '3i3np^3 (corr. ace); Lev.R. s.29 '?1p3; XIV, 14 d CQ?p"i3T stones of nicolaos dates; Y. Ab. Zar.
v. oiaibipi?.
l^T? &c< Y Ber
d k
II, 40 •pp^3bp3 l(j9/.)— Pl> ?p1^p h3 N*p1 -
.» -
asp?" ? 1
909 •WftPfrl
under Antioch Epiphanes and Demetrius I, defeated and pieces or to the slips (Ol'-Pp). Dj. 105 a 1TO '3 anm
slain by Judah Maccabi (I Mace. VII, 39 II Mace. XV, ; within a distance of three meshes; (Tosef. ib. XII (XIII),1
T'3 eh. same. Targ. I Bam. VHI, 12 nrwb (ed. Wil. piT?,v.pp>
aatfo, trSEfs; V?Ero, v. sub <*$.
~f'J II m. (b. h.; preced.) 1) clearing, ploughing over.
Tosef. B. Mets. IX, 24 Tfi nssn (read: D3UJ3) in the year -fflEj'O, 'Z2?3 m. (Pers. nasadur. v. Perl. Bt. St. p. 48)
during which he cleared the land. newly broken land. — 2) gum-ammoniac. Gitt. 69 a bot.
yoke ;'servitude. Targ.Deut.XXI,3. Targ. Num. XIX, 2.— hated for her (illicit) marriage. Dj. 64 b imparl as to
Targ. Jer. XXVII, 8; a. fr.—Y. Sabb. V, end, 7 C Bab. ib. ; marrying (a third time), and as to the treatment of one
54 b,v.",Ta'^.—P/.-iT?. Targ.Jer.XXVn,2. Ib.XXVIII,13. twice lashed ; a. fr.
I 2 IV m. (v. preced. ; cmp. jugum a. Z,v~(6v, v. Sm. yW£"3 ch. same. Targ. I Chr. VHI, 9 « wvmrwn
Ant. s. v. Tela) cross-beam of the loom, also the cross-rod ilSOlU, read: HJWZTOn n333»n KmrinK*T for a novel inter-
under the cross-beam (liciatorium) to which the ends of pretation of the law was established through her marriage;
the leashes are fastened; trnsf (mostly pi.) D^n^a, "p"p3 v. Y. Yeb. VHI, 9 C top.
contrad. to Di'Vp. —
duced by passing the spool with the woof across the
'3 m that portion of the web pro-
pi.;
nniiS^D
Ma. B.
f.
r\"iSTO3).
(3ffi3 )
r
chaff. B. Bath. 94 a (Ms. M. nfefafa
warp, mesh, slip. Sabb. XIII, 2 (105 a ) 'S TO *3$ fitairn »n^3, ss^ n?, xrj$^> « sab '*??•
T T | •
910 *»
31 wax that runs through the beehive. Sabb. 110 b (Ms. to Ps. CXX, 3, sq.) '31 "p30 "pi ^3 b3 all weapons strike
Sian^,
t t : •
v. na*»*
"I Keth. VII, 10, a. fr. "pntt) afflicted with leprosy. Ib. WW
I, 3, a. fr. "p> T3V2 one who lost her hymen through an
ITirPJ, 'FO m. (nro) dissection. Zeb. V, 4, v. Baton.
accidental lesion. Par. VIII,9;Mikv.I, 8, v.D^a.— 2)(trnsf.)
Gen. R. s.34; a. fr.
to strike, produce sound, play. Yoma 1, 7 S3XX3 1-OBb *p33
apn^,&nn^,v.
It t :
8 ub'M.
• : • »*
'31 snap their middle-fingers. Arakh. II, 3, v. V^rt; a. fr.
Amalek, s. 2, v. "p. Ithpe. *%¥% "OSX to be injured, suffer. Y. Ab. Zar. II,
41 d top 1*021X1 .. yimDX the first drank and did not die,
ro3, v. •«.
TT but were sick; ib. IISS^X IWa X^l read *^f1; (Y. Ter.
HD2m. (b. h.; n3i) crippled, fc^ai paralyzed, WO VIII, 45 d bot. only j'VWO). Y. Dem. I, 22 a top 1133X X^l
lame. Yalk. Deut. 933. '31 '""l '3^> btt)a like a lame person and they suffered no more (from mice). Ib. xbl *il3S>
>1
that disturbed the peace of &c.,opp. t&&. —Pl.tro*. Pesik. n33a let him cross, he shall not be injured. Y. Keth.
R. s. 13, v. 3>bS. XII, 35 b top "OSa ma Xini in bs wherever he be buried,
what does he lose (what difference does it make to him)?;
HIO, '3 nSHB (b. h.) pr. n. m. Pharaoh Necho (II),
Y. Kil. IX, 32 c top ^3313 (corr. ace).
King of Egypt. Sot. 9 a ; a. e. a
Af. ">3X to harm. Y. Sabb. Ill, 6 bot. (in Hebr. diet.)
^tjlDO, HOiDD
m. (333) butcher. Y. Yoma III, 40 c
"DD, *'^^'? m -
B. Kam. 59 a
(preced. wds.) deduction.
top (expl. yip, Jer. XLVI, 20) '3 lax in one says, it means
nm 133 payment made with a deduction of the ex-
is
intended to hit him on his loins. Y. Peah 1, 16 a bot. (ref. Pa. ^233 same (with accus.) ;
to deceive. Targ. O. Num.
;
Vw 911 -D3
XXV, 18 ed. Berl. (oth. ed. Pe.). Targ. Ps. XII, 3 (ed. Wil. going to be slaughtered, and it lowed, as if to say, save
**2ui Targ. I Chr. XII, 17. me; Y. Keth. XII, 35 a 0^3?^; Y. Kil. IX, 32 b 0330 taken
to be slaughtered.
>"pl m. (preced.) craftiness, fraud. Targ. Mai. 1, 14
(ed. Lag. b33). ^Djl!, JSripJJ, *J f. (preced.) slaughter ; slaughter-
ing (according to the ritual, M2iM!3) sacrifice, feast (= h. ;
b"0:, K^D? m, fc^O?, Kflb^ f. (preced.) M3T). Targ. Is. XXXIV, 6 (h. text M3'J).—Targ. Y. Deut.
crafty', deceitful. Targ.Ps.XLni.l. Targ. Je'r. IX, 2. Targ. XIV, 21. Targ. Y.Lev. XVII, 13 (ed. Vien. M"M03i3). Targ.
Ps. CXX, 2 ; a. e.— Targ. Hos. VII, 16 (ed. Lag. KbrpS). Gen. XXXI, fr.—Targ. Y. Gen. XLIII, 16 '3 tva the
45 ; a.
D*D2 m., NO n
p3, SriD 1
^ f (preced.)
- slaughtered.
(Ms. n033).
Targ. Lev. XIV, 6 (6. ed/Amst. Kn033). lb. 51 (0. ed. SmDjJ, v. preced.
Vien. KMO''33); a. e.
SJPP5> V. T033.
1ST02 m. = «il3 <aq.v. >
Mr33) be sbowed him tbe bite wbicb he had bitten off and near a city. Ab.Zar.l9 b v.Mbx. B.Bath.IX,7, a. fr.
,
from Sennacherib, the booty &c. ni^lMK ',M3 ttFIB '3,v. WPH rW
Ib.'SI TO33 pbM^M if a person
.
favor him (if he is thy friend); a. fr. —Num. R. 9 dlpad s. and he who does the weeding (in a field of mixed seeds);
lisalO where he knows (the people), where he ac- is M. Kat. 2 b a. fr. [B. Bath. 54a Ms. R., v. 1013a I.]
;
quainted; Sifre Num. 14 iniN *ji"li3ai0 dlpad — 2)tomake Hif. 10i3<7 1) to strike, wound, sting. B. Mets. 30 b B. ;
known, identify; to acknowledge, own. R. Hash. 1. c. "ja Bath. 88* Ptiisn if he struck the lost beast which he took
dilioan on the declaration of those who identify (the in charge. Gen. R. s. 30, beg. 'Dl i*lK \&W(t a lion struck
witnesses ; v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 2). Gen. R. s. 43 rtfl Kb and crippled him. B. Mets. 78 a 10*13 ini3i3H a serpent bit
'31 iniK FH3fi1 .
."13^3 iaiO my name was unknown .... and her. — b
2) to cause injury by contact. B. Kam. 23 ttjisa
thou hast made me known among my creatures. Sifre (Ms. H. *p10a) he who caused a neighbor's death by
Deut. 217; Kidd. 78 b a. e. , (ref. to W, Deut. XXI, 17) bringing the serpent's tooth in contact with his neighbor's
Ei*irifc<b *i3*ii3i he may identify him before others (as his body Snh 78 a Yalk. Deut. 944 "jilOiSaiO, v. di3i*VJ31p
; . . ; Sifre
first born son). Sifre Deut. 312 i*li3a rtVlKttJ that I may Deut. 317 di3i3aiO (corr. ace.).— 3) (denom. of 1013a I) to
make it known as mine. lb. Ipbh MX "VSa dlpafi pina insert the hoe or spade. B. Bath. 54 a v. 1013a I. ,
beginning with whom does the Lord acknowledge his Eithpa. 1333*1H, Nif. 10133 to be hoed for. Gen.R.s.45
share (claim as his) ? With Jacob ; a. fr. '31 1151W Kbl 'ptiWna Kb . diSlpn for thorns there is . .
Hof. *i3in to be recognized; to be discernible. Kidd. neither hoeing (digging over) nor sowing, but they grow
Ill, 5 il*l315 'it her pregnancy was certain, v. !"H3*i; ib. of themselves, while wheat &c. ; Yalk. ib. 79 'plOISS Kb
62 b B. Mets. 93 333*1 'n the thief was found out; a. e.
.
1
'
'31 dilOITO Kbl neither digging, nor ploughing, nor sow-
Nif. "Qi? same. Part. 13i3. Bef. 28 a '3 n*lK .. ibhisa ing &c.
'31 by the walls of thy house, one sees that thou art a
smith. Kidd.31 a '31 '3 -p31 t)1da from thy last words (the 12JDD ch. same; Pa. 10133 to bite. Gen. R. s. 91 ...*,3
thy enemy) do not discriminate against him (v. supra). rOj (v. next w.) to bite. Cant. R. to III, 4; v. tVfOi.
SifreDeut. 322 '31 ai-]33a nsttfl whenlsrael is in trouble, . . .
the nations ignore them and act as though they did not *Q3, *1 JJ (cmp. nri3 ; v. 1033) to ivound, bite, injure.
know them; a. e. Targ. Num. XXI, 9. Ib. 6 (ed. Berl. VttM Pa.); a. fr.—
Gen. R. s. 98 '31 riSiab i53*l Kiim the serpent that is to
IJJ ch. same; Af. 13K to recognize, know. Targ. Y.I
bite my Peahl, 16 a bot. [read:] ... laKrlK*! iblbiK
son. Y.
Gen. XXXVIII, 25, sq.
tTW Wnh Kb ni33 had I not been told from on high,
Ithpa. i32iK to be distinguishable. B.Kam. 5 a Ni3|ia*i,
v. N]2 m
:
lb. 97 a 'npTn "ISjrtB its reduction in value is
'bite', I should not bite.
'3i, v. bini.
Koh. R. to VII, 1 i"PP33*l IKa
Gitt. 67 b (expi. dipnTiip) 'si Kian rprwi
distinguishable.
young wine from the press has bitten him (made him
Pa. "i33 to make strange, remove. Sabb. 82 b (ref. to
delirious). B. Mets. 60 b '31 fiib *T*03 apt K3iK -ji03 it is
Dim, Is. XXX, 22) *i*3 -pus. •W'nW (v.Rabb.D.S.a.l. note)
neshekh (usury, v. T|103), for he bites (injures) him, by
remove them from thee like a strange (disgusting) thing.
taking from him something which he (the creditor) had
" not given him a. fr.
]JJ m. (b. h.; preced. wds.) stranger, gentile. [In ;
editions published under the censor's supervision, our w. Pa. ni33 1) same. Targ. 0. Num. XXI, 6, v. supra.
is frequently changed into d"l35, wil, 11013, in«i3 &c] Ab. Ab. Zar. 35 b '31 bi3K1 rn33a nin took a bite and ate of
Zar.IV,4(51 b ; 52 b
; Mish. ed.d"l35). Sabb.31»; a.v.fr.— the bread (of a non-Jew) &c— 2) to cause to bite. Yeb.
P/.di**.33. Hull.l3 b '31 t"5 11315 1Kb"pNb msinaiO '3 gentiles 76 a '31 mb 13ir©3al "fivma we get a big ant and let it
..
outside of Palestine are not to be considered as idolaters, bite (insert its head into the opening) and cut its head off.
they only continue their fathers' customs. Gitt. 61 a li&3*l3a Ithpe. ri'osniJK, PH331K to be bitten, stung. Targ. 0.
'31 '3 11325 we must support the poor of the gentiles &c. Num. XXI, 8.' Targ. Y.'ll ib. 9.
(Tosef. ib. V (III),4 diia). Gitt.V,9 (61 a ) 'SI '3 ina 'jiliSDa
(Mish. ed. d"l35) we must lament for the dead of the
nroD,
T T :
v. ravw.
t • :
whom
"1HK1
married two
. . . diJlK in the case of three brothers,
sisters, and one a stranger;
two of
a. fr.
Bets.30 a . B. Bath. 26 a top '31 '3 WO as much as a lid
on a pitcher shakes. Sabb. 105 b . Pes. 112 a .
1033b IfllX -jianna *,ix the law does not bind him to pluck
N22,
tT
TV22, PL
tt
NBia,
't
rwa
T •'
v. ais i.
out (the plants which grow among the fenugrec). Ib.
103? dKl (Y. ed. 'i3) but if he did &c. Tosef. ib. 1, 15 1033am n^to,v.nia3.
t t; • t
—
913 D^tt?
yntm
D1732, v. 000.— [Tosef. Bekh. IV, 16, read: tAXA, v.
m
tV tT22,
t:'
v. m-33.
»»i
"11Q2 m. (-133) speckled. Targ. Gen. XXX, 32, sq.— nD"n2 00a) melting,
f. (denom. of 0O3, Nif. of loss
P/. pitta; f. Klfliaj, Targ. 0. ib. 39. lb. 35 Wtjfaj; Y. of courage. Mekh. B'shall., Shir., s. 9, v. !"13"33.
ib. SOn-ViaS (corr. ace).
]
*2- pr.n. pi. N'mire, a twin-town of (Hash-)Shulami,
"H1CD pr. n. pi., v. 1-1T33.
separated from by the Jordan. Tosef. Bekh. VII, 3 "pas
it
S"^I2Z f. (Btt or i-jo) felt-mattress, felt-cloth. Yoma *\T22 (v. tpa, a. ^T33), Hif. Tposn to lower. Sifre Num.
69* ; Bets. 15 a , v. 135.— PJ. 1533. B. Mets. 84 b , v. T^ ch. 83 'SI isia33 nisan every hilly place he lowered, and
B. Kam. 119 b
'3 diisn iro what kind of garments
meant? Pelt-spreadings; ib. 93 b .
is
every depression he raised; Yalk.Ex. 228. —Ber.45 a TpaSi
l3lptnipn Ms. P. (v. Rabb. D. 8. a. 1. note 6 ; ed. -|2?Oi) the
"SI (="3 VI3; cmp. no sT22 m. (a popular corrupt, of "ppb, q. v.) haven, bay.
adv. 1T*1 II Sam. XVIII, 23)
Erub. IV, 2, v. pqh. Tosef. Yoma II, 4 ISi 3113 M3p3 (Var.
at all events, really, even, likeicise. Pes. 102 a W8 KOis
i?3) the harbor of Japho; Yoma 38 a 135 311} '3 a. e.
«jtq '3 i rtare Ms. m. i (ed. straw iinin i stno ^313) 1
;
a Hull. 63 a (in Chald. diet.) 'SI '3 iff! JTffl 15 when he saw
Erub. 30 . Pes. 114a a. fr. '3 X3n (abbrev. 3'Tl), v. Stsn.
ants (at work), he used to say, 'thy righteousness &c.
Yoma 64 a '3 TO,
II.— '3 t5M (abbrev. 3"n) tf is really
v. Irt
'si in the house of the ant there are three stories. Ib.
so (that this subject must be taught only in the presence
'31 finx '33 nnj~3 once an ant dropped a grain of wheat
of three students)? Hull.ll b sq. 'SI SOI 3"n (will you say)
it is really so that he ate no meat?; '51 3"n XOin 151 and
&c; a. e.—H. 0*403, T*»f Peah IV, 11. Tosef. ib. I, 8;
if you will say, 'yes, it is so', what about sacred meat?
Men. 71 b a. fr.—y! Yeb. VIII, 9 b p313-i3 VPSO, v. T^:.—
;
a [Chald. K30TOM1B.]
Ib. 12 1 rwttl 'i£X then you must say 'yes' even with
regard to T'rumah i<3 '3 noiJlttJ i£X then you must say
SfflDDJ m. (03O3) sleeping couch. Y.Keth.H, 26 a bot.,
;
(which would be better). R. Hash. 22 b a. fr. '3 i5rt — , 0122 m. (b. h.; 003) decayed. Ex.R.s.15 3tt3 n^© ia
N~srC3 so, indeed, it stands to reason. Ib., a. fr. '3 iorr 'S ys that (idol) of wood appeared rotten; a. e.
fiin <
T T : T T!
"]"CD2, v. itw:.
T\yi22 f. (denom. of 31*33, Nif. of 313) melting, loss of
courage. Mekh. B'shall., Shir., 8.9 (ref. to 1333, Ex. XV, 15) D n pD2 m. pi. (pp.3) decaying sores. Sabb. 62 b .
— — 3 .
n»3 914 03
"ICp m. (b. h.) tigei- or leopard. Y. Yeb. VIII, 9 C top, S3j, 22 pr. n. m. (prob. abbrev. of mssn) Nannai,
v. tim II. Kam. I, 4, v. O^TQ; a e. Pl.
Snh. 1,4; B. .
— a name frequent in Malioza. Yeb. 115 bot., v. "an. 1
'
web (for which they may have used remnants of other ^22, v. 8033.
V, 6; a. e. — Y.'PeahIH,17 c
top' (expl. '•ttftiah ib. 111,2) a puny dwarf. Midr. Till, to Ps. CXXXVII; Pesik. R. s. 31
illa^S prt3 making the field look checkered like a tiger ntn '3rt that dwarf (Nebuchadnezzar); a. fr.— Hull. 63 a
(or leopard), v. rfT^lOJ*—M. pa?, KJIBSj, *S. Targ. Cant. blOS 0133 "[Sa^Ol and thy sign (to remember that the
IV, 8 (ed. Vien. pba). Targ. Hab. 1*8. — [">la3 ma, ma small species of 83l3'1 pli) is unclean) be, 'the dwarf is unfit'
Nla3, -pas, v. next w.] (for priesthood).— PI. W^JJ, ^033. Cant. R. I.e.; Gen. R.
1. c, v. supra. Ib. s. 37; Yalk. ib. 62 '3 di1iri53 Caphtorites
niQD, '2 n"Q (b. h.) pr. n. pi. (JBett) Nimrah, modern (Gen. X, 14) are dwarfs; a. fr.— Tam. Ill, 5; Midd.III, 5
Nimrin, in Peraea. Tosef. Shebi. VII, 11 j Y. ib. IX, 38 d '3 d^llaS small columns. Ib. V, 2 '3fi (sub. d^liaS).—
bot.; ib. (expl. maj JYQ, Josh. XIII, 27) pa? rva.— Targ. Fern, M033. Bekh. 45 b . Par. II, 2; a. e.
O. Num. XXXII, 3 ed. Berl. (ed. Vien. "pa? mm paid,
read with Y. '3 mal TVfiB)j Targ.O. ib.36; Y. pa? tVO, ^02t 2, 0^22 ch. same.Targ. Y. II Lev. XXI, 20 0^33
"la?.— Tosef. Shebi. IV, 11 *bn pa3 (Var. tJTKW); Yalk. (h.texYpI).—Pesik. Dibre, p.H2 a sq. b331 '3 (Ms. Parma
De'ut.874 m>T0 pWSj Sifreib.51 mb5> fTWfl (corr.acc); 80133) the Babylonian dwarf (Nebuchadnezzar); Yalk. Dan.
Y. Shebi VI,36 C only pa3. — [Sifre I.e. Kla^SI 831313; 1062 (ref. to Dan. IV, 14 d"HB38 bBtt)) '31 '3 1S313133 W
Yalk . 1. c. trvchn '3^31d; Y. Shebi. 1. c. KlSldb dnnal 8313113; that means N. the dwarf &c. (v. 'Rashi' to Gen. R. s. 16,
Tosef. 1. c. nixa dinrai 8313113.] V. Hildesh. Geogr. p. 60. end).
great miracle was connected with the show-bread which them &c. Y. Kidd. IV, 66* XrTHK 301 511 nitlS; Yeb. 63 a
was removal &c. Sot. 47 a a. fr. -jITQ 03
as fresh at its ,
'31 KWrK VQ3, v. 511. Mace. 11*; Gen. R. s. 80, v. ITS;
03 a double wonder. Ned. 41* '31 niB53UJ 03 bl15 the a. v. fr. —Zeb. ll b FI303 ffniaK
KM the redactor took this
wonder of recover}' which the sick man experiences, is up (inserted it) by the way, v. K115 II. — Cant. R. to II, 16
greater than that which happened to Hananiah, Mishael Ct: '3 mm and he took courage, felt better; ib. S'WPKI
&c. Sabb. 23 a , a. e. 03fi ir.lXO Y*l 'p C]K the women, too, U5B3 read: 3"03 tVUTl and I felt better.—Y. Sabb. I, 3 a
T13S3
were concerned in that wonderful delivery. lb. CtfB -"" bot. *>imb washed his hands (v. bp3). Y. Ber. VUI, 12 a
'3
03 why not omit the benediction mentioning the wonder bot. XB+fl p303 (not p303) wash your hands; ib. "pin 30
C31 0"O3 iTCriU)?; a. v. fr.— PL 0">03, pp3, "0. Ber.IX, 1 wash thy hands and say grace. [Y. Maasr. IV, 51 b bot. —
'3i '3 marra -|ii3 '3 13 iesstd oipa s-iKiin he who sees
. . rWTO p30 -,11.11, perh. to be read: p3D3 ',1im, they took
a place where miracles happened to Israel, must say, from him.]
Blessed be he who performed wonders &c. lb. 60*, a. fr. Af. a^DSX, a^OX, 3^px to cause to take, esp. to give in
'3 i-HWa (abbrev. 3"a) a miraculous event, v. 13}. Toma marriage to, to allow to marry. Targ. Zech. Ill, 5. Targ.
29* ^n b3 ?10 -TCX tbe Book of Esther is the last record Y. Gen. XXXVI, 3 PinppKI (not K3 ...); a. e.—Veb. 12l a
of miracles. Taan. 25 a ; Snh. 109 a top, v. ipb ; a. v. fr. Uimnib 31 .1303X1 (not T503X1) and R. D. allowed his
. .
wife to marry again; ib. i"J1303X1 (corr. ace). Ib. 120* top
03 II island. Deut.R.s. 2, v. NO'1 ?.— PL tj-W, "pO/3, '31 mrsb 13103 xb (Rashi: 'Opxb, Ithpe.) to percnit her
PL as ab. Targ. Y.II Ex. XV, 25.— Y. Maas. Sh. V, end, 5^203 f. (preced.) selection, choice. Targ. Ez. XVII, 5
55 c (oneirocritical play on *|0 3) "TOM FIX mb pO^ai and
>, '3 -,E5 ed.Lag. a choice vine (ed. X333; h. text .1ESBS).
'"0 pr.n.m.iVtssa.anAmora. Y.Erub. corr. ace). Targ. Y. Deut. XII, 17 (ed. Amst. a. oth. '303,
S02 II, !"i02,
T
aT corr. ace); v. KappJ.
II, 20 bot. Y. B .Bath. II, beg. 13 b Y. Ter. XI, end, 48 b .
;
sabb. 82 a wan rpo?, expl. tmnx, tnsrm vm rw be Pa. *% 1) to find out by sign, to divine. Targ. 0. Gen.
mind everything Y. Ber. VI, XXX, 27.-2) to try, test; to attempt. Targ. 0. DeutXXVIII,
must discard from his else.
end, 10 d in»1 Tl (ed. Krot. ?iBJl) if be has abandoned 56, v. supra.—Targ. Esth. V, 14 wbu K'Jpsab to test the
the thought (of drinking more wine); a. e. — Snh. 1. c; (strength of) the gallows. Targ. Ex. XVI, 4; a. fr. — Snh.
Yoma 1. c, v. supra. —V. rHOri. 107 a -|b N3ip3a I will try thee. Ib. "jb SOOS^a last (corr.
ace). Ablzar. 15 a *bm tf»0^i read: Jn^O.3" ? let us try
t
1
HOD cb. same, 1) to remove, take out. Targ. Jud. the animal for me; a. e.
XIV, 9 (h. text i-H-i).— Part. pass. HUM. lb.— Cant. R. to Af. 105$, ^OSH same. Targ. Ps. LXXVIII, 56 (Ms. Pa.).
V, 14 '31 KHD WffVt
%
. bis mother took the bread out of Targ. Y.il Gen. XXII, 1.
b
tbe oven, and he ate; Pesik. B'shall., p. 90 ,sq. KU55 (corr. Ithpa. ^n^S, ip?iS< l)to be lifted up. Targ. Ps. LX, 6.—
ace.).— [2) to lift, weigh.—Denom. XHpa, Nnnpa.] 2) to be tried. Targ. II Esth. V, 14.— Snh. 1. c. Wfnj WW
Pa. H03 to remove, sweep out; to exile. Lam.R.toI,13 "ib H?pjia . . ib they have been tried (proved true) to me,
(expl. rt3T-n, ib., with ref. to Jud. 1. c.) nno; (not NH03) thou hast not.
he removed (exiled) her.—Part. pass. Hp3a. Targ. Prov.
XXIX, 21 (b. text ",131a!).
WO!, a^DVD &C18, v. ^D3S<rix.-'3 oisn, v.
^ospisn.
Ithpe. Hpsnx to be pulled out. Targ. Esth. VII, 9 (fr.
to ask for a test (cmp. Is. VII, 11, sq.); to try, test. Gen.
"Q*P03 m. pi. (=i33iD3; preced. wds.; cmp. 12J1B a.
R.s.55, beg. (interpret. H03, Gen.XXII,l) .. "$&$? VoiM K3bm '3, or '3 whey. Pes.
ti"M|) [that which is separated,]
'31 *frtib in order to lift them up (as a standard) for the
42 a !
'3 whey and refuse of wool. Ab.
B. Mets. 68 b i"iniH1
world, to raise them &c, v. 0.3. Ib. (ref. to Gen. 1. c.) R.
Zar. 35 b N31N there is the whey which does
TDf^ «bl '3
J. says '31 033 lb*W he raised him &c. R. A. ; says, "jHIK '3
not curdle (and which may contain unclean milk).
ifcHim he really tried him, v. IK-fr lb. MOW H"3pH "pK
'31 the Lord does not test the wicked,. but only the
righteous; ib. s. 32; s. 34. Mekh. B'shall., Vayassa, s. 1
(ref. to Ex. XV, 25) rtVrtS(^) lb N1D3 0115 there he raised 1TDD, '©^D m. (n03T ) 1) lifting up. Gen.R. s. 55, beg.
him (Moses) to greatness; ...bfc<1U)i nx OlpaH H03 Ota '31 pymi '{ -TIN '3(ref to Ps. LX, 6) a repeated ele-
.
there God tested Israel. Ib. Tithro, Bahod., s. 9 113.233 vation, dignity &c. —Snh. 107 a
2) trial, test; temptation.
03n« biab bi3B3 osnx nio; (Ex.XX, 28) 'to lift you up', '3 i*Hb laXJ) Ni3H ... Til David ... placed himself in the
b
to raise you. Arakh. 15 a '31 WJ H131103 1UJ3> ten times power of trial (asked to be tried, Ps.XXVI,2). Ber.60
did our ancestors try the Lord; Ab. V, 4; a. fr. '3 iTb i3Xi3ri bl* suffer me not to come within the
. .
Hithpa. np:rn, Nithpa. npsn? to be tried. Ib.3. Talk. power of sin, iniquity, or temptation. Sifre Deut. 21 ",ni3
'31 trt "Worn, read '31 iaHX1 S03 he took him along
: Wf account of the (connected with the purchase of
trials
and showed to him &c; (Yalk.Is.355 '31 HinaHXI H1303).- animals, and which the Jewish seller may be induced to
Pesik. R. s. 22 '31 JTHptNl NU53 he took (his money) and attend on the Sabbath eve). Lam. R.to I, 1, v. N03 1; a.e.
put it in trust with him. Ib. S"Pb H3H11 HHO^ she took it
(the deposited money) and gave it to him; a. fr. ST^ip?, v. swiwtoa,
—
«^D3 917 ODD
But when Sihon was slain, they appointed him king in HC J, ?J*Dj ch. same, esp. to offer a libation. Targ.
his place; Yalk. ib. 765. Cant. IV, 15; a. e.
rD n pJ f.=T|^?, q. v. Sabb. 41 a i3B3p X? they will not take the time to manipul-
ate &c, v. preced.
D^pw m. (0D3) falling away, grief. Tern. 16 a (inter- Ithpa. T\OiT-i<, Ithpe. TpppX as preced. Hithpa. Targ.
preting iass, i chr. rv, io) bix\ub *&qa "fjin i&Hn (not Num. XXVIII, 7; a. e.— Ab. Zar. 71 b Hi? V« tfsp XEp
iC" 03p) I shall
1
go with my grief to the grave (cmp. Gen. every drop as it comes out becomes forbidden.
XXXVII, 35; XLIV, 31 ; a. e.); Mekh. Yithro, Amal., s. 2
10-0 ",333 llli (corr. ace); Yalk. Josh. 27 (a. Ar.'s. v. 13) |
?|P5 m. (b. h.; preced.) 1) libation. Ex. R. s. 15 '3 -p
iQi013 (corr. ace). wine from which a libation has been poured on the altar.—
yrph itns).
suspected) to have been manipulated by an idolater, wine
riSPpD f. (?G3) moving, marching. Y. Erub. V, 22 c ed. niUiy) it does not become (the gentile does not make
bot.; Men.95 a ins>i033 when marching, opp. S"H*3n. Mekh. it) forbidden wine until &c. Ib. V, 1 '3
fn TOS nittJSp to
Yithro, Bahod., s. 1; a. e.
work with him wine dedicated to an idol. Ib. 2 '3 ",n
in
'31 ?£3ttJ if forbidden wine was poured over grapes. Ib.74a
Sr*Cp, J^nOD, ^2 f. Ct>3) trial; pr. n. pi. Nissetha, bot. '3 ",n really idolatrous wine, opp. "p dtlD suspected;
Nistha. Targ. 0. Ex. XVII, 7 (Y. SUitM); Targ. 0. Deut. a. fr.
v. Matt. K. a. 1.) whence did the Israelites take wine for agreement mean metal (not coins)?; Men. 107 a ; a. e.
their festive gatherings during the forty years &c? — 2) to B. Bath. 33 b '31 SOX '11 '3 13Hil this is a case corresponding
make wine forbidden (7|G3 T?) by the manipulation of a to that of a metal bar which R. Abba decided, the case
gentile suspected of dedicating it to idolatrous purposes. being that one took by force a piece of metal &c. Shebu. ;
might he not do it with his foot (while treading the wine)? (when the weaver throws the clue through the web for
Gitt. V, 4 "jOSEfi he who does damage to his neighbor by the last time).
touching his wine for idolatrous purposes (v. interpret,
b0?.» v. ?di;.
ib. 52 b ). Y. Ab. Zar. IV, 44 bot. 113H ?3 -jt>3E he causes
a
all the wine in the pit to be forbidden a. fr. ; DD3 (b. h. 003) [to pine aivay,] to be sick; trnsf. to
Nif. T^" ? to be offered as libation, to be poured on the
1 be troubled. Targ" Esth. IV, 17.
altar. Pes. 22 a "fCS^n DTas like the water which is Pa. Qi©3 to trouble. Targ. II Kings IV, 28 (h. text rfcajn).
poured on the altar, opp. "psE-Sti which is poured out Ithpa. D1&3DX, OSTiX, D2iN, Ithpe. t3i03-X, DippX to be
at the foot of the altar. troubled; to grieve; to be weak. Targ. Gen. XLV, 5. Ib.
116
—
?Di 918 nD3
XXXIV, 7 (0. ed. Berl. WSpShJfcj v. Berl. Mass., p. 77). to make the flame rise; [cmp. m>S Hif.,] to start a fire,
Targ. II Ohr. XVI, 10 ; a. e.-Sabb. 145 b ; Gitt. 56 a ; v. Warm to heat. Bets. 32 a , a. e. '31 d^32 "pp^da you may, on the
b
Gen. B. s. 50 (expl. IN^l, Gen. XIX, 11) yi&PX or fD^ Holy Day, use wooden vessels for heating &c. Pes. 27
they became weak. pidart he who put the wood on. Ib. '31 ipidfitt) man if
one heated an oven with wood belonging to the sanctuary
3?Q3 (b. h.) to move, mardl. Tosef. Sot. VIII, 1 DV» bsd &c. Sabb. Ill, 1 '31 tt)pd mp^dfitt) rrro a range which
'31 1J1K Sdia .. every day the ark moved behind two they heated with straw &c. Tosef. Yoma II, 5; Yoma
standards (divisions), . . ., but on that day it moved in 38 a d^SBda "pp^da placed the fire deep into the stove.
front; Sot 33 b . Num. B. s. 2 d"Wia .. VVtfO Witt) "in&6 Sabb. 41 a ; a. fr.— [Midr. Till, to Ps. XXVIII, v. infra.]
Sd"^ came together to make ready for the march. Mekh. 113W1 'n KM but if the oven has been made glowing.
B'shall., Vayass'a, s. 1 '31 1003 H& rt5*da It this march XXVIII '31 "fl »ni .. '3 Kin dK (the
Midr. Till, to Ps. if it
they undertook by the order of Moses, but all other now
furnace) is usually heated with one bundle, let it
marches they made at the order of the Deity, a. fr.
be heated with seven; ib. ptsa »rf HSMJa p-^da Kin d!X
Hif. Spdri 1) to remove, cause to depart, to separate, heated with seven bundles, let it
'31 (corr. ace.) if it is
take apart. Mekh. 1. c. ^pdd fTO Vs>d fTOn he forced be heated &c. Kel. V, 4. Tosef. Hull. I, 22 «ipwn vbw "W
them to march, against their will, with the staff. lb. t"S before they are hardened by heating; a. fr.
across the sea, and Moses removed it &c. Kel. V, 7 "p*iS pD3 ch. same,' to go up. Impf. pW, pd^; inf. pVtB,
i"">drf3 he must (not only divide, but) separate the parts pd">p; imper. pd, pld. Targ. II Sam. V, 22, sq. Targ. 0.
a
of the stove entirely. Sot.8 'dl WWl nx "p^dri f*l rVQ Num. XX, 19 pW3 ed. Berl. Targ. Gen. XL1V, 17 ; a. fr.—
the court orders the witnesses to change their places; Kidd. 50 a '31 pdTab with the idea of going up to
RfiaHSt
Tosef. Snh. IX, 1 (ed. Zuck. )WU?q). Gen. B. s.38 (ref. to Palestine. Bets. 27 a p&Kl 'OWt; M. Kat. 22° pd^Xl (not
Gen. XI, 2) lavalpa fdS3> Wlftl they removed them-
'31 p">dK1), a. e., v. XII ; a. fr.
selves from the Originator of the world; ib. s.41 ia23> 'fl Af. p^dN, p">dtf 1) to cause to rise, to bring up, offer.
'31 he removed himself &c. Mekh. B'shall., Shir., s. 10 Targ. Lev. II, 9, a. fr. (h. text TOpM). Targ. II Sam.VI, 2
j
'
tftMJ, read W^da.]— 2) to signalize, Yoma l^pda &6 we do not name children
38 b imattSS
v. Ktoa. after them. Gitt.ll b VmWiatt)d igBStt biOttJi TP3tt) «Vi
Bb/".3>wn to &e removed. Tosef.YomaI,4 miinsn "jo 'n names which Israelites are not in the habit of adopting.
was removed (deposed) from the high priesthood; Y.Hor. Shebu. 29 a ^tlT (KdlO) inb p^dKI and named them coins;
Ill, 47 d top. a. e. — 6) (with mT, a. d of person) to produce a claim
against. Shebu. 41 b *jd KSp^dpT .. *b dn give me the one
2C0 ch. same. Gen. B. s. 38 (ref. to Gen. XI, 2) WW hundred Zuz which I claim against thee (which thou
'31 Kra+TQ "p they moved from the east to go further east. owestme). Keth. 85 a '31 iTIT ma ipdp Wt, v.^Ktin. B.Kam.
Af. rdit to remove. Y. Meg. IV,75 top tan&a SON
C 97 a "fit ind p^dan iffiS^ persons against whom he had a
ina>1 r&a xbl I can look (at the priests) without diverting claim; a. e. —
7) (with KnsHX) to have in mind. Shebu.
p£3 (b. h. ptt)3) to go up, ascend; v. pda. ™lW (b. h. "11133, a. UttS ; cmp. ISO a. n-;b) [to produce
Hif. P^dfi impose a tax, to assess, v. p^da II.
1) <o a rough, grating sound; cmp. *ns I,] to saw, plane. Gen.
2) to bring to a conclusion, v. p^da I. 3) to put on wood, — B.s.6 y^2 "WO KiniD riWl 1dd3 (the light of the sun pro-
: ——
no: 919 rvcr>y:
duces a sound) like (that of) the plane which planes Y. Sabb. IV, 6 d bot.,v.rni03.— Esp.(*,riOB bio) '3 hatcheled
a
wood, opp. EjtJ to glide; Midr. Sam. ch. IX. Y. Ber. I, 2 C flax. Sabb. IV, 1 (49 ) iipi 'S b'O '3 thoroughly beaten
a
bot. '31 r-p-O rnOiJ tvartW 13 while the sun passes in flax (cmp. KFip/i). Ib. 1l , a. e., v. 10X. Snh. 37 a , v. anrn ; a. fr.
~C2 ch. same. Targ. Y. I Ex. XIV, 25 (h. text Wj the same as shutting (the stem br2). Num. B. s. 14 (play
cmp. IChr. XX, 3). on ^52, Ps.LX, 10) 13V0. nb/attn by tying up his throat
Pa. same, to split. Targ. Ps. XXIX, 7.
"W Yeb. 49 b — (strangulation). — D'HSIO nb'W Me ftme o/" closing tlie
— -z: n m -x~ r,~rx they brought the cedar and sawed
m
Temple gates; (sub. nlbsn) tte concluding prayer on the
a
it through; Yalk. Is. 274. B.Bath.75 'ol BTCQtt "^5)72 Ms. Day of Atonement, on public fasts and Maamadoth (v.
M. (ed. "~z:"2, corr. ace.) who were cutting precious TQ52) ; the prayer called N'ilah (iibiss). Taan. IV, 1
stones.— Y. "CO II. '10 '33 . . . r\TH021 during the morning prayer, the Musaf,
the Minhah and the N'ilah. Y. Ber. IV, 7 C top Kin TVff'K
""CZ m. 1) (preced.) (planed) board. Cant. B. to 1, 11 '2 when is the time for the N.? {JT310 "'"aw tlVwaa when
':*5 ':
yQ WfTB he put gold on between one board and
the gates of heaven are closed (sunset); bzVl *WB ':z
the other; Y. Shek. VI,49 d bot. Y. Hag. II, 78 b bot.— when the Temple gates are closed. Ib. D"*"i3Ti0 '3 ">b:£21
PI. C"r:, fhW. B. Bath.IV,6 'in the boards in the bath
that we may offer the X. prayer. Ib. '21 n*DlB '3; Yoma
house. lb. 67 b '3fi rna the room in which the boards are
87 b/2)l '3 nbSP the concluding prayer exempts from read-
stored. lb. 1 rx tan sold (with the press) the boards,
Y. Sabb. HI, 6 a top rtfrt
ing the evening prayer a. fr. Trnsf. locking up, inter- ; —
v. --- IT. Kel.XXH.lO, v. D310.
ruption of business. Cant. B. to VII, 2 (play on D"^532,
*5fl rx •"';;- to remove the boards (which covered the ib.) aro '31 riOSD, '3 D^bsa TilO two cessations of business,
bathing tank). Bab. ib. 40 s ; a. e— [2) wicker, v. 12J3 in.]
one shutting up on Passover, and one &c. 2) bn30ii nb^sa —
S"C2, '"0
ch. 1) same, board. — PI. frjofo 'oa, 'tpa. (or t^'S'i) putting on sandals, wearing shoes. Yoma VIII, 1.
b
Targ/l kings' VI, 15; a. fr. — Ib. VTI,30 Wtti '2 bronze Ib. 74\ M.Kat.l5 a.fr— Gen. B.s. lOOmion '3 wearing
;
constr. ftfL. Targ. Hos. VIII, 6 ftrtb '3 gold foils for
;
D"2?«! I m., nlT'V^ f.(b.h.; titt) pleasing, lovely. Buth
boards (h. text ~"2-w; cmp. X2"'l ). mosai finiX MX110 jTt) when he saw
B. to 11^5 ETX3 '3
7102, v. xo, that she was lovely and her conduct becoming. PI.
DTa^SS ; t"rint«. Ib. '31 d^iO ni 0"'a her conduct
,
is becom-
SrC2,
t : •
v. xr-*fl.
• t • ing and lovely. Midr. Till, to Ps. V WOTS 13b SinroiD na b=
~n '21 all the things which thou hast given us are good
»?:,
T
v. ^.
"I
.
and pleasing. Gen. B. s. 23, v. i"T253. Cant. B. to IV, 4
5S>-, v. X5">3. '31 O^T^MI '3 DObia all of you are welcome, all of you
T T »»I
are pious &c; a. e.
V'sZ m. = fiX3; pL c-~:, v. nxs.
ST^XIX^
T
m. (ir) [hollowed out,] tank of the
D" 1
press (h. np3 Targ. Y. Ex. XXII, 28.— PI. X*l?3, '1553. U*'*f-T II pr. n. pi. Na'im (Nain), in Isachar. Gen.
Targ. Joel K, 24. Targ. 0, Gen. XLIX, 12.— [Sa'chs, Beitr. B. s. 98.
II, 27: adaptation of Lat. navia.]
iTD" 1
n"j"13?3 f. (b. h. ni33; nya) [light matter,] scraps, chips. the chant &c. Y.Shek.V,55 c bot. '2n nx miO, v. Dibsn'ix,
116*
; —
Knws 920 W3
Meg. 32 a '3 Nba tOlpn he who recites Bible verses without JsJ ch. same, to tie a shoe. Part. pass. bi53, b^sa. Targ.
chanting; Treat. Sof'rim III, 10. Cant. R. to VIII, 14 '33
Y. Deut. XXV, 9 '31 '3 (Wl and there shall be tied on the
nnx in one accord ; a. fr.
foot ... a sandal which &c.
SPIED '•J, 5SPZ3 •J ch. same, stveetness, melody. Af- ^?t^ to P rovi de «>#7i shoes. Targ. II Chr. XXVIII,
15. [Dan. II, 25, a. e. &S»h to bring up, fr. bb_5.]
Targ.Il'Esth. I, l^a'w'constr. Targ. Y. Ex. XIX, 19 '31
t^ba and full melody.
"•Jm. (b. h.; preced.) 1) (cmp. Gr. 6~6o7)|xa) [tied
n under the foot,] shoe. Yeb. 102 a ib53a atbl ib53 ITfOTl
f 2?3 m. (y?3) a wedge-like ditch.— PI. 3T>53, 'paFatt.
. . .
VI, 1 ">1S03
1) to
^353
tie
'3 if he locked it in (secured
2) lock, locking up. —PI. 3^53. Cant. R. to VII, 2, v.nb"<53.
the flock) properly. Tosef. B. Bath. II, 11, a. e. '31 115.1 '3
S.OT, Targ. Y. Lev. XI, 22, Ar., v. xbi^3.
if he fastened (something on the property), fenced in or
tore down, it is possession (nptrr). Sabb. XIII, 6 '31 mx U./J (b. h.) to be pleasing, lovely.
"P3B3 and one blocked it (by placing himself in the Eif;tf9»\ 1) same. Snh. 24 a (ref. to 353 Zech. XI, 7)
entrance). lb. 7 '31 irP3 nx 3513^ it is like one lock- '31 nib m ftWtBa* . . lbs* this refers to the scholars in
ing up (sitting at the entrance of) his house to guard it. Palestine who are polite to one another in discussion,
Mekh.Mishp. s. 18 '31 ^SS bl53b xblU in order not to close opp. a^bsna. — 2) to siveeten the voice ; to sing, accompany.
the door to future proselytes (not to discourage them Y. Shek. V, 48 d bot. '31 lblp MX 3i53a rTtl he sweetened
on account of advanced age). Snh. 32 a a. fr. fctblZ) "13 , his voice when singing, v. rW3?3. Gen. R. s. 23 nn^ntt)
bisan, v. nVji.— Y. Naz. VIII, 57 a bot., v. 151.
y
'31 Tosef. 31 fcpra fia?3a she sang to the timbrel in honor of
Sot. V, 9 [read:] '31 nbl b53U5 who locked his wife up (to idolatry, v. h'a53. Cant.R. toIV,4'31 an'WV'at 3^533 ia
prevent her from going astray); Y. ib. I, 17 a bot.; Gitt. who sweetens Israel's songs? David &c. ; a. e.
rvHatn b3 "nS>2 "j^Sia how great wa is the beauty of thy steps '31 why was she (the wife of Noah) called N.? Because
(pilgrimage to the Temple) which locked up (protected her doings were pleasing; ib.'3l nn^n ninx '3 Tubal-Cain's
against) all troubles-Part. pass. bl53 ; f. HbWJ; pi. ff^Bp, sister was a different Naamah, and she was so named &c,
ytytt); ttfe©}, Midr. Till, to Ps. IV '31 'I... nbsn iisii)
'
Gen! XXVIII, 12. Targ. Cant. II, 2. Y. Ter. VIII, 45 d — Gen.VHI,21) 'SI XSl^l '3 BRCRl fi2»a from the moment the
top; Y. Ab. Zar. II, 41 a bot. '31 XT=D rST?(b) (or fSTab)
embryo bestirs itself to come out into the world; Gen.B.
to stick a knife into a radish.
b
s. 34; Yalk. ib. 61. Hull. 51 'SI Tias? trCW Bashi (ed.
Pa. YK (transp. ra:) same, to plant. Cant. B. to 1, 16
fllS" ?) if
1
the animal made an effort to get up, although it
'31 PTir:-; rx '"X 'pnai (not Jt»3BO) and now, even if you
tried to stick into it sixty myriads of reeds &c. v. ">B3; ,
did not succeed; a. e. — 2) (of flax) to be hatcheled. Y. Sabb.
H, beg. 4 C (expl. ',DTl, ib.H, 1) ms» xbia *,nOB flax which
Y. Taan. IV, 69 b Y. Meg. I, 70
a bot. SSSQ (corr. acc.j;
Lam. B. to II, 2
;
to cause evacuation. Toh. II, 1 rmpfi nx rn53p she may '31 nnb the manna was bread to the young, oil to the
empty (or stir) the dish. Kel. XXVIII, 2 '31 "Q '"Oib used old &c. Tanh. Sh'mini 11 '31 =n
'3 =x if they (the elders)
for (lifting and) emptying the pot. Tosef. ib. B.'Mets. are young &c, v. 'fB^. Ib. '3ni "ninari the young men
II, 10 'ST "1532 i313ni"!ttJ which the shop-keeper uses when and the lads. Sot 46 b '31 TOTm m
1 they were young
— ! — ; — ;
nn?2 922 ™»
men, but behaved contemptibly like children; a. fr. '3*1 you blow into its nostrils and put the teat
ratsTlS
Fern. S"H23 lass, maid, esp. (law) a girl between twelve into mouth; Sabb. 128 b Y. ib. XVIII, end, 16 c NT3.a
its ;
and twelve and a half years of age, v. rvros. Esth. R. to '31 HB131 yf* you take wine and squirt it &c. B. Mets. 60 b
V, 1; a, fr.— Keth. Ill, 8, contrad. to m^B. a. fi3I3p. lb. D^3*ip3 "ptiSria "pK it is not permitted to blow up entrails
IV, 1; a. fr.— PI. WhM, constr. Whsa. lb. Ill, 1 (29'). Esth. (for sale, to give them a delusive appearance); a. fr.
R. 1. c. rWilM TW her two maids; a. fr. 2) to be blown up, to swell. Tanh. K'dosh. 8 VOB siME3 his
a
I, 3 top, v. WttiJ; Kidd. 4 a bot. '3 "OS"© the symptoms
Ber. 19 b Nidd. 57 a a. e., v. ti^Q; a. fr.— [Y. Peah VIII,
; ,
of maidenhood (puberty); a. fr.
21 b top nB32rt, read tlBBan, v. ftB£.]
^rfiHSO f. (v. *©3Tt I) roaring, cameVs cry. Yeb. 120 b Pu. nB>i3 to be blown, fanned. Treat. S'mah. ch. VIII
rrwn%& rt^bW xb"| Rashi (ed. nVipi&BK) and this did '31 fifiBIS NbU) tSK fc6l nn&ISliJ tt5K . . 3"Jla it is better that
not make the camel cease from crying (until life was a fire consume me which has been blown (by man), than
entirely extinct). a fire that has not been fanned (Gehenna Job XX, 26). ;
b
Targ. job XX, 26. Targ. 0. Num. V, 21; a. fr.— Hull. 47
SD23,
T T t'
v. an^.
• TT
NfPSin T'fct (not i-il-PSi"!) some explain KnBl&6 NTOl (v.
SD3, v. KTM.
Sabb. 33 a '
(
B3 "TPB?, v. fcOBB; a. fr. — 2) to be blown up,
|>?. ",53,
to sioell. Targ. O. Num. V, 27, v. Ithpa. (Y. nB3n, prob.
HEO
TX
I, Pi. hB^3, v. TO.
*
to be read: fiB3rTfl).-— Lev. R. s. 33; Cant. R. to II, 14, v.
Nrfrtp.
nSD II (b. h.; Vfi3) fan; winnow; sieve. Men. VI, 7;
Pa. rtQ3 same, to blow, cause swelling. Targ. Y. Num.
X, 4,v^S3. Y.Keth.VII,31 b bot.,v.*n3. Hull. 45 a mpi3
V,22 (0. KfiBx!?, Af; ed. Amst. WW&6); a.e— Part. pass.
'33 if the windpipe has perforations like a sieve. Sot.48 '; 1
Y ...). Ukts. I, 2. [Lat. napus is a kind of turnip.] Berl. fCtim). Targ. Job XIX, 26 (ed. Wil. inBtnX; h. text
1Bp3). Targ.Koh.XII,5.—Y.Maas. Sh. IV, end,'55 c fffi*
HDD cmp. MB) 1) to blow, breathe. Y. Sabb.
(b. h.;
the wheat shall swell (v. supra). — 2) to be bloivn, ignited.
VII, 10 d tVOW "^3 MBisrt he who shapes glass vessels by a
Sabb. 26 &013 n3 nB3^X she caught fire.
blowing (on the Sabbath); Bab. ib. 75 b '31 "^33 nB?_tt.
Makhsh. I, 6 '31 tTttHJJB riBISn he who breathes at lentils nDj m. (preced.) swelling; bulk, volume (v. NrtoBN).
to ascertain their quality. Tosef. Sabb. XV (XVI), 2 fiBIS B. Mets. VI, 5 il&MUab fTBp 'an an increase of volume
— ; ——
HB3 923 VW3
a
makes the load harder for the animal (Bab. ed. 80 '3fi
S n 1l2D3 "
m. (preced.) dealer in naphtha.—PI. ""WW.
TOBOQ fifljp an increase of size is as hard for the animal Ned.91 b.
as an increase of weight), v. KrtM. B. Kam.47 a Wf?,
v. xr-t:.
"'DD, HS2, Pi. t«n (denom. of ns3) to fan, winnoic,
ITtaa r.-z-z nm
to nrsi vrvba r^xn mnfi in-aa rttTB '3 is found to contain more than the legally allowed refuse),
a smith whose open shop was in the middle of the road, he winnows the entire quantity, and the seller has to
and whose son, a jeweler, opened a smithy opposite him indemnify him for the entire quantity lost by winnowing.
Tanh. Vayesheb 1; a. fr.
b
—
Y. R. Hash. II, 58 top, a. e. b
Y. Maasr. IV,51 bot. '31 ttQ* KSflB 13^31 (better nQ3^ ) :
'".-
p R. Johanan, v. next w.
the smith's son, i. e. PI.
but he must not blow the chaff out over a basket; a. e.
-re:. Y. B. Bath. II, beg. 18 b '3 bl» JtVl nor dare an oven Part. pass. UBIM; f. rTfBD. Men. X, 4; VI, 7 ttfcwa in
for smiths be put up (without the precautions mentioned •1E3 mu» sifted thirteen times. Ib. t&Xt bz '33 n'pO fine
(corr. ace.)
— '3 13 a) the smith's son, v. ',3^. Snh. '31
£)2,
iO^Ma when she
Pa. ^03, same. Y. Sabb.
fans (blows the chaff out, on the
96 a ': "OfUS. 'an X3:: better is what the smith (B. Isaac) Sabbath), she is guilty of an act coming under the category
said, than what the smith's son (R. Johanan) said. B. of winnowiog. Buth R. to 111,3 [read:] V\ BWTI W«TBB Vt8
Mets. 85 b a. e.— b) name of a bird. Hull. 62 .— PL fIJjB.
b
; go and winnow it (again), and it will yield the remainder;
Targ. Jer. VI, 29. Targ. Jud. V, 26 "pTW. Yalk. ib. 604 '31 X33^n *B3 Vn (not 1B3).
'"-
&W!EZ, ch =h.nE.:. B.Mets.80 a (expl.^I!<^Mmi3p )
&VD3 f. (preced.) =h. itS3, fan, winnow, sieve. Pes.
v. nE3) 'z* stVpn "3 '3 the volume of the load is like tbe lll b '33 rT^S llftl (Ms. M. 831313) and he moves to and
weight, i. e. loads of the same volume are considered
of a fan. B. Kam. 97 b '3 Xl ^BX (Ms. R. SOB33, v.
fro like
the same weight as regards the stress on the animal, and Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 80) even if tbe new coin be of the
if he added three Kab to the volume bargained for, he is size of
a
a sieve?; Hull. 124 '33 '->EX even if the flesh on
responsible for any injury to the ass ; ib. (expl.TXttJBP tWp) the hide be of the size &c.? Gitt. 69 a bot. **tt — OT
'31 "*81 '31 . . xbpn weight is weight, and the volume is an '3 the bran which comes up to the top of the sieve when
B. Kam. 47 a "Wa '3 (Ms. F. ilTE"?) how about the gain in '33 the winnowing may be done with a fan (independently
value from its fuller appearance? b
of the wind). Succ.20 '31 iDIBP Htl can be used for covers
and sieves, v. KOIB.—Y.Sabb.VH,10 c top ',B3 (fr. XS3).—
STIS13 pr.n.pl. N'fahaya. Targ.Y. Num. XXI, 30 (b.
'
[Tosef. Hull. niVlV), 27 IMP, v. yjBSjL]
text he:).
b
U£2 Pi. D|M (ctnp. yS3) to beat (cotton). Sabb. 73
,
'31 "js: .- yVXft -~i~t threshing, beating flax and beating HITS!: f. (MW) blowing, a
breath. Y. Sabb. H, 5 bot,
cotton are all one kind of labor (threshing). [Ar. s. v. yB rnx '33 he ignited and extinguished in
ni^SI 1"VS3n if
reads: OE3"3!Yl, r.WO.] one continued act of blowing. Gen. R. s. 14, end nV©3
'31 '33 ffln in this world the breath of life is put in by
— iv- m. (prob. a transpos. of Cp9, a readaptation of
blowing (Gen. H, 7), .... but in the coming world by placing
vayda) naphtha. Sabb. H, 2. Ib. 26 pb '33 fp&TB fW
a
(Ez. xxxvii, 6). ib. -ran Via wrtasa fime rrc da nan
'31 white naphtha must not be used for lighting . . .
&c. (S£Xt] KOpp$6pa or -upo^oXa). Kbits II.— b) name of a species of lizards, living in the
a
8 -EZ ch. same. Targ. Y. II Ex. XIV, 24. Targ. n water. Sifra 8h'mini, ch. VI, Par. 5 Hull. 127 (not ',3). ;
Esth.1,2 —Sabb. 46*. Ex. B. 8. 15 '^""En ",3 some ed. (corr. ace).
— ,
Amst. b^BS) that Keth. 66 b X3Tn '31 the management of which is a large
b^BS, ed. it is not an untimely birth.
Targ. Ps. LVIII,9 Ms. (ed. XblBS). Targ. Job III, 16 xbB3 concern, V.X3W III.; a. fr.-P/.-pUPBS, HlftM; ")^E3. Targ.II
bT
(Bxt. xbB3; Ms. XbSD).— PI. ^B3, **i. B. Bath. 101 b '31B Esth. VI, 10; a.e.— Snh.52 a ,v.X33/iri. Yeb.74 '3 "pfl those
rn n
£>3 f. (bS3T ) l)falling. Sot.Vni,6, a.e. v. nd/3. B..
b SETDD, v. xn^Bss.
Kam. V, 11Bn nb/Bsb as to the laws relating to
7 (54 ) T T • t t • :
p*£>5, v. pB3.
fallen to thy share at a distant place, take (this as a
loan) &c; a. v. fr.— Imperat. bis. Tosef. Dem. VI, 4 blBI
p^Dj m. (preced. ; cmp. Syr. XpS13, P. Sm. 2424) quick, '31 "wnnn {Var. bid, some ed. blB) and surrender thyself
alert. Targ. I Sam. XXIII, 22 '31 d"ns (h. text ditsn dlS
).
1
to public service in my place (v. supra).
',
increase thenumber of illegitimate births (by allowing on me (for support). B. Mets. 105 a '3 '31 X1T3 a seed (of
intermarriage between bastards). B. Bath. 12 b 'XI X313H weeds) once fallen, has fallen (cannot be destroyed by
iQHX (Rashi 1'BlBxb ib RTP3) I desire (it is an advantage the plough). Meg. 15 b nTOIB xnb^a n^b nbB3 something
to me) to have a large number of tenants around me (a suspicion) had entered his mind ; a. fr.
(whom my neighbor must employ). Ib. xnbia ixb HB1BX Af.b^H, as preced. Hif. Targ. Ps. LXXVIII, 28. Targ.
X" !! this plea about a large number &c, is no plea; a. e.
1
Y. Ex. XXI, 22; a.fr.—Hull. 42 a top b">BX ^blSX (read xbBX)
bB3 925 P5?
i"nV xbBai and she '31 13B.X and scatter the stones prepared for rebuilding the
she '
miscarried through his fault; a. fr. Temple. Lev. R. s. 10; s. 19 '31 *px ISBSa nnxia nSTUa as
Ithpe. ^SpX to be upset, fall in. M. Kat. 2 a iTfiPl soon as you shake it out (of its marrow), it is good for
iblBpX? a caving in (of the ground through which the nothing. Midr. Till, to Ps. XVII iinxiB EMJ3 . . . yvrq "SX
b PSB3 dash thy babes against the rock, as thou
water makes a road) might occur; ib. ; a. e. '31 I will
tib22 I (sbDO, Xb22) ch. same, v. \A& escapes, the body decays). Gen. R. s. 36 (ref. to S1SB3,
Gen. IX, 19) '31 01215 fiSSSI .. tiai? like a large fish that
S3D2 II m. giant, v. Vtta ch. ; a. *htp} I.
scatters its roe &c; a. e— Snh. 67 b "pS31 (Rashi "fB3?2) he
»i? in
miracles'. Midr. Till, to
m., mb$2
pVcVI ;
f.,
v.
pt.
X^B.
rrta!*}? ^ scattered, i. e. bleiv
J, v. C)*0 h.
substances). — 4) to snap a chalked cord for marking.
Targ. Is. XLIV, 13.
052, D52, NDS2, v. fB3, X34B3. Pa. -pE? same. Targ. Jer. LI, 34. — Ib. XXIII, 29, v.
"52
2-'B3. — Targ. Esth. I, 11 ",CB3ri1.— Part. pass. ^B3a. Targ.
(cmp. 3/W, iiss) to bloio, squirt into the mouth.
Is.XXVII,9.-B.Kam. 93^2183 n^B3,v.p1&II. 8abb.l47 a
Ex. R. s. 1 (play on H351B, Ex. I, 15) '31 fW nSBii HHtTP irr^ff^a "ttaaa shaking their cloaks. Ib. '31 SQRW shake
she squirted wine into the child's mouth after having
them in his face. Hull. 113 a h*4 "pB3£)l and shakes the
given its mother to drink, v. HB3.
salt off. Ib. 76 b '31 Tr%E he split it, and found two nerves;
Hif. S^BJi to blow air into the lungs, to revive. lb. nrYfltt)
a. e— [B. Bath. 45 a *»»; Keth. 91 b sq.
, WSBB, v. MSB.]
'31 Six rtS^tfO (oriiSpBQ, fr. WB) she revived the child
when they said it was dead. CyI52, ?s092m. (preced.) flax-beater, carder. Yeb.
118 b Keth. 75 a '31 rT*1p«l Xiaa '31 though the husband
3^52 (interch. with yta) to shake.
;
be a carder, his wife will call him out to the threshold and
Pa. '"B3_ to shatter. Targ. Jer. XXIII, 29 ed. Lag. (ed.
sit down (proud of her husband); [Ar. XBB3: a guards-
MBO, yJBtt, corr. ace; Bxt. yti).
Ithpa. SBSHX to be shattered. Targ. II Chr.XXXIII,13
man in the vegetable garden, denom. of B1B3.]
117
p*= 926 *®
106 a a.e. ,
'31 i3n 'B, v. 13 I ch.— Part, pifii. Targ. I Kings
XV, 17; v. next w.; a. fcv— m& piB3 ^K=??> -? m - (pveced. wds.) l) = h.nxx, excrements.
na '31 and used it for doing his duty (for the ceremony of
Xabsa 'ib for general expense (not charity). Tosef. B.
Ethrog). —
Y. Sabb. VI, 8 a top, a. e. fffWOj lp ': tn what '
itmeans 'who has brought forth'; 3>ai0d piBal it means structure next to or over a tomb. Ohol. VII, 1 naiax '3
'who brings forth'. lb. XnBil mb "ipiBX they brought a solid tomb-structure (to which there is no access). Shek.
out bread (and placed it) before him. lb. (ref. to XiiJian, II, 5 '31 '3 lb ',1313 nan WIS from what is left over of the
Ex. VI, 7) '31 mpiBXI ... 13b X3piQa 13 when I lead appropriation for funeral expenses, we build a monu-
you you a thing that you may
forth, I shall do for ment &c; (Gen. R. s. 82 ma). Tosef. Erub. VI (V),4, sq.;
legal decision; to collect; to claim. Keth. 76 b 3X inna Gen. R. s. 14 (names of the soul) '31 mi '3. Ib. Bin IT '3
piB»1 mxi the father brings evidence and gets a verdict nefesh means blood (life). Ib. (ref. to Gen.II,7, a. VII, 22)
for collecting, opp. diplal for letting the money stand '31 '3 nai03 ni013> Xin ",X3 here the text calls the soul (rrattM)
where it is. Y. Gitt. I, end, 43 d trhtfA "|*pBXl and collected and there, ruah (spirit);
nefesh, ib. s. 32. — Snh. IV, 5 '3
from him. lb. Xp 3i*3 ",153 (v. supra Pe. 2) they wanted to nnx one (person's) life. Y. Taan. Ill, beg. 66 1
'
13P310 fftxa
T
collect. Y. Shebu. VH, 38 a top '31 xbl "jlpBXI ",inx they '31 '10B31"3 as soon as the court has declared its will to
came and claimed that he had not given them anything; do a thing. Nidd. 65 b a. fr. '3 b53 one who is master over
,
inent offered before?— ~-E: rr:(3), v. !T2.— Hull. IV, 7 (77 a ) M. Kat. 10 XS3 (Ms. M. X3X, v.Rabb. D.
1
'
S. a.1. note); B.
ns-n '3 one not fastidious. — B. Bath. 89 a
BF^ftW ': the Bath. 54 a , v. X*bra.
opening in which the tongue of scales rests (agina).— PL as
ab. ': ^fh v. "fn II. 8nb. 1. c. '3 "+X9 witnesses in capital
S3I2 to quarrel, v. 123.
t
cases. —Yoma VIII, 6 "3 p£t> the possibility of danger to ^£- III (or XS3) m. (preced.) strife; pr. n. m. Natsa.
human life; Sabb. 129 a ; a. fr.
Sabb. 56 b (transl.3Vn3, I Chr. VHI, 34, a. ref. to Wfl, I Sam.
wTI, SwTr, riw^r XV, 5) '3 -Q '3 Strife (Mephibosheth), son of Strife (Saul),
monument. Pesik. ch. same, 1)
v. bra
B'shall.", b
and they erected a monu-
p. 79 '31 '3 mb "jrnn
ment to him (the dog that saved their lives), and to this 211- to put up, place, v. 32^.
day they call it xabzl ': the dog's monument. Y. Erub.
Nif. 3X3 to stand {defiantly). Num. R. s. 18, v. M^sn.
V,22 b bot. f f f tt\ ':, v. 'pp'np; a. e.— 2) soul, will &c. (v.
p
preced.). Targ. Gen. I, 20. lb. XXIII, 8; a. fr.— Cant. R. —\-> 3 •£- ch. same, to put up, plant. Targ. Gen. IX,
to II, 1 6, v. 3.33. Sabb. 129 a '3 qbn '3 "IBO meat (is a neces- 20 (h. text S»3). Targ. Y. Deut. XXXII, 50 (cmp. 333);
sary of life), life for preced.— rfttJM r:, v. rfl3 ch.
life, v. a. fr.—Lev. R. 8.25 *p2^3 Blffi to plant (trees); Koh.
Pes. 68 b •'XrE:, v. "TH. lb. rTOI&l RFPTO with the intention R. to II, 20 3S3T:b. Y. Orl. I, 61 a top *pX3 -,lb '31 and
of benefiting himself. Sot. 16 a.e. ^ODdp^Mn xb, v. ~z:
,J
,
planted them in the land (Palestine) ; a. fr. —Part. pass.
mm
;
"S7TI, v. -rs:.
5^1'iT,
'
n
I c, Sr^^r, *0 f. (preced.) plant, shoots.
ani?M,
t -
renins:,
t t -
'nro:,
t - : : :
v . x^. * * *-
Targ. Job XIV, Is. LVII.3. Targ.
8,
I- I m. (b. h.; '"4:) 1) sprouting, flower, blossotn. l^n"S2 m. (HS3) victor. Lev. R. s.30 '3 Kin )VKi .. n^bl
Ukts. II, 1 PWD |pm and the on
flower-like substance (some and we do not know which is the victor;
ed. n:»3)
cucumbers. lb. 3 WB 7 :fl * ne sproutings on the pome- Yalk. Lev. 651 fiTTS^ f#l ^n (corr. ace); (Pesik. Ul'kah.,
granate (Tosef. ;
ib. 1, 8 nx-3. ~r-r). Y. Shebi. IV, end, 35 c p. 180 a n^3 y-Pi-i). Lev. R. 1. c. SOim:i3 xn.T! (corr. ace.)—
(ref.to-^rr-.ib.IV.lO)':! brtTOfitl m xb what blossoming PL 7:-X bu llU n that the Israelites are the
$*itfCtt. Ib. ': ' '
is meant? Such as promises one Rob'a of olives. Cant.R. victors; Pesik. I.e., p.l80 b Ib.X^niS^ (corr. ace); Yalk. .
to II, 3 "."3C: ETip i2">3 its blossoms come out before its I. c. 'HS13 (corr. ace.).
leaves. Tosef. Par. XII (XI), 1 13T3 rx mrW'2~ when it
has shed its blossoms; a. fr. — Gen. R. s. 28 flTrril */3 Ar. il IN iJi« m. pi. (preced.) illustrious men. Cant. R. to
(ed. wb
v.).— nbrsfi y., v. 3btt.— 2) yi, ytft name of a
q. II, 13 (play on Bi3S3n, ib. 11) '31 1SCD '3tt the illustrious
coin (Blossom)=7/8 of an As (v. rt3'"Vj). Kidd. 12 a Tosef. ;
appear in the land.
B. Bath. V, 12 ed. Zuck. (Var. "p'Tt, some ed. f2Pn, corr. n^lAJ f. (bs3; v. nbisr?) place for refuse, dumping
ace.).— PI. BPW^, Y. Kidd. I,58 d Bab. ib. I.e.;
T4;'7-<-
Ber. 9 b rial
;
ground, mire. re 7«0 '33 Ar. (ed. nb^"?::)-
Tosef. 1. c. ; v. •,""•
\ J] } J| SL 2 ch. same, blossom. Targ. O. Gen. XL, y 1^-, afc'J m. (pS^) uninterrupted flow of a liquid
poured from vessel to vessel. Toh. VIII, 9 '31 *rcr.n "p'V ':~ ...
10. Targ.6.Num.XVII,23(ed.Berl.y3). Targ. Job XIV, 2
an uninterrupted flow, a current on slanting ground and ..,
(ed. Lag.xsn). Targ.Y.II Deut. XXVni,40 TOI3; a.e.—
.
\ - II m. (b. h. ;
prob. fr. its far-sightedness, cmp. y&,
"Ito, y. -m IV.
Hif.) hawk. Hull. HI, 1; Tosef. ib. IH, 3; a. e.
Mi£^>
T ^^ I ch. (mostly ". n3) same. Targ. 0. Lev. fcO"12Zj
objects in shape.
m. ("is") joiner's frame, clasps to keep glued
Targ. XLIV, 13 ed. Lag. (oth. ed.
XI. 16 ; Deut. XIV, 15. Targ. Job XXXIX, 26 (Ms. XS^).— Is.
all those masses; a. fr.— Part. pass. rJ«S. lb. ^3X113 hSlTQ constr. ^3nS3, **?. Targ. Jud. V, 28. Targ. Y. II Ex'. XIV,
'31 '3 ^3X12) fiStt»l . . . 1"IS13 when I prevail, I lose, but when 14; a. e.
1. c. (expl. HSSsb) PiS?b rtX3 XlitlU "^ to him whom it is SrFDnS!) f., constr. WOrTS3==X5rTS?. Targ. Y. I Ex.
befitting to glorify. — 2) to conquer, prevail over. lb. ~^0 XIV, 14; a.e."
'31 mix D^riSS?? 1l"3. a human king is angry when people
defeat him (in argument; cmp." 3't Pa.); Pes.l.c. — B. Mets. 1
DtlaE, v. nsa. — [Sot. VIII, 1 (3), Y. ed. m"3 rfrfttt, v.
(v. supra) ; a. e.
Part.NsS, ^SX3; f. fcWB ;
pi. yt\. Targ. Prov. XXVI, 17 'X3
b ed. Lag/ (ed. Wil. TO, corr. ace). Ib. XXVII, 15. Targ.
Nif. HS"1 ? to be defeated. Y. Sabb. II, 5 top v. supra.
Ex. II, 18; a.e.—M.Kat.l6 a/31 "jStSB*! that we (the court)
n22D ch. same, 1) to be glad, to sing. Targ. IIEsth.1,2 must contend (with persons disregarding legal summonses)
'31 MU3 ni("i1 it flew singing among &c— 2) to succeed,thrive. and curse &c.
Targ. Koh. XI, 2.-3) to be victorious. Targ. Ex. XXXII, lthpa. "K3P$, Ithpe. ^Jlrx, 'rx same. Targ. 0. Lev.
e.— Y.Sot.IX,24 b tffco 1)123 the boys (John
18, v. XriS3; a. XXIV, 10. Targ. Gen. XLV, 24;' a. fr.— B. Mets. 84 b ill*
Hyrcan's sons) have won the battle; Bab. ib. 33 a Tosef. ; '31 K'lJM'na Xp his wife was quarrelling with &c. Kidd. 76
ri
Num. XVI,
wtpaV xin ni^n itm tira wpq w iibs when women
Pa. riU3 to conquer, overpower. Targ. Y. 14; quarrel with one another, they will eventually reproach
a. e.— Lam. R. to 1, 13 (expl. rb*l"1*l ib.) JttJSi (not XHS3) one another with unchaste conduct; Xlri "pbttl^a *>"Q3 . .
he conquered her. iSS^tfl when men quarrel, they will reproach each other
Af. nssx to cheer up, play. Y. Ter. VIII, end, 46 c 'XI with spurious descent (if there is any rumor about it). Ib'\
j'fll'VJ'lp and played before them ;
(Gen. R. s. 63 HMIs, HU31X "WO Wffl y^O (or "Bttal Pa.) because they (charity
v. ST33). collectors) expose themselves to reproaches. Ib. Xp him
Ithpe. rixsnx 1) to be bright, shine, excel. Targ. Ez. '31 in">X 'VSM (or iSttp) he and Rab Bibi strove with each
XIX, 11. Ib. XXXI, 8; a. e.— 2) to be defeated. Targ. Y. other, one saying, I want the town office &c. Meg. 24 a
Ex. XXXII, 18. wsiSpx^ ijiXI G1UJ2 because it may come to quarrels
between them. Ib. b 13*1 ^3^1 I'OX ^3^X Ms. M. (ed.
Map m., 1 1M2Z J f.(b.h.; preced.) success/'unconvincing,
a ^IS" 1
?) his father may take up the quarrel for him, or
irrefutable. Snh. 105 (ref. to Jer. VIII, 5) r&Vtl '3 ttSt&n
his teacher. B. Kam. 117 a 13130, v. KWttS III; a. e.
'31 the congregation of Israel defeated the prophets with
Pa. ">S3 same. Targ. Koh. Ill, 7; a. e.— Meg. 24 a lb 'pp
an irrefutable argument.
Xlin ^1SJ3 will a minor quarrel (about precedence)? Ber.
n!ID m. (b. h.; preced.) success, endurance; (adv.) 56 a BUB (Beth N. ^^52); a. e. (v. supra).
/orei;er'.Erub.54 a/ 3V3 1EX3W Dlpa 3C wherever the Biblical
text has the words netsah, selah, or va'ed, it means &c,
v. pbfin.— PI. dTiJM. Midr. Till, to Ps. IV, v. HISTS. n^D,v.3^.
Sn^23 m. (preced. wds.) victor.— PL flT3|3. Targ. II D"£2 J m. (3S3 ; cmp. X^ST) permanent resident, opp.
Esth. I, 2 'n nm b"^3 the crown of the chief of victors. ». Ge'mR. 8,64' (ref. to {br, Gen. XXVI, 2) M313U: MlBS
Targ. Ex. XXXII, 18 (0. ed. Berl. frjXSI, v. fixa). '3 ^in SniT "^in 5>al3
l
*tf1 . . make a settlement in the laud
of Israel, be a planter, be a sower, be a citizen.
inliJ, "j m. (preced. wds.) 1) victory, strength. Sot.
J
Ps. LXXXIV; Yalk. Ps. 833 "3 ivbs ftB . . . h#hB i» b3 intercalate one month).
1 2
S-S2 929 «;
3*2"2, M^"223 m. ch. = X2:J3, q. v. Targ. Job XIV, "«23, J m. (preced. wds.) [that which
8, is thrown away,]
sq. Ms. —
PI. V^s:. Targ. Ps.CXLlV, 12.— Lev. R. s. 25, decayed matter, esp. (in levitical law) limtid and coagu-
v. 223; a. e.— Targ. Y. Ex. XXVI, 15 yiWtt} rTTBSO the lated portions of a corpse. Ohol. II, 1 ; Na«. VII, 2. Y. ib.
way they grow, v. nb^l? I. VII, 56 b bot. 'si bniai pmia nan 1123 '3 mrx (Ar. boo)
what is netsel (in levitical law)? A corpse which is dis-
N"^2"3 m. (v. sq3 II) lean land. Targ. Ps. LXV, 1
solving &c, bnia; Bab. 50 a lripia nan
v. ib. 1123 inrx'3
"pl2n WT«^ ed. Lag. (ed. WiJ. WTKISt; h.text nnaa). lb. riTino bniai a secretion from a corpse which became
Ti WT3/<?sa Ms. (ed. xnnas -n^; h. text rmAn). coagulated, and a liquid secretion exposed to heat. Tosef.
Ohol. Ill, 6; a. e.
S3 '
J»., v. preced.
. h+P b? be saved through her. B. Bath. 164 b pX .. »?MB 2311 wstiOQ, v. y:). B. Bath. i47 a urs^a nsi23 (Ms.
y\ *,na biS^S E1X there are three sins which man cannot M. WSjTO) when they are in blossom. Koh. R. to XII, 5,
escape ice; a. fr. v. piS; a. fr.— 2) to cause to sprout. Gen. R. s.28 V*HW Ar.
Hif. '--'*r\ to save, rescue. Num. R. s. 18 inb^an insx (ed. -psa), v. yvi.
his wife saved him. lb. ^bpun . . tVOS Moses . . ., save Gen. R. s. 84
Pilp. "p3S3 1) to sparkle, be enkindled.
us! Sabb. XVI, 1 '=1 -plX pb^STC) we must save them from p"mi prophecy was enkindled
13 nsss"1 ? the spirit of
fire (on the Sabbath). Snh. VIII, 7 y£E32 IjTHk finXVUO within him Cant. R. to I, 12. Midr. Till, to Ps.XC, end,
j'
whom we must '21 11a Tb5 '3 a ray of the Divine Glory shone upon him,
save (prevent from committing a crime)
even at the risk of their lives.. lb. 73 a 112232 nb'ujnb JTffl v. "int. —
2) to sprout, grow. Cant. R. to VI, 10 natsssa
ISJ I m. (preced.) cricket. — PI. yns:. Tosef. Hull. 71 bot. (reported as one of the changes adopted in the
(1
Ill,
25 "(Hull. 65 b "TOpS). Greek translation of the Pentateuch, ref. to Gen. I, 27,
a. V,2) dSOd VUlpSI 13t a male with corresponding female
1j»J II m. (b. h.; cmp. Arab, nadara, a. "j'£3) sprout, parts created he them; Gen. E. a. 8; Mekh. Bo, s. 14 (v.
offshoot. Tanb. Lekh, ed. Bub. 9 '31 BTO '3 "pbais dX if Gen.E. l.c.,beg.).-[Y.Meg.I,71 c 1^1p3b,v.3p3.]-2)(cmp.
you take a shoot of them (the felled trees) and plant 11X) to curse, blaspheme. Snh.56 a (ref. to Lev. XXIV, 16)
it &c; Tanb. ib. 5 'pbw rijXM "prji31. '31 3p13 iX!"i1 i&Wd whence do you prove that this nokeb
t
I,' m. ch.=h.*WJ ....
III, wicker -haslet.
perforated or the other; a. e.
t : • : • 1
v. y? ch.]
JpJ m. (b. b.; preced.) hole, perforation, incision.
n™)22D II f. shoot, v. 1X5 II.
t : • Hull.'45 a "p-iX '3 one lengthy incision; a. fr.— PL
1HX
di3p 3, "p3p 3. Ib. ',11dn p3 ttJUa '3 perforations connected
D j-»J m. pi. (fr. v)1S, a cacophemistic disguise of T T
S|^-, "^ pr. n . m. Nacai (Lucas, v. Neub. Stud. Bibl. I, wherein the pearl is seated; a.e. — P?.')'1 3pT 3, ftt^S, constr.
ts '31 mbp Saitf be heard N. say; Koh. E. to X, 8 rnbp II Chr. XXXIII, 1 1 a. e.— Nidd. 62 a NrMJna '3, v. supra a. e.
; ;
a
'D '311; Yalk. Gen. 133 'Kp31; Pesik. B'shall., p.90 ip3ial
(corr.acc.).— 2)N.,one of the disciples of Jesus of Nazareth. rQpi, *p2 f. (b.b. preced. wds.) female sex, female; ;
Snh. 43 a
Ms. M. a. early eds. (v. 12W IV). female gender. Nidd. Ill, 2, a. fr. '3b 3w'n she must observe
the laws of cleanness for the birth of a female child (Lev.
"ONpD, &*p '2, v. np "i3pT«. XII, 5). Ib.31 b v.ip3 1; a.v.fr.—'3 ",11UP feminine gender.
,
T
I (cmp.
through. Y. Keth.
i)>- "i"p )
II,
T
26
to sting, point,
1
'
bot. "Wp/ia "Ob
puncture, break
my conscience
PQ^ f., l) v. spa.— 2) '3 rra anus, buttock. Pes.
am vii, i irnps ma; a. e.
stings me (I afraid that I may have sinned) ; Y. Yeb.
X, 11* top -:^-p-: (corr. ace). Gitt. 56 a (play
on jW'tp J) '
S?Q*p«, v. Nrisip?.
'~'zvz r~~ ~z rripje for his sake did the sun break
through again (after being obscured); Talk. Deut. 809; "I*p2, v. "Wp*3.
Taan. 20 a Ms. M. (ed. rTTlpa»). Ib. '3 JO lbTK Ms. n:m
M. (ed. rrnpS). [Ib. mpj mAm Ms. M. (ed. ilj ffi read, I
l
11p2 m. (b. h. ip3; np3 I) speckled.— PLn^Vp:. Tanh.
as Ab. Zar. 25 a rTTOS.]—2) (Massorah) fo rfof, twarfc witt
: VayetWll 'Dl '30 yol *& C^-np?n
rtfiP -jsnrra hPH he p
dia critical points. Ab. d'R. N. ch. XXXIV, "Wga "Or turned around (changing his wages) from the ring-streaked
marked these words with dots.
(Ezra) have to the speckled and from the speckled to the ring-streaked
r
Pai
-:
is changed into a Resh &c). Y. Hag. II, 77° "ittb rW3 ffltn
T
carobs are subject to tithes as soon as they get dark spots '21 (-,33a be) '33 and it (the letter Beth) points with its
Y. ib. 48' 1 bot. t t^ fOU upper stroke (saying), He above (has created me); ib.
f .
Der. Bt. Zuta ch. VI "i:).— PI. V^p3, "ipia. Tosef. Ber. *fip2, v. t/ipn.
top 'i:n (ed. Lehm. fQnpWl); Bab. ib. 50* "Tp3 (Ar. "lpS), LVI, 14 (ed. Wil. X£"p:).
v. "pa.
"!^j?3i ^"3^i>?> • sni> T3*?-
N^TpJ, ~p"i3 Y. Ber. VII, ll c top '•'-"
ch. same.
"13 . . . rman (ed.' Lehm. "p":) because called R R . .
rnnipi m. pi. (-ip3 1) those sharpening the millstones,
chisellers. Tosef. Kidd. V, 14; Kidd. 82 a .
a caviller.— P/.-^p;. Ned. 49 b ?SVrT3*p5n those fastidious
persons of Hutzal.
G, v. »C1pri3.
np^ I f., v. HpSO II.
?pw (cmp. np a. Tps I) to puncture.
Mp- II to be clean, v. --:. Hif. rpn (mosUy with M) to let blood; to be bled.
— ;;
T
I??
932 "V
Zuck. note) the text says (Num. V, 28) 'and she shall be
I2pJ (cmp. vpV) to hold in hand, take, seize, [naps
cleared', she shall be cleared (released) from all the evils
Pesik. B'shall., p. 81 b ; Yalk. Ex. 225, v. dip.]
Pi. ap^3 to cause to hold, to procure. Ex. R.
which might come upon her deservedly (because she gave
s. 1 lip? 1?!
an? (some rise to suspicion through her conduct). Ib. !"lpYP3 flPPp^lU
'31 i3tt) ed. I3ppal) and provided for them two
balls (breast-shaped stones); (Sot. ll b appai; Yalk. Ex.
(Var. ?pi3U>) read: hVlTflS nnp^D she is released from
further visitation (being sufficiently punished) by her
164 appal; Yalk. Ez. 354 ",ni31).
exposure to disgrace. Pesik. R. 1. c. FipSF.a . . . "j^ri by
I3J53 ch. same (corresp. to h. inj<). Targ. Esth. VI, 1; what severe means has Sarah been vindicated 1
a. fr.—' Part. act. CgS, pass, li^ps holding. lb. VIII, 15; *Hif. npsn to clear, remove. Kidd. 62 a (ref. to ipstt,
a. fr.— Shebu. 38 b '» KSfin
he held an object in his '3 Num. V, 19) Vra ">p3ri it may be read hanki, clear thy
hand (on being sworn). Ab.Zar.30 a fiiim N*ian »ip3 rTlH life out of thy body (die, if thou art guilty) v. p3fi. ;
was carrying wine with him. lb. riB^pS K"Q3.1 SOI** she
n
holds fast (clings to) the habit of her (deceased) husband. j?3> fctjjj ch. same. [Targ. Prov. XVII, 3, v. NpB.]
Sanh. 5 a fctniun W^p? I hold a license (to teach). M. Pa. ip3 to cleanse, clear. Targ. Is. I, 25. — Keth. 87 a
Kat. 28 a , a. e. '=1 WTW '-|p uipa hold at least half of it in Kn3>!3,tt»"pUB3 by means of an oath. Part.
1p_3 clear thyself
thy hand, i. e. admit as certain &c; Snh. 90 b sioipa (not pass. ipsa. Ib. NTOinttJa rppsa thou art free from the
XJipS); a. v. fr— Hull.53 a , a. fr. "^ZJp?, ffifQi we hold a obligation of an oath.
tradition. — Sabb. 116 b
top '31 KaUJ BJipj quoted in Levy Ithpa. Xp3_nN, "'pSTK to be cleansed. Targ. Ez. XVI, 4
Talm. Diet, (ed.^pltf) had the reputation that &c. Gitt.56 a v. np? II.
i"n2£pn "jtt5B3 Bip3 have thyself counted among the sick i. e. ,
have the report spread that thou art sick. Hull.87 a ">P Blp3 "pJ I m. (b.h.; preced.) clean, clear; bare. Tosef.
'31 »W1 keep time for me &c, i. e. allow me three days' Toh. Ill, 8, opp. -|?3l£a. Pes. 22 b (ref. to Ex. XXI, 28) as
time. —Trnsf. a habit. B. Kam. 57 a v. X^i.
to contract ,
one says to his neighbor l^DSSa '3 "01 PB NX" that
1
man went
Af. i^psst, aips, Pa. tnps 1) to cause to hold, to give, out of his possessions empty-handed; B. Kam. 41 a . Ib. b
hand. Targ. II Esth. IV, 16.— Pes. 110 a ri^p fcOpaa rWK 1B13 i;ma from paying the half-fine. Taan. 23 a
'3 free
'31(not tfpS/O, v. Rabb. D. S. a. I. note) his mother was (ref. to Job XXII, 30) '31 '3 rWl NpUJ 111 thou hast saved
ready to hand him two cups. lb. '31 FP? B^pSa (or E^pSa) with thy prayer a generation which was not clear from
his servant was ready to hand him &c. B.Kam.85 b rp»1p3XP sin. Y. Meg. I, 71 c Y. Ber. II, 4 d top (ref. to Koh. V, 17)
;
'31 "llfi-j xnmu "ilati guard thy foot, that thou be pure
i-p*Hir:n X3113. to make him regain the natural color of . . .
flesh; a. e.— B. Bath. 22 a KpHU \rb B">p3 make him take and guiltless when thou art called to the house of God
the market, i. e. give him the monopoly of sale. — 2) to a. fr.—Erub. 62 b , a. fr. '31 np only a Kab (little in quantity),
pick «2>,#aMer.Ned.50 a/3l(read!*::p3a..niri)tt"ip3as<p rTlh but well-sifted (v. infra).— (Adv.) Tl3 ip3, ri3>13U) '3 with-
she picked the straw out of his hair.— 3) to cause to con- out vow (as an oath), without oath; or: cleared by means
tract a habit, train. B.Kam.ll8 b B.Bath.88 a '3Hri3i-jp3l!<;, of a vow &c. Keth. 87 a .— PL B^pi, "j^pS. Gen. R. s. 98,
—
;
v. VCTX*}. i) *to carry. Targ.Y. Ex. XXI, 37 rmfiMQ mips? v. ',i"!p3. Gitt. IX, 10 niHh wpS the pure-minded; a. e.—
, v. 'Bp-'?. " are not clear enough (for esoteric wisdom). Num. R. s. 9
'31 -j^P^np '3 iinnuj "na in order that thou be clean for thy
pj, npj (b.h.) [to be rubbed off, be while,] to be clean, husband through these waters. Y. Shek. V, 48'1 bot. '3 ns
clear (cmp. rot). bread of fine (sifted) flour; Pes. 37 a v. n»*VTlT. Kidd.82 b ,
TO 933 nvy
aire to nrrw pmna "ptrb ns bt^b . . . ",-n-no ma: ground passage. Ab. Zar. 10 b xnnps. Pi. »ryp3. Targ.
(the Sanhedrin) that used to discuss the points of law in
Job XXX, 6 (h.text inn).—Ber. 54 b top (Ms. M. xnnin3);
couples (v. Snh. V, 5), until they brought them out with
Yalk. Num. 764.
a clearness like that of milk ; Gen. R. s. 98 O^ttJa .. TttO
z'-rz :-'-: |t*K 'pBWia "p9 ns? (read HTOfcl). IZTpD, v. usps.
47 c
; Ab. Zar. 20 b '3 T& tvmn WM zeal leads to clean- H^pD, v.
'fasp* n.
liness, V\ nX" a 2 i
,
'3 cleanliness leads to levitical purity.
Y. Pes. VII, 35 b bot. 1 xbst WK it is a mere matter of DlJI^pJ, v. Diaibipi?.
I iCTpJ f. (Cp:) revenge, retaliation; use of the root X2p2, Nr?2p0 f. (preced.) revenge ; judgment. Targ.
*V."pr , 'r
""^ pr- n. gent. Beth N'kife. Y. Yeb. I, 3a the Ephraimites. Midr. 7 KVl tF*
Till, to Ps. CXLIX,
bot. '3 rra nn*WO; v. *x&p. IHW^i lOpWB n3... T what revenge
meant here?... the is
revenge for the evil they did to Israel. Ib. nnx npp3 xbl
XFD"p3, ]Vy~\ '2 pr.n.pl. N'kifta (Hollow) oflyon nor will it be a revenge executed by man a. fr. PI. nittps. ;
(Merg'Ayun), in the north of Palestine (v. Hildesh. Beitr., Ib. '31 'r*1 ipixn '3n 53 all these retaliations are reserved
p. 37, sq). Tosef. Shebi. IV, 11 (Var. 'Ztip'i, 'a^ps, XPa???); with the Lord for the wicked; a. e. — [Ber. 1. c. 3 TC
118
— —
TO 934 m
'Si iWl why these two judgments (n'katnah in the plural)?; Pa. C]p3 same. Targ. Ps. CXL, 12 (Ms. Pe.).—Part. pass.
v., however, nsfiin.] CflJJTp. Ber. 6 a ''BpSal tPTS bruised feet; Yoma 53 a , v. t]53.
SPDpO, v. «apjs.
Hif). Hull. 50 a '31 &6l ins^BpX they compared them, and
they did not look alike.
pD?2, 3, v. T i
3",
pp
,,
B. Ithpa. Clpsnx to knock against, to stumble. Targ. II Esth.
IV, 13.—Yoma 1. c. yBppa Ar. ed. Koh., v. Eg).
3?P0 m. (cmp. p^pi) c/e/2, cavity, ravine. Kil. V, 4.
v. Kim— Y. Sabb. VII, 10 a top DTttn nnniU '3 cavities Hif CpJJh ljfo surround. Erub.1,8 (15 b ) ^3(3) niB^pni
under olive trees; cmp. J^JISt. nana and they surrounded it (the camp) with utensils
from his wife. Midr. Till, to Ps. IX, v. S)J3S.— Maas. Sh. '31 grown hair around &c, v. "ipj.
Cpp^UJ IS until he has
V, 15; Sot. IX, 10 Q-Bpisn those who knocked the sacri- 3) to cut all around, esp. (with ref. to Lev. XIX, 27) to cut
fices on their heads; expl. ib.48
a
Y. ib. IX, 24 a bot.— ;
around the corners of the hair of the head. Naz. 57 b inx
Part. pass. Cpp3 ; f. nsipS ;
pi. tr<Mp3, y»WpS niBlpS. Tosef.
;
C]pi3n in&O rppan he who cuts and he whose hair is cut
Hull. Ill, 24 ms>pb '3 0^3 eggs cracked open into a
are alike guilty; a. fr. —
4) to sell on terms (v. naipp), to
dish (Hull. 64 a niBin-j). Cppa ^Sisnn the shopkeeper allows credit
lend. Ab.III,16
Hif. Cn??*7i ^P 1"? *) *° caMSe a knocking together. Sot.
(the Lord is long-suffering). B. Kam.79 a top Tft 335 if he
22 b (expl. ^Bps) rW nx CfpSan he who knocks his feet
stole an animal and sold it on credit (and has received
against each other (by his mincing walk; Rashi: who no pay); a. fr.— Kidd. 40 a '31 pSPpa -pa no loan on time
causes his feet to strike against objects on the road) ; cmp. when
is granted (no chance for repentance is allowed),
^p3. — 2) to bring closely together. Bekh. VII, 6 CfpaiB,
the Name of the Lord is profaned; (oth. interpret., v.
v. U3p3. Nidd. X, 7 PBpai and brings the vessel which
contains the Hallah near the dough; T'bul Yom IV, 3, sq. Hof. t\pVn to be surrounded. Arakh.33 b ; Meg. 3 b THU
Bets. IV, 5 '31 Tia "pEPpa "pal and you must not move '31 C)1&a^1 it was surrounded (a fort was built) and then
two wine vessels together to put upon them &c. Esp. — settled; a. fr.— Part, qpia; f. PB;pia; pi. pBpia; IlfiBgW.
(ritual law, in examining an organic defect found in a Ib. '31 nam 'an fortified since the days of Joshua.
1, 1
slaughtered animal) to create a defect similar and near
Ib. 2 b Ib. 4 b Gen. R. s. 39,
. . v. Wl|; a. fr.— Mekh. B'shall.,
to the one found, in order to ascertain whether the latter
8. 1 HiBpia semicircular.
was not the result of an accident after slaughtering;
Nif. vjp/O to have one's hair cut all around. Naz. 1. c,
in gen. to compare. Hull. 50 a D^Sa "033 Q^EPpa we may v. supra. Ib. '31 a^n^a '31 XS^n ^3 whenever he who has
compare defects in entrails in which was found a per- punishable not a minor or a woman),
his hair cut &c. is (is
foration the origin of which is doubtful by making a hole
the cutter is punishable; a. e.
next to n3p3 ftPpP we may compare defects in
it. Ib. crown
Pi. Cjp'a 1) to collect fruit which remained in the
windpipes; a. fr. —
Kidd.40 a Dtan bl?TO fB"pa pfc no
of the tree (v. ^Ip" ? II), to glean olives (corresp. to 1XB, Deut.
1
comparing (balancing of sins against good deeds) is granted xxiv, 20). Gitt. v, 8 Vra i">nnnir na ripsan *» when . . .
which is not in close neighborhood of those products top). — 2) to cut all around, trim. B. Kara. 119 b ; Tosef. ib.
which are to be redeemed; Bice. II, 5; Ter. IV, 3 a. e. ;
XI, 1 8 yWl ^Bp3-i those who trim shrubs, lb. C)p3> . . . "OUan
'31 la" if one hires a laborer to help him trim &c.
*P3 ch. same, to strike, knock, push down. Targ. Ps.
CXL, 5*.
Targ. 0. Ex. XXXIV, 20 rrBp/Tfl ed. Berl. (oth. ^VJ ch. same. Af. C]pXas preced. Hif Targ. Jud. XI, '.
ed., a Y. TMPPl; ed. Vien. 'p?ni Af; h.text m*tP1). Targ. 18.— Targ. Lev. XIX, 27; a. fr. Part. pass. C]p3 (=h. SflWS,
Deut. XXI, 4 (0. ed. Berl. 'p?1, Af.); a. e.— Part. pass. v. preced. Hof.). Ib. XXV, 31. Targ. Is.XXIX, 2; a. fr.—
Spp3; f. XBipS. Ib. 6 (0. ed.' Vien. KPBpS). Erub. 53 b — Snh. 69 a "JpttpR^l n^apa before his hair around the
(enigmatic speech) wl "pHf 133 nBpJ nb" the ladle strikes genitals is —
grown. Y. Ber. IX, 14 b bot., a. e. (expl. ^Bp^)
against the jug, shall the eagles fly to their nests (the CppX (the Pharisee that says,) Lend
'31 "h me that, I may
wine is gone, shall the students go home)? do a certain pious work; a. fr.
8
935 »K?
(expl.
i«Sl« ipfTf1 (Ar.^p^ni) I desire that my field be clear
(qp3 '
(of stubbie).
nBpS.'is. Ill, 24) 264.-2) beating (of the heart),
; Talk. Is.
scruples, doubt. Midr. Till, to Ps. IX, 2 '3 "nbd Wf K?1B "IpD m. (1p3 1) bite, trace of a bite. Tosef. Ter. VII, 16
that there be no struggle in my heart (ed. Bub., a. Yalk. 'SI ns^XPS 'S if there was a bite to be seen in a fig, and
ib. 642 : Cjpi3 "Qb VOV K?tt5, v. S]p3 I). it shrivelled (v. niaiia, which is an indication that it —
was not a serpent's bite). Y. ib. VIII, 46 a top '3rt dlpa
SrD(>^, v. C]J?2 I.
ibsst they (the birds) ate from a spot which had been
NO::*! ': ed. (ed. Lag. a. oth. Xpd"^, transp. of Xdp^S, cmp. 100 "prYTC) a compress of lint has a healing effect (and
XO^p) a splinter of foil (mica; h. text "pit 111X). is not merely a protection). 3) pickings, worms which —
hens pick. Ab. Zar. 28 a wfcpV'pa *« (Ms. M. "Hp? pi.)
""Ip3 I (b. h. ; cmp. 1lpT I) 1) to dig, chisel, esp. to ivhet
'31 dTitt&B 1ip3 (or 11p3) the Philistines put out his eyes;
D"Hp2, v. i*ip 3.
a. e. — 3) (of birds, mice, serpents &c.) to pick, gnaw at. :
Tosef. Ter. VII, 17. Y. ib. Ill , beg. 42 a 1pl3 VAN l&Olin npD, Qp U m.(ip3 1) [picker,] dcarper, fault-finder.—
d^nga. rslpS, "& i- Snh. X,28 Num. R. s.
when they saw the bird pick; a. fr. — [Y. Yeb. X, ll a
top PI.
end; SifreNum. 131 d^Siprin (some ed. ipTii ; corr. ace);
bot.; 20,
shall be picking in the dunghill &c. Toh.IV,3 ph^QB "Ml (Mish. ed. he whose legs do not touch each other
niplttl3)
'31 "|rt3 if they have been picking them (the pieces of when he puts his feet together. Meg. 12 b v. infra. ,
Hp'OttJ . . . figs or grapes which have been picked at. bones against each other (in walking, because his legs
are bent outward), or rubs his legs against each other
"Ip2 ch.same. Targ. Y.Num. XXI, 35. Targ. I Sam. XI, 2 (his feet being bent outward). Midr. Sam. ch. IX PSJpa
Ip/ri (ed. Wil. *lp>">-a) ; a. e. — Yalk. Prov. 963 'Si Tlga 'pi i"P31pa nttJpai Sl^aiS. she knocks (creates a loud sound)
the one (the raven) picks the eye out, and the other (the with her feet and with her horns. Zab.IV, 1, sq. '31 bs> Ti
eagle) eats it; Midr. Sam. ch. VII 1pK3.— Pesik. B'shall., if he knocked against &c. Meg. 12 b (play on ttPp p, Esth.
p. 93
b
one worm '31 6^p31 XTWl which shall bite me II, 5) '31 bs nttJ (Ms. M. 1I3P31C) he (Mordecai) knocked
behind the ear.— Y. Sabb. XII, beg. 13 c '31 •pB'vs '31 fnt\ he at the gates of mercy &c. a. fr. Esp. (cmp. "jas, <"J33t ) to ; —
who chisels stones, columns, millstones &c; a. e. Part, — strike an instrument, play. Tam. VII, 3. Gen. R. s. 18
pass. T>p3. Kidd.80 b '31 'SI KrPK dK if it had been picked (play on dSSIl, Gen. H, 23) aits "»b3> l^prfe WW ('Rashi':
at (by the hens after drinking of a red liquid), it would UJplEpb) she is destined to be loud against me like a belL
have been noticeable. Pesik. R. s. 31 ; Midr. Till, to Ps. CXXXVII UJpSa "»3«
Pa. 1p3 same. Y. Ter. VIII, 45 c top (^WWO &Op3d fiin 'Si "papj3a dn^flttJ "]11S nasnia I desire that . . .
!
!UJ", pr}l
a serpent had been biting at figs.—M. Kat. 10 a 1p3a 8p1 you play on the cithern before me and the idol, as you
XT.il (Ms. M. 1p3) whetted millstones &c. played before your God. Ib. '31 l^prt d^lalS 13 K shall
we stand playing before this dwarf (Nebuchadnezzar)
"IpD II with 1p3; cmp. fipT 3) to be clean.
(interch.
and this idol? Ib. to Ps. XCII, end (play on ',\Z?p'', Gen.
[Sifra Ahare, Par. ch.XIII lipsn StbtfJ ''Rabad', be not9,
XXV, 2)
w
a !33b ova "p^T 10 l'^ tne y struck the timbrel
foppish in dress in order to attract the admiration of
before idols; Yalk. Chr. 1073 Gen. R. s. 61 '!TS ymjpa (corr. ;
ftl (Ar.
ace). — 2) (cmp. C]pl) to bring under the same category
by juxtaposition, to compare. Kidd.5 a , a.fr. (ref. to SiXM" ! 1
ed. Wil. nxpsnxb; \Wab).— B*. Mets. lOS^SO^O it singled out? To compare other idolatrous functions
,
h. text all
118*
— —
«*B? 936 1W"I3
Hof. tt5]Mrt to be placed side by side, to be compared. &V]j m. (v. preced.) violet (color), violet (flower). Gitt.
Ker. 3» (ref. to Num. XV, 29, sq.) '31 MTrWl b3 rnsjsmh all 19 b '31 tp-ca nib "pipin we examine the sheet with a violet-
the laws of the Torah are here placed on an equality colored liquid (to bring out any faded writing). Ab. Zar.
with idolatry (as regards conditions of punishment). lb.2 b 28 b'31 K111» Ar. (ed. K131 K111K; Ms. M. X1131) violet-
'31 *p13 WISH ?3 sittJjMil all laws concerning incest are dyed wool. [B. Han.: Yl fcfa decoction of the bark of
put on an equality with &c. (Lev. XVIII, 29) a. fr. ;
the pomegranate-tree, Pers. nar, Perl. Et. St., p. 37, sq.]
^b'a MinUJ something comparable with me (with the Divine &OH3 c. (transpos. of K133 , v. Nia_3) axe. Targ. Y.
a. e.— Snh. 25
b '31 K*TO| TJt- Targ- ll Esth. 1,2 (3). Targ. Job XLI, 21
UJpSab X33>li K3K Ar. (ed. ittnpsb, Pa.;
Bashi SCBJ333) I know better how to clap (at the pigeon- (ed.Wil. '13).—Yoma 37 b ; Bets. 33 b "O^m "31 xnnp (Ms.
race). B. Kam. 52 b mbs ICppal bTrab h*4 i3>3*<£< it was M. a. Ar. "HHS, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note) the helves of
his duty to go and knock upon it (to try the soundness axes and adzes. Snh. 96 '31 '3 nbti (not M13) three 1
'
. .
of the board). B. Mets. 59 a (prov.) b'n&tl ia"p3 . . . bbtfjas hundred mule loads of axes of iron that has power over
R15T1 when the barley is gone out of the pitcher, quarrel iron (steel).
knocks and comes in a. e. ;
Lord's light in the Temple).~PZ. nil3. Tarn. VI, 1 '3 ^ttJ Nardshir, name of a game, checkers. Keth. 61 b Ar.
D^nita (Talm. ed. d^aisa "a iritt), corr. ace.) the two (ed. '113).
—
5 ; — .
WC 937 «iK
TT
*pQ"i:, Yeb. 102 b top over it so that the hair will not grow again. Mace. 20 b .
'3 ->aiT Ar., misreading of "^Wl
(ed. "pia Td).
Naz. 40a —V. D11J3.
Dlp~0, 01p"lD, v. next w. &^2 (b. h.; cmp. !n03) 1) to lift up, carry. Sot. 35 a
ngbgV nx "Jinx 'S the Ark carried its carriers. Ab. ch. VI
C p -, Cp™]2 m.(vapxta(Jo;)tiamss!<», prob. WAife
'31 Visa Xiria helps his brother to bear his yoke. Ber. Ill, 1
Daffodil. Targ. Cant. II, 1 (some ed. Dipna, corr. ace).
niacin "'Xbia, v. ftira. Meg. 9 a (one of the changes in
Ber.43 b Xni313an Opns Ar. (ed. dpi:; Ms.M. Diana) garden
translating the Bible into Greek) Dnx "03 xiaia a carrier of
narcissus, xnann wild n.
men (for nbn, Ex. IV, 20) ; a. v. fr.—Pesik. R. s. 6 Daina ">3X
w"lj pr. n. pi. Narash (Ners), Narse in Babylonia. DIEXn fix XU3131 I will raise and elevate their head; v.
B. Mets. 93 b 'an xba: the crossing of N. (v. xba5). Nidd. infra. —D^sa '3, v.D3. —D^S '3 to lift up the face, to respect,
67 b . Erub. 56 a Hull. 127 a, v. "WTO.
; 8l b 'an *ta Yoma favor, spare, be partial. Hag.l4*(expl. D^S XTO,Is.III,3)
Beray near N.; a. e. (v. Berl. Beitr. z. Geogr., p. 54). imaS3 imnb'B "pXSJisia fit he for whose sake his generation
B. Kam. 115 a bot. Xirna. is favored in heaven. Sabb. 13 b f"inifib 13 "3 xbttJ who spared
S lJ^3"|2m.(preced.) of Narash. Hull.l27»'3inppa}3'3
him not for the sake of his scholarship. Yoma87 a lb siXbjE
T'na'a '5 that indulgence was shown him (by the Lord) in
if a Narashean kissed thee, count thy teeth. B. Kam. 1 1 a
this world. Num.R.s. 11 "fOBO 'S3 XEX xb shall I not favor
'ai aaa "a a Narashean stole &c. Sabb.60 a ; 140 a,3 xnx Ada
of K; a. e. — Pl. *xr~:. B. Mets. 68 a 'a **Wl Narashean
thee for thy own sake? Ib. '31 *b *pxiai3 DfilT D'J3 as they
honor me (by saying grace even after a
(the Israelites)
tenancies, i.e. the owner gives a field in pledge for a
debt and takes it back in tenancy, v. "ja'aa.
scanty meal), so do I favor them; a. fr. bx "i2£3 'a to lift —
up the soul to, to long for. Midr. Till, to Ps. XXV, 1 nab
p '? Uj p*jU m - (ybp&rfi) [narthex, a small umbelli- ^bx njiasa Ml KIM why dost thou lift up thy soul to me
ferous plant with a hollow pithy stalk, which may be (why dost thou depend on me)?; Yalk. ib. 701. — "(Dnp '3
used as a receptacle ; in gen.] case, casket. Y. Ber. V, 9 b to offer up a sacrifice. Ib. 702 'p XUJ131 xaifi Dnx if a
top XSin bl2J ip^Fra a physician's medicine chest. Y. R. man sinned, he offered &c; Midr. Till. 1. c. X*Oai X»13
Hash. I, 57 b . [Lam. R. to I, 9 pmnH3 Vers, in Ar. (corr. 'p (corr. ace.)— Part. pass, XSiaa, f. fiXTO &c. Ib. 1ttJ3S
acc.) ;
v. lia-ab.]— Y. Erub. I,19 b bot. Oppbtt?) ipTna the ~b '3 13T23S3 inn . . . now that we have no sacrifices, our
pithy hollow part of the horn, opp. WOt. Gen. R. s. 6 soul is lifted up to thee. — 2) to lift, remove. Pesik. R.
': "b 8Jn rraH blba the globe of the sun has a sheath ; ib. 1. c. (ref. to the double meaning of '3, to raise a. to
ynraa
it
'fcon&a rftlph (Ar. Tpniaiaa) the Lord will
denude
of itssheath; Koh.R. to 1, 5 (v.pITO); Ab.Zar.3 b bot.,
remove) ItiJKn nx IXia 13b go and remove (or lift up)
his head; a. fr.— y© fl to forgive. Y. Snh. X, beg., 27 c
a. e.— [Y. Yoma IV, 41 d top, v. pCTSa.] Ex. XXXTV, the text does
(ref. to 7) 'SI "pX niSIIS X2J13
"]2, ^p7)™|2 ch. same. Targ. Ruth IV, 7 sq. pnna not say, 'removing iniquities', but 'removing iniquity',
T ^P"~
:
sleeve'lh. text bn).— PL 'pp^nna. Targ. Y. I Deut. XXV, the Lord takes away (from the scales) one bond of
13 (weight-chests). man's sins, and the merits prevail &c; Y. Peah I, 16 b
bot. (corr. ace); Yalk. Ex. 400; v. n^O. Pesik. R. s.45;
rfipTTO, Cant. r. to iv,4 /
a, read: nipnna, v. pm a. e. — 3) to take, esp.
"
(
n31 'S to take and give, to deal; to
pr")^, Sprnj, v. p^nna, xppnna. transact, argue. 8abb.31 a n3laxa DTOI r«b3 hast thou
a
(while on earth) been dealing honestly ? B.Mets.48 xri3n
lw-» SsL^» I m.^aapx, only in 'a na son of man, human
D^nana "jniai he who concludes a bargain verbally. Tanh.
Targ! Job VII, fr.— Y. Dem. I, 22 a top
being.
a. v. fr.-PZ.Kira, iaa ^33,
1 ; 20; a.
also "«$3 ^aa. Targ. Ps. LXII, 10;
w
Sh'moth 18 'ai nabina y roi "pKUJ-aiB DCa as well as they
T debate on the law below, so do they above. Ib. "pXw13SJ
V," end, 49 b ; a. fr.
a. fr.— Gen. R. a. 60. Y. Shek.
^ "J^na "jiatliSI they argue in court, and the Lord argues
WOZ I woman. Targ. Y. Deut. XXII, 5.—
f. (preced.) ; —
with them a. fr. 4) fifflX % or '3 to take a wife into one's
PLyVfr X-r:, TO. Targ. Ruth I, 4. Targ. Gen. VI, 2 ;
house, to marry. Keth. 11,1 "'Snxia? Hbmathou hast married
a. fr. —
Tam. 32 a 'a n^blan ttma a place inhabited by me as a virgin T^-Sia? tn3abx I married thee as a widow.
;
women only. Ber. 17 a "p^at *wa TO "«flh Ms. M. (ed. OTO) Yeb. 37 b '31 cnx X^ xb one may not marry in one country
whereby can women acquire merits ?M.Kat. 28 b anaiaattjn '3 and go away &c. M. Kat. 1, 7 '31 DTO ^XttJia "px no mar-
the lamenting women of &c; a. v. fr. ': *a a) the icife's
— riages may take place during the festive week; a.v.fr.
family, father-in-law &c— b) the paternal house after the Part. pass, '^iaa (followed by accus.) having married; f.
father's death. B. Bath. 12 b 5TTO *3ft xnssx contiguous fixro (followed by b) being married to itf.D^XTO, p* ;
. .
;
— , 1 ;
«W3 938 TO
nixiUS. Yeb. HI, 6 m"03 '3 intfl one of them has married fctp^T '31 (ed. once 1*12531, v. VXtf), v. preced.; B. Mets.85 b
a stranger. lb. Pil^nNn FN ')i~i IDdl and those brothers VCpff M3r31 (Ms.M. N1253 Ms. E. X^T2J5 v. Eabb. D. S. a.l. note).
; ;
Nif. VHP ) 1
and to provide a wife for him ; a. fr. Hull. 91 a it is called gid hannasheh (v. ^a), laipas '3125
Hithpa. fcttSOriii to be raised; to exalt one's self, to boast. '31 because it slipped from its place and went up Yalk. ;
a. e.
.
31); ib. D*-ra . . . "paWM they (the torturers) take their R. s. 6 35X1 'a -jl-a "rase the expression 'lifting up the head'
Uvea as pledges; Midi. Till, to Ps. XVI; Talk. Ps. 667 (Num.IV,l;21; v. preced.) is used in connection with them.
»-,
( C orr. ace). — 3) <rtDt\ to cause to forget. Snh. I.e. Ib. JTHIh "Sn nnp ^33 sttS EX1 '3 the taking the census of
. .
(play on twin) '2', 3i-P3X3 3XT:r rx -rrnr he made the sons of Kehath (v. preced.) is not made dependent on
Israel forget their Father in heaven; Talk. Kings 245 their genealogical descent but on their office of carrying
x-rrrnc. theArk.Ib.s. 16(ref.toPs.CVI,28,a. Num.XIV, 1)"I3335-P T
3p *3 lifting up the hand (for oath) against lifting up the
mEDj S w« ch. same, to forget. Targ. Deut. VIII, 19 voice (for murmuring) —
]V 'J carrying sin, responsibility.
(0. ed/Berl/Jftpe.). Tosef. Shebu. HI, 4 (ref. to Lev. V, 1) '31 rs *3 zYVSft iisn
Af. T33X 1) same. Targ. Ps. CXXXVII, 5 a. e.— Y. Dem. ; the text makes the responsibility dependent on the telling.
IV, 24 a [read:] n:-r~ rr-r:s n-;;-- perhaps thou didst Y. Ter. I, 40 c bot. (ref. to Num. XVIII, 32) '» XlttlO rx
forget to prepare it (by giving tithes)? Keth. 20 a *-;"?" '31 '3? only he who is responsible can separate T'rumah;
'SI Itt and one of the witnesses has forgotten (that he ib. II, end, 41 d 'SI '35'Sn tCSra ftm from the fact that he
knows of the case). Hull. 93 b '31 '"As P/H^ax they have is made responsible, you learn that his act is valid. Y.
forgotten R. Judah's opinion. Gen. R. s. 77 "iS^X KoiWi Shebu. I, 33 a bot. ; a. e.— 2) (denom. of JFfcja) elevation to
D133 perhaps we forgot something (left behind). Ib s. 78 office, digjiity. Num. R. s. 4 (ref. to Num. IV, 2) "WW IS^X
Wfl r-- :x :
I forgot one hundred (of the fables); a. fr — '3 "jUab . . . "ilpS the text does not read p'kod, but naso .
.,
2) to cause to forget. Targ. Lam. II, 6 (ed. Vien. WW, which expresses elevation; '31 "irra '3 I32p they were
corr. ace); a. e. given a superiority over the other sons of Levi. —Esp.
Ithpe. -r:rx. -rrx to forget. Targ. 0. Deut. VIII, 19 of the Nasi. Keth. 103 b '31 ^rasor? 31(13, v. VO*.
the office
for the tribe of Levi. [Ib. O^nE X^C3, read "SOr;]. Hor.
(corr.acc); Gen.R.s.100. Y. Ab.Zar.HI,42 c Xr^to?"! ",-;-X
II, 6 ; a. v. fr.—PL VVP*ft. Xum. R. s. 12 '31 ':n tCTtO tV&
those of the family of the Nasi. Y.Sot.rX,end,24 c rPrVP&'<3
why were the princes so anxious to be the first &e? Ib.
(corr. ace), v. "pH.
s. 3 ; a. v. fr. —Esp. Nasi, the chief of the Great Sanhedrin
in Jerusalem and of its successor in Palestinian places (v. fcCCZ, v. rwto.
t • : t •
'3" '3 MS3TT3 the Lord causes the wind to blow and brings Sr v s
wD> v. vawftfi.
up clouds and lets rain come down &c.
rDn pJ f. (r^3 ) biting,
T
bite. Mekh. Mishp., N'zikin,
I i^ wr 1 i> UJJf t i 'w», wJ ch. same, prince, s. 12; Y. B'. Kam. I, PnVsn 'S beg. 2 a . Bab. ib. 2 b X^H ',"-"'
T
.Mm'. Huil! 98 aa.fr. ^ TTl those of the Nasi's (R. Judah's) is not biting a species of damage by the tooth? Ab. II, 10
house. Ib. 124 a " *yi ITONl the son-in-law of the Nasi's '31 r"r: fnsraij their (the scholars') bite is the bite of
(the Resh Gelutha's) house. Y. Hag. II, 77 d bot. SOX "px a fox; a.e.— [Y. Ter. VI, end, 44 b nx^S rOPtBi, read nifJ,
T TOSTraif I am made Nasi; a.fr.— Y. Erub. VII, end, 24 d v. n-^r;.]
x^s ftp *i
I l> w- f.
;
(Vi 3) falling off, chopping off; dropping.
'
*
riS'w'r II f. (X i"3) 1) lifting up; zrzz rx-r3 pro-
:
Y. Mace II, beg. 31° '31 rTTOJ V" 1 1 5 'Sffl 'S H13 as the verb
nouncing the priestly benediction, v.xr3, a. ri. Taan. 26 b ; nashal there (Deut. XXVIII, 40) means dropping, so here
fr. — 2) carrying, loading. Ex. R. s. 4, v. <"!C^?~. Gen. it means (ib. XIX, 5) the slipping (of the iron from the
R. s. 89 (ref. to Ps. LXXII, 3) '=' PX'-i? b**l tWBO when helve), lb. '=1 tn3^2 "pits '3123 'S ft2 as well as nashal there
the mountains bear their load (of fruits), there is peace (Deut. VII, 1) means striking (diminishing), so here it
for the people. — 3) rx" ricr: taking the sum, census. means (Deut. XIX, 5) striking (the iron will cause a chip
Num. R. 8. 6 (ref. to Num. IV, 2, sq.) '1 '33 .. trrpT\ rTO3 . to fly off the wood). Koh. R. to IX, 12 ni"OX R^tiaa they
why does the Biblical text give Kehath the first place in died from decaying limbs; a.e.
taking the census?; v. next w.
riS^CZ f. (Br3) breath. Meg. 16 b ^3 W'
ttfltfe "ps
n*^"w-i f. (Xl£3, v. preced.) \) lifting, carrying. Num. Prix you must recite them (the names of the sons of
l ; 7 —
nctf: 940 a«5
Haman) in one breath; (Y. ib. Ill, 74 b bot. nmBM). Gen. d'R. El. ch. XXXVII 1fi313*1 X3X mpWI X^lp Tin 3X read
R. 8. 14, end (ref. to JlOirsn 33, Ps. CL, 6) &nxi3 '31 '3 33 3S> not, 'and he kissed him' (Gen. XXXIII, 4) but, 'and he bit
'SI D1313for every breath that one takes one must praise &c; him.' Tosef. B. Kam. 1,5 Tjittrt rVWlo na^x is not con- . . .
Deut. R. s. 2, end.— [Tanh. R'eh 9, v. next w.] sidered as forewarned (v. 1310) as regards biting a. fr. .. .. ;
p" ©^,
1
v. pu?a.
is forbidden &c; a. fr. — Trnsf. to adhere to, be affixed.
Pes. 48 b 1TO IT ni31313l3 . . nn33 Babylonian loaves which
stick toone another T'bul Yom 1, 1 1U It ni313l3 Hall. II, 4
ng'tfJ, Pr?
; ;
v. .
tf* -prra '3 13? X-W mow at Mount Sinai the verse was 2) (denom. of T"|133) to take interest. B. Mets. V, 1 ; a. e.
XXXIV, 5.' TplEOl "p3Q11 he takes four lumps of dough which joined
contain four fourths of a Kab and presses them together
JTTttJD f. (-1133) falling off, dropping (of fruits). Y. into one lump; a.e. — b
2) to pay interest. B. Mets.70 (ref.
Mace. II, beg. 3 c v.n^'W. Y.Peah II, 20 a bot. 1^1333 Ifrto
, to Deut. XXIII, 21) rplBn X3 TpWPl 1X3 -pirn iXO what is
13*lp the dropping grapes are dedicated (to charity, cease meant by tashshikh? Does it not mean thou may est (or
moment of dropping (before
to be private property) at the must) take interest? No, it means, thou mayest (or must)
they reach the ground). Ib. '31 mTVBSa ops if one inter- pay him interest.
cepts the grapes in falling &c; Y. Ter. VI, end, 44 b Ib. .
'31 iliOS T312J33, read: 3"iS mil333 it refers to grapes :j UJ J m. (b. h. preced.)
;
[bite, trnsf., cmp. X^ian) usury,
intercepted in falling. Tern. 25 a n"P133 t33 Dp3H 33 "lOX interest. B. Mets. V, 1 '31 mbon '3 mrx what
is neshekh ?
'31 131"l if he said concerning gleanings, As soon as the If one loans a Sela stipulating the debt at five Denars,
larger portion of them drops (before they reach the contrad. to TPSrV). Ib. 60 b '31 ni33 Xpl X3iX '3 in this case
ground) they shall be free to all (ip£n); a. e. it is neshekh, for he bites (injures the debtor) by receiving
what he had not given him ; a. fr.
NFlT^ f. (v. -1133 II) birds of prey. Midr. Till, to
Ps. LXXvili, 45 (expi.3115 ib.) 'S (some ed. xrrni33; ed. n -3ww
T
f. (preced.) an animal wont to bite, biter.
Bub. Krvmsa, corr. ace; Yalk. Ps. 820 nrmiB)/ Tosef.*B Bath. IV, 6; B. Mets. 80 a
. .
srriz^, v. xnix^j. 5©? '(b.h.; cmp. nbl3) 1) to strike off, chip. Tosef.
Mace. II, 6 Spanofi yw\ -jo bnan '3 if the iron (axe) chipped
:JCJ? (b. h.; cmp. p»a) l) to bite. Gen. R. s. 74, beg. a piece off the wood which was to be split (and the chip
'SI 7331SO 73313 p«w
they do not bite off and eat, but struck a person dead); v. hW3a. — 2) to slip off, fall off.
out &c.; Pesik. Par., p. 34 a Koh. R. to VII, 23. Pirke Lev. R. s. 22 li-Qix 13133 his limbs
;
fell off (by decay; Gen.
; —
5tt) 941
P*
B. 10 rflft Koh. E. to V, b
s. ; 8 ',1tt33, *ptt», ch.). Mace. 7 '31 C)ittJ3b xb ''al could not the angel have blown at him,
. .
•:— ~-:\ v. infra. and he (Balaam) would have given up his spirit?; Tanh.
Pi. »*3 to sfr/fre o^", to cawse cAtps to fly off. Ib. bi^3l Bal. 8. Yalk. Cant. 986 na C)OT3 ... mm and a serpent
3^ns v'nashal (Deut. XIX, 5) may be read v'nishshel (Pi.) blew (hissed) at it (the dove); a. e.— MBS '3 (or nois) to
and the iron chips off a part of the wood &c, v. supra; make the leaven swell, to stir up passion, hatred. Esth.
'imp ?'1 31 the traditional reading is v'nashal, and the
;
E. introd. (ref. to Am. V, 19) the serpent, that is Haman
iron slips out of the helve (v. 3X). ian33 XE3 C)S5i3 mn© who stirred up passion like the
Mf. bmft, iifefil to end
fall off, decay. Lev. E. s. 37, serpent (Gen. 111,13); Lev. E. s. 13 tt5n33 nens qtt53aj (not
'31 *DXtW Van '3 nvna limb after limb fell off his body lieaE); ib. s. 15 end 1OT33 qtt«J (insert nas); Gen. E. 8.16
and was buried each in a different place ib. "OX "OX '3 ; '=1 nas ?p -,an rma (fr. S)WJ) ; Yalk. ib. 22 »n33 d,UJ (corr.
Koh. E. to X, 15; Gen. E. s. 60. Num. E. s. 9 '3 miCS. Km ace.).— [Nif. CpES, tpSPS, v. t]WJ n.]
her flesh (limbs) shall fall off; a. e.
Hif. 3^ n:
to let fall, drop. Bets. V, 1 '31 ni"ns "p^TKa
^jIDZI I ch. same. Ber. 3 (expl. &,ttj3) '31 '3 the
b
X^b
night blows (expires), and the day comes in; the day
you may let down fruit (that was spread on the roof)
blows, and night sets in (Eashi: retires), v. Sjtis, XQ»3.
through the aperture &c. (versions ib. 35 b "pWiUJa, ;
:
~w2 ch., Afb-"2i<to send off. Targ.Y. Deut. XXIV, 1 the bread loses its glistening surface (when it gets stale).
ed. pr. (oth. ed. b^l; h. text nnblOl).
*\Lj J II (cmp. E)«j I ch.) to slip, glide, move. Meg. 3 a
U 'Zl (b. h.; cmp. 3»3) to breathe. Gen.E. s. 14 end,
'SI ttttrfva d i ,r3' b let
i
, 1
him move (Eashi: skip) from his
place four cubits.
v. IWA.
Ittaf. CgKripM to be made to slip. B. Mets. 23 a xsnrpa
D wr ch. same. it slips from its place (by people's stepping against it).
I feel better). Lev. E. s. 9 D'TO'to X3X1 . . "pll spit in my E. s. 23 '31 X3 '3 TTCPX when will the dusk come, when
the evening?; a. e.
face seven times, and I shall be cured.
Ittafel c~rrx signs of life. Sabb.
to breathe, to give JSSI23., constr. dti3, 5)103 ch. same. Targ. Job III, 8.
134 a ="-:"•; x:-!^xn Eashi a.Ms.O.(ed. T»»3a,STTitt}30;
...
Ib. XXIV, 15 (ed. Wil. dtiY). — PZ. Tjfm. Ber. 3 b 'S **
Eashi Ms.d"Ci3, v.Eabb.D.S. a.l.note 40; Ms.M.-prr: -) '31 lin there are two neshef, the night expires &c, v. C]S53.
an infant which gives no signs of life.
pUJ (b. h.; cmp. ^r3) 1) to touch closely; to kiss. Y.
I— w- m. (cmp. xrs III) neshem, a medicine which Yeb. XV, 14 d (ref. to pBJS, Ps. CXL, 8) ptiis y-*prv2 UTO
produces depilation. Neg. X, 10 '3 ~d '3 bsx if one ate n. '31 when the summer kisses the autumn (at the change
or smeared n.\ Sifra Thazr., Neg., Par. 5, ch. X. of seasons, when disease is rife). Ib. "pptiis nroVlS "WID
'31 when the two worlds touch eath other (the moment
SC w2 m. (CT3) breath, respiration.— PI. "rars. Succ. of death). Gen. E. s. 90, beg. (ref. to Gen. XLI, 40) S&2J
26 b ; Yalk. Prov. 938 '3 ptlB sixty respirations.— xrr; f.. '31 "^pjsis mx xm none shall kiss me (the kiss of homage)
v. UtrffSi.
but thou. Ber. 8 b , a. e. '31 xbx {pen fW 7p'ri3 D3 when
' ,
l
;
rpl2v 13a, pi. MiplBttB. Cant. R. I.e. "pMBttJUJ npw BK . . TTIBa, "PT^ (prob. to be read: "pilESa as versions of
'31 '3a if thou studiest the words of the Law so that thy pb'^iaa, v. bin;).— Esth. R. to I, 14 i^tsai, v. n^irj-iB II.
lips be equipped (ready for contest), all shall kiss thee &c. Pi. 1123 1) to drop, let drop, v. supra. 2) (cmp. Assyr.
Y. Ab. Zar. II, 41 d top '31 "pp^iroc D"ns"t UP there are Zar. ll a sq. '31 mniOIB 11S3an ... llp^S what mu- trm
things on which you must seal your mouth (v. pl23!"i). tilation of an animal's feet does not affect its vitality (v.
law) to restore a liquid cleanness by contact ilBlB)? Cutting the tendons of its hoofs beneath the
2) (Levitical to
or levelling with a clean well. Mikv. VI, 8 iOaa I3l23iai ... ankle; ib. 13 a . Pesik. R. s. 31 11351153 B"nia3a they pluck
ip^nai he takes a pipe . . . and draws (the water from the his hair.
B1X3
(expl. "OpllP,
as one brings
"lips , v. bins. — 2) to lacerate. Ber. 8 a [a gloss, v. Ar. ed.
Koh. s. v. 11233 4] K11233 "ninatbl (Ar. iltij) which tears
in contact or levels &c, y jyUffflfl ',11231
v. &q&. Bets. II, 3 i
'
What is meant by the gentile's doing to the slave his nomos "I^D II, NHflJjf n
3 1) same. Targ. Lev. XI, 13 ; a. fr.—
(v. Biai)? (Answer.) '3. lb. Kin '3 t"Q STTCJ can a field be PL "pill??, N*11233, '13. Targ. Ex. XIX, 4. Targ. II Sam. I,
'SI ini3n BIB by peref (Lev. XIX, 10) is understood that ^rVHCD, v. xniii233.
which drops on cutting grapes. Bets.2 'pliuian rn'VB fruit 1
'
which drops from the tree (on the Holy Day). Y. ib. I, TltED, Sabb. 134 a , Tn233a, rW»»5a, v. 0^3.
beg. 60 a '31 111233 BVfia pBO where it is doubtful whether
they fell off to-day (on the Holy-Day) &c. Gen. R. s. 10, p^rilpD, v. pPll233.
—
v.to; a. fr. Sabb. XXII, 4 (146 b ) "pia V^3 111233123 ia
DfrEJD, v. B12J3.
(OiaS.) if one's garments (cloak) fell into a puddle on " - t -
the road.
"JF.JPD (v. )Tvti) to urinate. Sabb. 134 a Vrrsa Ms. M.,
Hif.-nvtn (Tvrsn) i) to let fall, drop. Ib.67 a T>i*Jai23 -p*n v. B1233.'
l^nil^B a tree that drops its fruit prematurely. Naz.VI, 3
'31 rnttjai23 ">3Ba because it causes falling out of the hair. pPiIpD, p^Fj^D m. (pi2», cmp. BP.WX, fr. B1233) attach-
Y. Peah VIU, 20 a bot. "H^a (not "V^WO), v. xiBria. Midr. ment, a contrivance to prevent the handle of a coal-pan
Till, to Ps. XIV iliisnb . . TPS the Lord will cause him from getting too hot. Tosef. Yoma III (II), 3 Kb Br bsa
to drop, v. nbniS. Keth. 6 b mills T^aiT B"SN although '3 ilb CPln on any other day the priest's coal-pan had
(by walking through the breach) he causes pebbles to no damper &c. Yoma 44 b p"Vfi238r3 (Ms. M. "SWO; Rashi:
;
S~irp, Ol PP?', '] he must flay and dissect it in its place (where
v. n=ai?.
he slaughtered it). Hull. 28 b "T3X 13X PPPSair "jTSD (not
n*ri2, v. pwp?. '3a1) since he cuts it into parts; a. fr. 2) to distrain, —
take by force, esp. to seize by waiting for the debtor to
wire, riir:, (wrs), v. •«»*». come out of the house with an ooject, opp. to "JS-Ja, to
enter and seize. B. Mets. 113 a 'ST SSPFJ* xb xa^X read in
?r0, Pi. TP3 (sec. verb of tip, v. Kidd. 25 a ) 1) (neut. the Misbnah (IX, 13), he must not seize his goods out-
verb) ?o tgtttrf, /?y off. Kidd. 25 a PXTP mWl H»... *»1 side of his house except through the court messenger.
'ai (perh. iVi/".) if a person (priest) was sprinkling for
purification, and tbe sprinkling flew upon his (the unclean ni]J ch., Pa. PP3 same, 1) as preced. 2. B. Mets. 113 a
person's) mouth. Y. Yoma III, 41 a top, a. e. "PTPSa, v. 'SI "pit "TAPS the court messenger may distrain out side of
"
f
"^-:. B. Kam. II, 1 WJO.-.ttl if stones flew off from the house, but enter and seize he dare not? — 2) to tear,
under the animal's feet; a. e. — 2) (act. verb) to cause to pull. Bets. 10 b TiPa "TJPia PlVna (not "mPX; Ms. M.
lb. 19 a PtWB p CX X?X
fly off. dipaa where the ani- . . "'pPSa) pigeons might pull against each other (and tear
mal cannot help making stones fly off. Nidd. 61 a W131 the bands) ; Gitt. 51 a.
""T" -"~~pa they chopped with their axes.
Hif. ntfl (b. h. irP) to cause to fly off, to chop off; to
nrrm.(b.h.; precedOpiece.-PZ.a^PPi. 8ifraVayikra,
squirt. B.Kam. I.e. '31 PYVtfTl Pari she kicked and made N'dab., Par. 4, ch.V (ref. to Lev. I, 6) fPPP? PP3i Voi
stones and thus did damage. lb. 17 b Snh. 102 a
fly off .
ttrPPTOs you might think, he may cut its parts into their
ITPX ftfrtTOO Plbpa TKti hke two sticks which splinter
It parts again; Hull. ll a ab P**PP3 xbl but he must not cut
off with a sword. "jP^S ^Tia *TP '3 as to N'thinim, David decreed concerning
Nif. ten to fly off; to splash. Cant.R. I.e. a*iPP PTP3 . . them (their exclusion from the Israelitish community
ill'tliri the sword flew off the neck of Moses and struck &c. with regard to intermarriages). Ib. VHI, 3 y*HOX 'SI nTOa *,
,
Xidd. 13 a
fWO, v. fton. Tosef. Mace, n, 1 W PTpa PJPP3 bastards and N'thinim are forbidden (for intermarriage).
if a chip flew off &c.,53J3.— Hull. VI, 6 TP3P tn the
v. Tosef. Kidd. V, 4; a. fr.—Pew. WW. Mace. 1. c.; a. e.
Pa. PP3 to cause to fly off. B. Kam. 1 9» nTVnx sttFiin Kp, Kidd731 a Y. ; ib. I, 61 b top; a. e.
v. preced.
HirrO HE f. 0P0) l) donation. Pes. 21 b , a. e. (ref. to
njrj pr. n. m. Nithza. Snh. 74 a rva P^SS nail 'Baa DeutTxiV, 21) '31 'aa nab Kbx -b px from this I would
119*
—; — —
nwo 944 n
conclude that it is permitted to give it to the sojourner pass. Tjfia. Targ. II Chr. IV, 2, sq.— Midr. Till, to Ps. II, 6
as a gift &c, contrad. to ni^3a; a. fr. 2) delivery. B. — (expl.TOdaibOnTp^nNl cast him (made him strong, cmp.
Mets. 19 a '3 HSU) "15 up to the time of the delivery (of pS? Hof.); Yalk. ib. 620.
the letter of divorce). T. Hag. II, 77 b bot.; Cant. R. to Pa. ^n3 same. Targ. II Chr. XXXII, 21.
in accordance with ... as regards putting on (the shoes fine. Targ. Pro v. XVII, 26 (h. text ITDS).
lb. 2 '31 '3 EsllHa vb .13 "paiii *>3 a family which is not sus- lonian, a Tannai. Ber. IX, 5. Tosef. Yeb. VIII, 4. B. Bath.
pected of intermarriage with N'thinim; Keth. 14 a . Ib b ; a. e. 73 a ; a. fr. — 3) name Amoraim. Y. Erub. VI, 23 c
of several
bot., v. naaill; a. e.—Y. M. Kat. Ill, 82 a N3X 13 '3.—Y.
b
Ter. VII, 44^3^1.1 13 '3.-Y.Ber.IV,7 1310 13
**
J^iTy m. (preced.) one belonging to the class ofN'thinim. '3; a. fr.-
Kidd. iV, 1 ; Tosef. ib. V, 1 ; v. ^itaa. 4) N. d'Tsutsitha, a penitent. Sabb. 56 b .— '3 11 WOK, v.
3NII.
T
n^rijf.C^riS) cutting outbreaking up. Sifra Sh'mini,
Par. £ ch.' X '3 l\ ttJ^ffl ntf that which can be broken up IP J (b. h.) to give; to place, put. Gitt.1, 6 '31 BS "jPi give
(brick-work &c). Y. Sabb. IX, ll d top S>313an n^3a '3 '3 this letter of divorce to my wife. Ib.'3l a3 W give ye &c.
the breaking up of idolatrous structures (Deut. XII, 3) is Ib. nrvra inK3> 15W; vb they must not deliver it after the
analogous to the breaking up of leprous buildings (Lev. man's death; a. v. fr.— '31 K103, v. Nb3.— WSJ 'S (to put 3>
XIV, 45). Y. Orl. Ill, 63 a bot. '3 '3 3in31 for the term yw an eye upon) to intend. B. Mets. 19 a a. e. ntfjisb '3> '31» fto ,
is used for idolatry and for levitical purity (Lev. XI, 35). as soon as he has resolved to divorce her; a.fr. 3 I^S '3 —
Tosef. Neg. VI, 10, contrad. to itS^n the removal of one (to have an eye on) to desire, think of. Ned. XI, 12 K3HE
affected stone. Mekh. B'shall., Shir., s. 10 *pKtt) W^BS 1HK3 rWS nsnia nUJN xnn lest the woman have a liking
'3 !"Q a putting up not to be followed by a tearing down. for another man. Ib. 20 b '31 "W -JFIK K^ffl lest I think of
Y. Orl. I, 60 d bot., v. nipS3. Y. Ab. Zar. IV, 44a ; a. fr. another woman. Ib. '31 ^1
one must not . . nnttP Vat
d
VII, 25 (in Chald. diet.) '33 (in) fffc 31H1 struck him
ad majus gives it, it is a legitimate conclusion. Bekh. 59 b ,
n£lj(b.h.; cmp. nn3,pn3) to cut, reduce, smelt. [Tosef. argue. — Gen.B.s.33"^13 *pim jand it stands to reason.
Shebi. 111,19 *]lrt>, ym* Var. ed. Zuck., v. pW.] Esp. '3 put blood on the altar, sprinkle, smear.
(sub. 31) to
'31 itfjN nilfl nsn^S Xtb the Law was given only to Moses
ib. 106 a contrad. to 1BK "pttW3; v. tK^tVX.
,
toWl and he melted it (the fat); Tosef. Ohol. IV, 3 13nTl1, v.™*; a.fr.— [Tosef. Ab. Zar. V (VI), 8 WttJISs'.v.yM.]—
DMrTl (corr. ace); Y. Naz. VII, 56 b bot. Y. Ab. Zar. Ill, Esp.tfo be put on the altar, sprinkled, smeared. Zeb. VIII, 9
43 b ; ib. IV, 44 b top l*$b 613 "pnan he who cup casts a nstfab 1^3n33 iiuxb pawn blood which must be put
for an idol.— [Pesik. B. s. 31 niinx *Ot*Q, read: 3inB13a below (the red line) which has been mixed with blood
Bniin&tfj; v. ed. Fr. note 49.] that must be put above. Ib. 10 '31 ina3 Wl" shall be
Hof. "Mn to be molten; to be reduced to slags. Me'il. applied four times, v. "jna a. njtTO; a. fr.
II, 3 (9 a ) lU53n T)W1D IS (Talm. ed. -pn^, corr. ace.) until Hof. inin to be put. "MakhsV. 1, 1 ']Wn ^33 (nt **1) it
the flesh is charred in small lumps; Zeb. 35 b ; 104 b .
comes under the law (Lev. XI, 38), i.e. it is a liquid which,
Part. SpaW. Sabb. 21 a , a. fr. 'a 3?tl Ar. (ed. TpWTQ, v. -pn) if put on eatables, makes them susceptible of uncleanness.
molten fat. Ib. 2 "jmi ">33 "p^X do not qualify for uncleanness; a. fr.
5jr^ I ch. same; Af. "rpnx to melt, cast, pour. Targ. "jrlD ch. same. Targ. Deut. XV, 10; a. fr. — [Targ. Is.
Job X,10 Ms. (ed. "J3G). Targ. Ex. XXV, 12; a.fr.—Part. LHI, 5 n3in3131 some ed., read: tttmfDI, v. ^na L]
r™ 945 1P3
HI, 19 Var.rpnb rpr-P. Cant.R. toVm,6 (ref. to Jer. XXII, h. text dpVtfi).
24) '31 ND&B pni3 Ninw that he will tear the Davidic Pa. pT}3 1) to tear, sever. B.Kam.9 b "^psn.sb STOH 1TO
kingdom out of his hand; ib. 'Si pni3 ^SX dWO from there an ox may be expected to tear (the rope). Bets. 10 b
I shall tear loose the kingdom &c. Pesik. Shub., p. 163 a ; .
•pnsa Ms. M., v. fins. —
2) to snatch, take away. Yoma
Bekh. 33 b pni3 he who tears loose (testicles and throws 46 b npns n^n.31 "p"13 having snatched it (the coal from
them away) ni13 inst pni3 who removes them after one
;
the altar), he has snatched it (and it has its sacred
has cut them (tearing off the roots). SifraThazr.,Neg.,ch. character no longer). — 3) to shift, transform. Mace. 15 a
VII. Par. 5 SIX ipr3 3X if a man made it bald (pni) (R. S. ;
'SI 1&6 ipijnab Kinn Ms. M. (Rashi tftvb, ed. IK?) this
to Neg. in, 5 O-iX *PQ JpWfl dX, Nif.); a. e.— Part. pass. (positive command) has the function of modifying the
~'r: (b. h.) an animal whose testicles have been forcibly prohibitory law (intimating the reparation in the event
removed; [oth.opin. whose : membrum has been mutilated of its transgression); v. preced. Nif.
by a violent severance]. Sifra Emor, Par. 7, ch.VII; Tosef. Ithpe. pnsnit, pT?^ 1) to be severed, snatched. Targ.
Yeb.X.o.— 2) to cause oozing, to secrete. Tosef. Ter. Ill, 13 Koh. IV, 1 2.—Yoma 1. c. nniSdb H|**lpK the taking it from
; --"•: •jTUfi . . rriptlfal ni31 d"<33S grapes are soft and the altar was done for an ordained use of it a. e. 2) to ; —
let their juice ooze out (when packed), but olives are hard be set aside, be designated. Erub. I3 a bm diwb 'XI yn
and do not let their oil ooze out.; Y. ib. m, 42 b top, ^ XpjP$*V Kim 6t"b m
having been originally designated
v. wm (copied) for Rachel, it cannot again be converted and
Pi. p**3 1) to tear loose. Cant. R. 1. c. (ref. to Jer. 1. c.) used for Leah; Sot. 20 b Zeb.3 a j a.e. .
1. c. — 2) [to tear, pull] to remonstrate, protest. Sifre Num. *fpP3. Ib. 1; 7; a. fr.
115; Yalk. Num. 750 ppjd JOnn pn b^nnn that son began SprO, '"0 ch. same. Targ. Lev. XJJI, 30; a. fr.
work); bxiW lbvtnn
to protest (against doing slave's 1
d^pnsa the Israelites remonstrated (against the laws I TO) a mnemotechnical abbreviation forbisdn hVw,
imposed upon them) ; v. infra. naan crown, a. d^r nrrri. M. Kat. 24 a .
formed, modified. Zeb. 5 b a. fr. .I^Slb 'W dfflK an animal , released (become permitted by being brought to the
dedicated as a guilt-offering which (on account of its Temple) in the land (of Palestine), can become so only
owner's death &c.) has been condemned to pasture until by reciting the confession (Deut. XXVI, 5 10). Erub.10 3 — ;
Hif. "vpn 1) to loosen, untie, unscrew. ToBef. Sabb. grate)? Answ. ref. to insb (Lev. XI, 21). Lev. R. s. 20
XVI (XVII), 5 mVTB which one unscrewed; Sabb. XX, (ref. to Job XXXVII, 1) '31 yfipi 1FP1 ina what does
ftrrcf, v. uiasa. lb. 22 a nj3b lia^i (nisis) pnn you v'yittar mean? It will leap, as we read (Lev. I.e.) &c.
may untie show-fringes from one garment(and put them) Hif. TWl to exile. B. Kam. 1. c, v. supra. Lev. R. s. 6,
on another garment. Gen. R. s. 5 '31 atrial DtlMn
be fP9 beg. Hit TFial and condemned the thieves to ex-
unties them (opens the bags) and lets the air in them portation (v., however, T^S).
escape; a. fr.— [Tosef. Shebi. I, 7, v. ini.]— 2) to ^ermeY,
decfere permitted, opp. iQfc Sabb. 4 a '31 lb IffWl would iPj ch. = h. ltt», to fall of, drop; to fall apart, decay;
they (the scholars) permit him to take it out &c? lb. II, 4 to become ivearied, faint. Targ. Is. XL, 7. Ib. LXIV, 5
"PFia ttttV* '11 but R. Judah declares it permitted. lb. 2 a. fr.— B. Mets. 21
b
JtTWI that it (the fig) dropped (and
FT«? WWj fr.— V. T*ra.— 3) to free, surrender;
a. v. was not taken off the tree). Ib. '31 ">m "pM"! a"s>x even
to outlaw, proscribe. Snh. 40 b fimab laES 'h did he sur- when the olives have dropped &c. Sabb. 33 b "pro Npl
render himself to death?, i.e. did he declare that he would W^ P5>al and the tears fell from his eyes; a. fr.
commit the act in spite of the warning which defined Af. i*HJB to drop, shed, let fall. Targ. Ruth II, 16. Targ.
it to be a deadly crime? lb. 41 a (ref. to Deut. Y.II Ex. IX, 32 rvnMtt (not 'PN1).— Y. Kil. VH, beg. 30 d
XVII, 6)
'31 W(J
IS until he declares himself ready to undergo '31Impairs "i^Fia'i where trees shed their leaves even in
capital punishment for his act. Hull. 41 a Y. Peah 1, 16 a .
midsummer. Naz. 42 a JOria Utbl fialK an earth which
'31 Iff! T»nnb xb^ they wanted a pretext to outlaw the
. . does not cause falling out of the hair; a. e. —Y. Yeb. XVI,
rebels ; a. fr. 15 d "pinK, v. infra.
has the meaning of sending into exile (causing to emi- Lag. "jVHSfctK Regia a. Levita '^Wins),
; v. Bfefa.
7 ——
947 x^ko
a
D Samekh, the fifteenth letter of the Alphahet. It inter- 1,7; a. fr.— Sot. 9 inxp xbannU) IS . . . "pK the Lord does
changes with b, e.g. C-.S a. b~E, xo: a. Xb3; a. fr. ; with not exact payment (punishment) of a man until his measure
T, q. v. with 2, as -X^p a.lXIS.
; preformative for Safel — b
is full. Ib.8 ;Tosef.ib.IH,l (ref to ilXDXOa, Is.XXVII,8) .
forms, as in ^3p0, 3PI10 &c. 'Si naiU X3X "<b "pX this would prove only that the
'OS
Lord measures by the S'ah (repays only great sins,
D as numeral, sixty, v. 'X. overlooking the small ones) &c. ; Y. ib. 1, 1
a. — 'O !"P3 (or
tfCXC 948 MC
SD&tD, HSDSD m. h. a. ch. («= 505b, cmp. 15b, 151U N2D III cmp. 3>3ia) to drink freely.
(b. h.; Part, —
cmp. KJKT) bristle, axon or beard of grain. Sot. 5 a (Ar. pass. X13D, pi. OTMao, -pittao soaked, satiated. Nidd. 24 b
N00). Hull. 17 b Xb «W
(Ar. NOOb) if the slaughtering '0 liniaaw Ar. (ed. ywisO) his bones are found satiated
knife rough hke a bristle of &c.
is PL "pOKO, constr. — with moisture, i. e. jjorows, contrad. to 'jinnaE oily, smooth.
iOKO. Koh. R. to IX, 11 '31 "piiana '0 b5 y-i rTTO (not
tt^ia^UJ some ed. lOSia) he ran over the ears of standing
;
S3D ch. same. Part. 130. Targ. O. Deut. XXI, 20.—
grain, and they were not broken. [Targ. ISam. XXX, 20 N301 some ed., read K31B1.].
Pa. 13C to retail wine in the shop or tavern. B. Bath.
jIDI^D m. soap, detergent, v. "JIBS I. 98 a niiiQOb XH51K with the intention to retail it.
as if one says, here is the bag, here is the Sela, and here 220 (b.h.) to go around, turn. Num. R. s. 18 itinmus
is the measure, rise and measure (said of one who asks '31 ^3 33101 "|bini and went around
... when I travelled ...
immediate reward for a good deed); Ruth R. introd. all the towns '31 1150 "jbini 331b inun I went around
;
(some ed. nxO); a. e.— PL, v. MHb ch. from town to town. Erub. 56 a nbib3 ',1BS bx 331b1 'and
turns northward' (Koh. 1,6) by night; a. e.
SSi iJSD II f.=Nnino, sweepings, refuse. Lam. R. to Nif.1V: to take a turn. Num.R. s.4 nbsab nanil nabai
1, 15 (expl.nbo, ib.) '31 '0 1135 (some ed.inNO pi.) he made it turned upward and became wider.
me like refuse before them. Ib. ipIO 'Ob Ktaa 123
"priVlX
Pi. 3310 1) to surround. Erub. 1. c. B. Bath. 25 b (ref. ;
(read XnibO ; Ar. KnblO xninob . . fcOai33) in Bar Gamza to Koh. I.e.) -jnsVna di£5Bl IPCaOa di£5S (Rashi *|n33ib,
they call sweepings sallutha (that which is thrown away) v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note 4) at seasons the sun goes around
v. Nrvno. them (making a circuitous route), and at seasons it passes
straight through (from north-east to south-west). Erub.
2D, v. so?.
23 b Num.R. s. 13 33b tie around; a. e
; Trnsf. to be
2D,
T
N2D
T T
I,' N2SD
TT m. ch. (v.
v
axon.
•:' aio)=h.
•' ato.
t'
around a person, to wait upon. Deut. R. s. 1 (play on 30
#rey, oZd; elder; ancestor; scholar (=h. "]pp. Targ. Is. inn IIS, Deut. II, 3) '31 llin n&t 1U35 'ib ham a long while
Ill, 2. Targ. Gen. XXIV, 2 ; a. fr.— Targ. Y. II Lev. XXII, has Esau been around his parent &c. —dnnBn b5 'ib to
27N*30.— Targ. IIEsth. VII, 9 30 K3K aaX3 (ed. Lag. go around from door to door, to beg. Tosef. Peah IV, 8
3U X3K, corr. ace.) like Agag my grandfather. — Y. Yeb.
.
'31 "pit . ,. P5 aaban for the poor man that goes begging,
XII, 12 d bot., opp. KrYiVO. Hull. 6 a '0 Ninn ninsttJN an old the public charities are not bound to do anything. Y.ib.
man (or scholar) met him; Sabb. 34a Gen. R. s. 74 (ref. .
I, 15 d top '31
33bE HK 'ifiX 133 'honor thy father and . .
to Ps. CXXIV, 1) 'O bxlUJi it means Israel the patriarch thy mother', even if thou have to go begging (thou must
(not Israel the people) ; Midr. Till, to Ps. 1. c. Y. Ned. X, support them); Pesik. R. s. 23 24; a. e.— Ruth R. to 1, —
end, 42 b i30b to my ancestor. Ib. 'O inoil '1 R. Dostay '31 inns "]i330ri . all Israel will surround my
. 1HU3S now
senior; a. fr.— [Y.Maas. Sh.V,56 c top, v. 803 1.]— PL ",130, gate . .
., waiting for distribution of food; Yalk. ib. 598
N*3C, 130.
T
Targ. Zech. VIII, 4. Targ. Joel 1, 14. Targ. "paiDa . . —
IMi. 2) to carry around from place to place.
Prov. XX ,29 (Ms. 131b); a. fr.— Y. Peah VII, end, 21 b Kel. I, 7 '31 "pinb "paadai and you may carry a corpse
'31 'O Tin ITX there were (poor) old men in our days &c. from one (of the fortified places) to another Tosef. ib. ;
Kidd. 33 a iJKaiXI 'O ... "1 R. J. used to rise before gentile B. Kam. 1, 14 "pina '0731. — 3) to place around. Num. R. s. 2
old men. Snh. 17 b K1101 '0 the scholars of Sura. B. Bath. '31 1X03^5 '10 he placed four angels around his throne.
58 b i&mnil i3Nb the Jewish scholars. Bekh. 8 b v. 05*$$ ,
Part. pass. 3310*), f. ri3310B surrounded, closed. B. Bath.
a. fr. — .Fern. («ao), tfnao. Y. Maas. Sh. Ill, 54 b top' las 25 b ,K11D3K.— P£ diaiba "paiOa assembled, arranged
v. ,
that matron was of the opinion. B. Bath. 125 b tb 1033 (as witnesses). Yalk. Ruth 1. c, v. supra.— Esp. reclining
I bequeathe my property to my grandmother. Ib. i» on the dining couch around the tables (v. ItMOO), Ex. R.
'SI 'b Qilp if that grandmother had sold the property s. 25 '31 "pbsiXl 'OB lying on couches and eating and
bequeathed to her before the claim could be preferred, praising &c. Pes. 101 b ninffib 'Oa 133 the members of . . .
the sale would have been valid; a. fr.— PL Tib. Targ. a party that were assembled for a feast; ib. 102 a . Tosef.
Zech. 1. c; a. e.— [30 to be old, v. 3iD.] ib. X, 1 2 a. fr.-[Tanh. Haye 3 3i30d, read 3in3d, v. 3r2.]
; :
to-day, and others the day after. lb. "jlu&^l HTB; Crab '31 the ten tribes were exiled to within the confines of
n3&3.
t -
v. rss.
: -
* :
the river S., whereas Judah and Benjamin were scattered
over lands Y. Snh. X, 29 c bot. '33 ; Targ. Y. Ex. XXXIV,
fcOpp
m. (preced.; cmp. jaSTS) neighbor, borderer. — all
"pa.
PL JT333. Targ. Is. VII, 20 '31 113S3 K*WStfl t33 (ed.
Lag. W*13?n ^33^33) read: '31 113S3 t53 (^13.33 being fcOZp m. 1) old, v. 33.— 2) officer of the royal house-
a gloss to our w.) among the borderers on the sides of &c. hold? Koh. B. to IX, 18 (expl.1^3t3n, II Kings XVHI,18)
"O (some ed. ^33).
nSC, v. ns/p.
D^DD (b. h.; 333) around. Tanh. B'midb. 12 •p&ab "0
"VQD, Targ. Prov. II, 7 ed. Lag., read lin3fi=lisi3.tt?.
around the Tabernacle; a. e.
Dl^lDp m.=h. t&tP, name of a jewel in the high rQ"Ilp f. (preced.) neighborhood.—PJ.ni'3'OO. Num.
priest's breast-plate, diamond. Targ. 0. Ex. XXVIII, 18 B. s. 18 srprvis-qB^ hveVth IpSMMttJ 1X110 "ffXa when they
(some ed. /p); XXXIX, 11. Targ. Y. Num. II, 10. saw that the Israelites had removed themselves from their
neighborhood ; a. e.
*Q&, V. V. WO.
fcO"Qpm. (!}3C)=b. h. TpO, thicket Targ. Ps. LXXIV, 5. .
Sr.SiBD,
T T -'
v. Mnriife
TT - Targ. IlChr. XX, 2 *Ap+l Tpao (h. text Ton •pxxn).
*nSblSD b
m. (b33) load-carrier. B. Mets. 93 13 SFG
t
n
2D, • . :
v. s<m33B.
t - • s <
T
'G 5<1X (Ms. B. »ViaO; Ms. H. nsjViSO, Ms. F. xbipO of "
»m 950 Tfeap
the dam with eartb, opp. "pTl rTOIS, v. "p^H. with regard to levitical cleanness; a. e.
Hithpa. 7j2Fipri, Nithpa. ^2np3 same. Gen. R. s. 56 NFCQP f. ch.=h. HMO. B. Bath. 146 a (Ms. M. '3S0,
rvma "p32npp entangled in troubles. lb. [read:] pTW oth. Ms's. fcdraO, fconBD, xraSD, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note),
rvoVob msbwa •psiuasi rvnabaa T|2npr6 -psa tby children V. X3112.
T "1
hair. Y.Sabb. VII, 10 a bot. '31 'DSFIp? if his garments Wl the soul supports the body, and the Lord sustains his
were caught in thorns a. e. ;
world; (Tanh. Haye 3 "rai3a . . . rYT013O). Pes. 113 b n?31S{
0^3 "jFj^piO . . px there are four things which the mind (of man)
Eof. ?\aaHh same. Peah VU, 3 [read:]
.
Ti pp3> . .
J ch. same. Part. pass. Tp3p. Hull. 48 a '01 Nidi Pi. b3"p to load. Part. pass. baiOp. Ber. 17 a (ref. toPs.
&O033 provided the perforated lung is intei'grown with 1. ni203 D*»V**50 laden with good deeds O'niO'TO 'On
c.) ;
the fleshy part of the ribs. laden with pains. Yalk.Deut.963 '31 3S03 d*baiOO (Deut.
Pa. T(2p to weave a net. Targ. Prov. XXX, 28 KSBOal R.s. 1 1 D^baiO Wl) carrying their silver and their gold a. e. ;
form a web. lb. '31 !"lVl2> 'O a web of fringes is partly Pa. bso (v. "p^3p) to send presents of betrothal. Kidd.
subject and partly not subject to the standard measure 50 b ^UJIp^ lini "'bapp where it is customary to send the
of &c. presents before betrothal; a. e.
tomian 'O (ed. Lag. N330, Var. N3SO, corr. ace.) a gold- n5llp f. (b.h.; preced.) load, burden.— P/.nibpp. Lev.
embroidered hair net; Sabb. 57 b Y. ib. VI, 8 b bot.; Neg. .
R.s. 37 bnibpp, v.3to\ Ex. R. s. i '3i oni?303 nxii hTno
XI, 11, a. fr. 'O bttJ 0">3UJ, v. 0">3to; Tosef. Kel. B. Bath. he saw their burdens and wept. Ib. ]tr? 3Cai "|bin ft^n
V, 15'113 b© 0*313. Sabb.l.c. IBM p rrjsb Xlni3 b= whatever "I'lT'i'Pp he went and helped them to arrange their
ornament is worn beneath the net; ib.65 a 'Oil (Tosef. ib. ; burdens; a. e.
IV (V), 7 rtisica naabu) **Tr)j a. fr.— 2) any net-work,
mat kc. Kel. XXVIII, 9 M3pT b)H 'D the old woman's net- 1"Dip, "'D m . (preced. wds.) 1) load. Sifra introd.
work (mat to sit upon, v. Maim. a. 1.). Ib. *W9n P"&n . . TIN "jlbp^pb 1W9 made for the carrying of something else
'OS the public woman's shirt which is like net-work (than only persons).— 2)^.11131^30, "TtS (cmp. b. h. Ntop,
(gauze, v. yv\ II). Y. Ter. VIII, 45 d 'OS "TOl? . . OTX the Pltr&g) presents, esp. presents of betrothal (donatio propter
— — — ;
making them the means of betrothal. B.Bath. IX, 5 fibllBri rrflSpjp/.D'^sp. •;— tab; rri-fl3C ) hoping; thinking. Ruth
;
","-;: ""X ... 'O if one sends presents they cannot be R. to "Pbs *0 ttt the citizens were relying on him
. .
.
, 1, 1 . . .
:; tTVSD (ed. Zyt. r«i3D, corr. ace.) he tied his sibni like iron (difficult), and he does not come to thy side . . .
^r"«-C, SrZ'^C f. same. Sabb. 147 b -p*i2t ^30 towards the one and severe towards the other (of the
'S! Ar. (ed. '=0 Ms. 0. w : myOB
Rashi Ms. MtnKtta pi.)
;
,
litigants). Midr. Till, to Ps. CXXXVII TrtSl irrnbx
if one carries a sabnitha (to be used at bathing, on the 'ST 'B lb pI'Gp'piU their God is merciful, and as soon as
Sabbath), he must tie its two ends (around his neck, so they show him a kind face, he takes pity &c.; Pesik. R.
that it be a part of his wearing apparel). Pesik. B'shall., s. 28. Ber. 63
b
fisbfis 'B TBW nrxi "-2X let us cheer each
b
p. 93 ':•; n-r-::s Ms. 0. (ed. rrnJ^sO, v. Bub. notes a. 1.) other up in the halakhah (by discussion). Ib. "OXUJ CiSS
even his s., if another person did not take it off for him, "31 'B I23fi Ti-aprt as I have been kind to thee, so
. . .
'OS renb (not ffWrTO) who dwelt safely in 8.; Tanh. Targ. Y. Ex. X, 11 p"i3p. Targ. Pro v. XIV, 1 2 ; a. fr .
Part,
Sh'mini 5 X^ppSpS. Arakh. Ill, 2 (14*), v. rbin; Sifra pass. ""^Sp, "P3p looking for, planning, thinking, believing.
B'huck. Par. 4, ch. X ippi'p ; Tosef. Arakh. II, 8 X301B0 Targ. 0. Ex.X, 10. Targ. 0. Gen. XXXVII, 8 ; a. fr.— Y. Ber.
(Var. X33"B0, corr. ace). m, 6 C
top iTTrppp yse\ there I thought about
it, v.'TSp.—
family, princes. Tanh. B'midb. 2 [read :] 2SPAt Tss-sfi concluded from this that but it is not so. Gitt. 56 a
. .
.
,
'SI 'OD I caused you to recline on couches like princes; .Tailpb "23"! "1130 the scholars proposed to offer it up on
(ref. to 301, Ex. XIII, 8) 'SI p3103 o^bo-iio "pis just the altar. Keth. 87 b a. fr. 'Si -lOTab . 'O R.
, had an . . . .
as kings recline; [Var. pa'SlPOS, 'aiOS, taken fr. Num.R. idea to say &c. (but was refuted). Ber. 3 a , a. fr. 'Op "Nits
s. i, beg., v. feavb]. *ST what is R. E.'s opinion? '31 fflbo 'Op "^X if he holds
that the night contains three watches &c. Ib. 4 b 'filtV *l
3?2C to be satisfied, v. S3C. '31 *© R. J. argues (thus) &c. Ib. 27* 'SI ixm nnsp ia do
120*
— ; .
you think that &c. ?—Yeb. 72 b '31 P13D1 .. h^SH he learned exploravit vulnus &c, misbar specillum vulnerarium) to
it by heart in three days, and reasoned it out (drew the perforate, cut, (only used in the sense of) to let blood.
cepted it ; ib. SO^Bpl Kl^pD Stn did she not understand and and on it (that day) we must not be bled. Me'il. 20 b 'Dial
accept? B. Mets. 65a nb^apl h13p thou didst understand '31 b3S<1 (ed. '310a1; Ar. "GDI, prob. clerical error, v.Koh.
and accept; a. fr. —3 'D to think like, to agree with, adopt Ar. Compl. s.v.) he who eats fowl after blood-letting. Ab.
the opinion of. Succ. 33 b '31 a^bBI N1H3 rmo nb 'O he Zar. 28 b 'all SO"* rrt 31501 Ag. Hatt. (v.Rabb. D. S. a. 1.
agrees with him in one point, and differs in another point note 7) one having pain of the eye and one who has been
a. fr. —b Ni^pD is of the opinion, shares the opinion. Ib.
a
bled.—V. Xlisnp II.
XXII, 10.— 3) (with "pBN) to be kind to, cheer up. Targ. (read1i3to). — with D^3B, brightness, friendly expression;
2)
Y. Num. VI, 26 *>1BK "Op TJRA Targ. I Chr. II, 55.-4) to Ab. 1, 15 tii&*» 'a 'Da .bapa ""in receive
in gen. countenance. .
Ithpa. lattpN l) to look for, hope; to plan, intend. Targ. "OP IV, N"£p, *fc, fcODlO ch. same, 1) hope.
Ps. CVI, 13.—Targ. Y.II Gen. XLIX, 17.— 2) to be under- Targ. Prov. XI, 7^ Targ. Job V^16. Targ. Prov. XHI, 12
stood, be intelligible, evident; to be rational, logical. R. K13D ed. Wil. — Targ. Ps. IX, 19 'BID (Bxt. '13D); a. fr.—
Hash. 31 b sq. '31 maSB 'K1 Stnba last he said something, Gen. R. s. 68 ilBD, v. K^IS. Ib. s. 53 T|13lp tTHaiN SO fiS*
reason ; a. fr. '31 ^IBS* 'D who can ever see the face of Abba Judan?;
Poel 131D, v. supra. a. fr.— 3) opinion. Y. Ab. Zar. I, 40a niB^p (ed. Krot. <*»),
Ithpoel laippx (cmp. *|BS) provide one's self; to store v. lap I, Ithpa.
up for one's self. Targ. Ez. XXXIX, 9. V. K1BDB, NlBDFi.
""Qp, fcOjp m. (preced.) 1) brightness of mind, in-
""DO II, Poel "13.10 (cmp.baD) [to encompass,] to carry;
genuity. Targ. Cant. V, 10.— 2) speculation, logical argu-
endure; to sustain. Targ. Y. Gen. XXI, 15. Targ.
to bear,
ment. Meg. 18 b a. e. (expl. DDarna, v. 0^3) 5>1i SOI Ilpl . .
'D illintO you call him, and he answers but cannot recall
tOBpab). Targ. Ps. XCVI, 8 (I131D1 'iVniK ed. Wil.' (ed.
an argument. Y. Ber. Ill, 6 C top "(an ^b Mini "nap 13D bs
Lag. 1131131 113in, corr.acc). Targ. I Kings IV, 7 (h. text
n^riliBO any hard thinking I had to do, there I did it.
bsbs); a. fr.—Y. B. Bath. II, beg. 13 b IBIDa \f& Wl SOI
Ib. '31 fcOU3p X13D Kinn b3 all that difficult subject of
and could not carry it (and dropped it).
T'bul Yom I studied there. —Esp. logical deduction, con-
"GO III, Poel "DID (Saf. of "n3; cmp. Arab, sabar clusion by reasoning, opp. to Nla5 verbal tradition. Yoma
— ;
it is intimated in the Scriptures; a. v. fr. — 3) common (ed. n? . ..). Targ. Y. II Deut. I, 24 Ptbl30 ^bpo.— Y. Peah
sense, ordinary conception, opp. ip" *. Y. Ber. IX, 13 c 1 VII, 20 b top '31 'O SOnfi that (much spoken of) cluster in
bot.; Midr. Till, to Ps. XVIII, 8 Kpbral t> Km -p, v. the vineyard. Ib.'O XlPi 130 rati Klin pin that ox which
you think you see (at a distance), is a cluster. PI. JO^biap.
Targ. Y. I Gen. XL, 12. Targ. Y. ib. 10.
Sr*n^C
T
m. (dimin. of snap) dear hope, or dear little
face. Pesik. B'shall., p.83 a "qrrtSj, v. SC113 1; Yalk. Num. X > ?i3Q m. (v. next w.) acquisition, property. Targ.
773; Cant. K. to IV, 12. Y. HGen.'xrV,21 (not S& 130; h. text »1). Ib.XXXI,
18. — Hebr. form Plbwp (v. next art.). Targ. Y. II Deut.
y IlIO m. (prob. a. geogr.term; cmp. "Wisp) sibrosi, XXVI, 18.
name of a species of olive. Ber. 39 a Ms. M. (ed. "pilEO),
v. "3 ; -3N. n^i-io,
t
v. wao.
:
Ps. IX, 11 ~PTi30 (Ms. 'afe) the hope placed in thee. Targ. family relic, treasure. Mekh. Yithro, Bahod., s. 2 (ref. to
T
Job XI, 20 fttCTpq ed. "Wil. (ed. Lag. 13T3); a. e. PIP30, Ex. XIX, 5) '31 DiX b» frihap fro as the heirloom
3D t v. a^p.
T\y\)D, Deut. R. s. 11 'O 13 PiSas, read with Yalk. ib.
I^Jp, ^TJp f. (preced.) idol-worship; trnsf. m. idol. Gen. R. s. 50, a. e. ',3S3) read "psa ",«oa "jbna he travelled
:
Targ. Y. I Gen. XI, 4 ; Y. II TPiD rra (strike out Pi">a). in a sagum like a commoner; (v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Sagum.]
00 954 TO
Targ. Lev. XIII, 12. Targ. Ex. 1, 20. Targ. Ps. XCII, 13 a. fr. — 3) "^ap, fc^ap, also "pap much, enough greatly. Targ.;
Esth. 1044 W}p ... lapla; Yalk. Job 920 WSp .."JJiOTa. very much ; ib. "paib.— [Yalk. Prov. 935 K^aiO ^aD, read
:
b
Sot. IX, 15 (49 ) XVff), v. KBX1M; a. fr.— 2) (=h.Vi) to fee ata^o "pa^o, v. aiD 1 ch.]
sufficient. Snh. 6 a *ff\Si ispr let it be enough with two
n
judges. — [Targ. II Esth. Ill, 3 rTITOb, read Mr* SO, v. 5p, fcTilp II m. Oap II, v. KJMb) way; '0 Stb there
WO ch.] isno way, it is impossible. Keth. 95 b Mb 13M" xbl '0 nb 1
J/, ^.apx fo enlarge, increase, make great; to have much, there is no way of not giving her, i. e. they must grant
do much. Targ. Gen. in, 16. Targ. Ps. XLIV, 13. Targ. her alimentation. Tarn. 32 a wbtN Nb*l ID Kb I must
Ex XVI, 17. Targ. II Sam. XXII, 36 ; a. fr. — Yoma 88 a go; a. e.
Pa. *Wq same. Targ. 0. Num. XIV, 17 iap (imperative). fcT Jip II m.— SO^J, /ewce. Targ. Y. II Num. XXII, 24.
Ithpe. "'aPpfct to be multiplied; to increase. Targ. Y.
Gen. XLVIII, 16. IS JP III pr. n. Sagia, name of a canal in Babylonia.
Kidd^ 33 a t> 1M3 (Mss. M. a. R. NBS).
JjD) C"mC II, Pa. cmp. meanings of *>ap (preced. ;
m
fr.
ten days to make, he made in one day. Taan. 24 a *15>1
"WOI KIM NMUJM and I have been running until now. KTJb,
•• TJO,
TJD, t t • • •
v. nao,
•*:'
a.
t;*
Sabb. 118 b '31 SO^O
•
tibl that I never walk a distance of
T " T
four cubits with my head uncovered. Keth. 62 a "^lapb rrofe v. wap.
rmna, v. "flpj I. B. Bath. i23 a Ntiiaaia "*iaob . . . nw ">ai
are righteous men permitted to walk in the way of fraud
(to deal fraudulently with a deceiver)? Erub. 18 b ^M
KU^-O "\ap t VCC which of them went ahead?; T3 -OT P^D, Tanh. Ki Thissa 2 tni •jirUBa, read T^p^l,
'21 the male (part of the double body) went ahead; Yalk. v. M3p (Pesik. R. s. 10 dVllMlal di^M).
Ps. 887 soarpa . . trap.
&W*a "japa VS
goats take the lead. B. Kam. 60 b h apa Sb^D,
T ' :
v. sba^o.
t : •
TOO 955 w
STJD, nTJO, b^TJp (Ms. M. babao 010X1, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note) why are
"TOD, MHPJQ m,
. . .
f.
the heads of the Babylonians round?
(130) [locked up,] declared leprous after being locked up;
in gen. leprous. Targ. Lev. XIII, 44. Targ. 0. ib. 45. ^5-?JD, fcOiibjp ch. 1) (adj.) same. Targ. I Kings
Targ. O. Num. XII, 10 KliaO ed. Berl. (ed. Vien. niiap). VII, 23; a. fr.—P/.'-pbabaO; Targ. Ez. 1,7; "jbabao. Ib. 31.
Targ. Y. Ex. IV, 6; a. ft.— PI. "PT«?; *• IT??' *#?£? a. e. — 2) (noun) door turning on pivots, folding door (v.
Targ. II Kings VII, 3.— Tosef. Neg. VI, 1 firliap; Snh.71 a nba).— PL pbabsp. Targ. I Kings VI, 34 (h. text D^ba).
«r ..., v. xa-tinii. Targ. Esth. I, 6, v. X10/?.
33D, Pi. baip (Sa/eZ of bba) [to heap up,] to lay by, 'O "inab, v. las.]— Esp. dorian *,ap or 'on the chief of the
save; to treasure as a relic. Y. B. Bath. IX, 17
a
top p priests, adjutant high priest. Ab. Ill, 2. Yoma III, 9. Y.
tOS»b 'O 'OJU ITO . . . plbn riKISU if a son appears to ib. Ill, 41 a top 'O ni03»310
mil Kb none could be "12? ...
have kept a separate household during his father's life- appointed high priest, unless he was made a Sagan first.
time: what he has saved (of what he took out for his Sifra Tsav, Milluim, Par. 1 pfixb 'art 'O filOB ni0:?3 Moses
private expenses), he has saved for himself (does not was Aaron's aid; '31 inna 'O lb MOOT 01031 and as he
belong to the estate). Lam. R. to I, 17 '31 nspl /01 IBS was his aid in his life-time, so was he his aid in his dying
he made an effort and economized and bought himself hour a. ir.—Pl. 01330, ",1330, constr. ijjMS, 'ip. Es. R. s. 1
;
sheep. Tanh. Emor, ed. Bub., 30 '31 HISTS "pbapa they '31 Oiobx "Ofi 010 ia who made the chiefs (Pharaoh's
accumulate sins during the whole year. Gen. R. s. 9 dibs . . counsellors) mute &c.?; Tanh. Sh'mothlO. Cant. R. to
W niua bapa tJK .. . "pbaOB the righteous live because they VI, 12 '31 ba> '0 110531 ... 11053103 when they were made
lay by good deeds, we shall likewise lay by good deeds free men and were redeemed and made the primates of
(in order to Koh.R. to 1, 3 'SI msad Hibapa provide
live). all entering this world; Yalk. ib. 992 '31 '01 fffl 11053
for the future world by means of good deeds; (Lev. R. they were made nobles and primates &c. Num. R. s. 18
s. 28, beg. niuan "pbiaa heap up; Yalk. Koh. 966 Qibiaa nsiro 1330 11331 3"3 mx
his brother is high priest and
PfKCO; Pesik. Ha'om., p. 69 a pVafW, corr. ace); a. fr.— his sons the high priest's aids; a. fr. — [11330, Midr. Till,
Pesik. R. s. 11 (ref. to ttb30, Ex. XIX, 5) "OJJWB las bl3i to Ps. XX, end, v. "ji33ip.— Qi33p , Y'lamd. to Num. X, 2,
'di ib b^mm nnx -p . . rmjattn . . . pm 12-1 irtNa baoa quot. in Ar., v. *,133ip.]
v. fctasa
you lay by something for my benefit from what I give
you; Mekh. Yithro, Bahod., s. 2 +99)00 ib "pbaiOa Onst C]K SJ^D II, v. X3 ii3>lO. x
(corr. ace). SifreDeut. 48 two brothers ",iaa OibaOa TtW ^:T i6iii, n ^p,v.N33ipn.
di"P3X inx that saved what money their father gave them
Yalk. ib. 873. — Part. pass. balOa given as a keepsake, v. nvio, -ji^p (D13JD j, v. -,13310.
K303 nx bapa 8<38<1 whatever I may save, thou shalt have '"Jp, v. i«3ip II.
[read:] rYtotn ria b3 -piN ",n where is all that I have ^" Jp=i3D I (with which our w. interchanges
l
!PJ|D,
saved?; Yalk. Gen. 56 (not nibi301).
in mss.a.eds.)! Targ.Ps.CXXXIX,18. Targ. I Chr. XXIII,
5JPJID, Targ. Y. Ex. XXVI, 28 babaoa some ed., read: 17; a. fr.
*P_D 956 WD
her (v. 030).— Part. pass. C]W& f MBW6 pJ. O^Biap, pBlttp,
; .
;
ISO ch. same. Targ. Job XXXVIII, 8 Var. Ms. (ed.
niBWD (usu. combined with "W, v. nil). Sifre Deut. 24 CpaK). Targ. Y. Deut. XXI, 5.— Part. pass. ITiO, Ki->50
Yalk.'ih. 805. Gen. R. s. 74; (ib. s. 60 "pBIBtt)); a. e.; v.
a) fenced in, barred. Targ. Cant. I, 9.— b) leprous, v. I"1 }©.
t)?0 a. C]HO. I^DN, ISDN same. Targ. Lev. XIII, 4. Ib. XIV,
~
Af.
b rvwra laSS n«
Pi. tjpi to afflict. Taan. 22 B||&& to
38
afflict himself by fasting. Y.Dem.VII, 26 b top . . aw ^ ; a. fr.
Deut. 32 1 "Wte "pat nmBTU IfiK after he has opened (ex- fcC^P ch. same. Targ. Prov. XXVII, 15.
plained), none can close (raise objection). Tanh. Sh'mini 9
emx '01 .... TO bs bs 135 he passed over all synagogues HO m. (b. h.; 110 to join; Arab, sadda, to obstruct,
Hif. Ttot} to lock up; to bind over, hand over, deliver. D"l"lp (b. h.) pi-, n. pi. Sodom, one of the cities in the
Sifre Deut. 322 DWS BTf^ Ttl ... Hliab bNlUT Wpa plain of Jordan destroyed for their wickedness. Snh. X, 3
when the Israelites attempted to flee northward, they (108 a ) (ref. to Ps. I, 5) 'O *©» ibi* this alludes to the men
blocked their way. Ib. 323 (ref. to Deut. XXXII, 30) V<K of S. Ib. 109 b '31 '03 .. . TOaiK four judges lived in S. &c,
'31 ^ass <9 Q3nK TVOO I shall not deliver you (into the v. ^B"1 "! ; a. fr.
—
HTO Sodomitic rule, unfairness, selfish-
'0
hands of the enemy) directly, but through others (who ness. Ab. V, 10 'mine is mine, and thine is thine', 'O 'a 6W1 It
i
will betray you). Ib. T<a Vy*p?$\ l^a "0131a I sell and that is a Sodomitic principle (justice without charity). B.
immediately deliver you. Tanh. Sh'mini 1. c. (ref. to 150a!l, Bath. 12 b 'O 'a bs pBl3 the law may use force against
V® •
"
v. supra) niaixn bsb TTI^S n ,,s< ^ 31° a11 nations unfairness (where one claims a privilege which causes
go before them into enclosures and flee, for they cause the neighbor no loss); a. fr.— Ib. 114 b '03 CpT .. Nrobn
all nations to lock themselves up; a. fr.— Esp. to lock up Ar. (ed. niU33) the law follows R. Joseph's opinion as to
the leper pending the priest's observation (Lev. XIII, 4, using force against unfairness. — '01 xa^ the Lake of
a. e.). Neg. V, 1; a. fr. — Part. pass. 1501a a leper under Sodom (usu. xrf3">al sa^). Sabb. 108 b v. ,
3J3-J I; a. e.
Pu. 1Mb to be closed, locked. Part, laioa, f. tWHBQ, TQllD, ^iyT)0 m. (preced.) Sodomite. Gen. R. s.41
v. supra. '0 iniK flip SI 01J<\U3 when a man is bad, they call him
— ; 3;
prne 957 n
a Sodomite; Tosef. Sabb. VII (VIII), 23. lb. 24; a. fr — tree. Kil. 1, 8 '\13 btt? '0 -pn3 . . . yw you must not
PL U ntri tU Disilp, Tpilp, '110. Gen. R. s.26; Yalk. ib.
' '
Wl); a. e. —
PL B^ip. Ib. s. 42 (expl. O+Wft pas,
pvIO, "fi^C, «TTO, V. SUb 'TTO. XIV, 3) 'O bias XinUJ which produces sycamore trees.
S^"lp f. (v. To a. Klb/W) Me head-board of a couch, pTO, SD^DljfcCnpch. l)same. Targ. Jer. XVHL
head -side. Keth. 61 a '0 ">3&t by the head-side. Esp. — (h.
T
text 0^3tf).— Hull. 16 a
Kinsi "0 Ar. (ed. K310) the
'p ^3 pillow, bolster. Ber. 56 a . Sabb. 118 a ; a. e. — PL potter's block (wheel turned by hand); N^al 'O wheel
x~vip. ib. i24 b 'o ra msn Ar. (ed. xmio 'O xinn; Ms. turned by water. Pes. 94 b XTP11 'O "O Ms. 2 a. Ar. M
M. MlfRJU, read xrv^lp 13, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note).— :
(ed. N312133) like the movement of the block of the mill
[Hebr. pi. WHO. Y'lamd. to Gen. XXVIII, 10, quot. in Ar. (millstone, the pivot remaining stationary, v. SOTJIS). Ib.
r"" -2. read: '0 ^3 cits/u'ows.] 28 a v., Kidd. 27 b «Wl in 6C1X1
V&O. 'Othe landfclthough
consisting of disconnected fields) is one block (by taking
"J'T1D, Tosef. Kidd. V, 14 Var., v. TTO.
symbolical possession of one field, you take possession of
the whole complex contracted for); B. Kam. 12 b (Ms. M.
"|""10, Koh. R. to V,8, v. fnO ch.
X31S).— Lev. R.
garden one sycamore trunk Koh. R. to V,
s. 22 "0 in m mv\ there was in the
8 "p^lO (a. other-
|
1 1* m. (b.h.) s/iee^, usually of fine linen (cmp. sivoibv; ;
v. Sm. Ant. s. v. Pallium). Yoma 111,4 '31 yn btf: 'O V&m wise corrupted; corr. ace). — [Pes. 113 a
6010 "O Ar., v.
they spread a sheet of linen (for the high priest to walk N311D.] — 2) (perh. an adaptation of Latin essedum) travel-
on) between him &c. Y. Kil. IX, 32 b top 13p3 inx '03 ling carriage.— PL 1.310, 1310, K*31p. Targ. Y. Gen. XLV,
"Ql Rabbi was buried in one linen shroud (without any 19; 21; 27 (ed. Amst.a. oth. '10, with 1).
Ib. 41 a 'O
ace). — 2) to chip, chisel (the surface of a stone). Cant. R.
of his linen sheet. "WTO he was wrapped in
nnnoi npT>01 (ed. Wil. np-Wl, corr. ace.) he
'31
to 1, 1
a linen sheet (without show- fringes) ; '31 fcKS^pS 'O you
carved and chiselled and polished it; Yalk. Kings 182
wear a linen sheet in the summer, and a sarVla in the
nplOI nnnoi; Yalk. Prov. 960 nplDI (corr. ace.) (Koh.R. ;
winter (without show-fringes), what is become of the
to
introd. npi*vai nnnoi nssiui).
law&c.?; a. fr. — PL y^lp, VPX+fy Targ. Lam. II, 20
Nif. pip? 1) to be split, cut into. Bekh. VI, 1 nplps if
22.— Y. Sabb. VI, 8
lj
bot. (interpret. 'ta^lD, Is. in, 23).—
there is a slit in the ear of the first-born animal, contrad.
*2) (cmp. x:np) a litter. Y. Bets. c *«1
'31 '03 allowed Bar G., the physician, to be carried in a
I, 60 bot. IJfiWqq . .
to n^3B3 ; a. e. — 2) to be chipped off; trnsf. (cmp. bpQ) to
i p"Hp, V. piO. expl. ib. 97 a UJiaa '3 chipped in its literal sense, i. e. the
stamp was chipped off; [anoth. opin.] ^aJ nisVa inbos
^p*"!p, v. Np-ic. '3 13*«n if the government abrogated it, it is the same as
t xbit D^sx (gloss: rvvp 131 Stinsj) obhnayim means a pip, p"Hp ch. same. Targ. I Kings XI, 30 np^lp (not
block (which means a hard object); '01 !"H 1X1" n*2 . . .
1
StpilO, ed. Lag.VlpIp; h. text3np). Targ. II KingsII,12.—
"li-Xn as the potter sits with one leg on each side of Part. pass, p^lp; Xp/lp; f^ 'lU -jpilp cloven. Targ.
'
f. pi. ;
T
the block (mould); Sot. ll b Gen. R. s. 10, end fits . Lev. XI, 7. Ib. 3. Ib.4 ^p"1pri(0.ed.Vien.' ' nBtiil/'.). Targ.
, ,
the block (anvil); Sabb. XII, 1. Snh. YII, 3 b3J . . . prffia Af. p^ipx to have a cloven hoof. Targ. Lev. XI, 5 sq.
'Ori they put his head on the (executioner's) block ; a. fr. ed. Vien. (ed. Berl. Np"H0). Ib. 4, v. supra. Targ. 0. Deut
Esp. rn/pv biB 'O (or sub. rnspir) the trunk of the sycamore XIV, 7 (ed. Berl. "^Ipa).
121
— ; —— 3 —
PIS 958 mo
Pa. p*nO to split. Targ. Ps. LX,4 'p^-10 (some ed. 'plo; is granted the debtor; B. Mets. 114 a '=1 W«ff\p irra is
a
ed. Lag. 'pno; corr. ace; h. text '33£E). a debtor allowed an exemption? Y. B. Kam. IX, 7 top
'31 rra liob &tbU3 t"03 bs with the condition that what
a slit in the ear disqualifies, evenbe of the minutest if it seizure. Ib. fBnn WIXO lb "plioo "px this special object
size. Koh.R. to 1,8 nnfibUJipTOy033 like looking through is not exempted; a. e.
ai
the crack of a door; a. e.— PL S^piD, 'pp. 10. Pes.8 plinb Hif. "VlWi to arrange, establish the order of. Num.
'obi into holes and fissures. Ib. 111*5 (48
b
) I3l3>n3l3 pWC R. I.e., v. supra. Ber. 28 b ; Meg. 17 b '31 lion b» ...» 'n
'31 l^plC (Bab. ed. l^pIO) dough is called sidduk, when
arranged the eighteen benedictions before Rabbi in the
cracks run into one another, Ib. 48 b plO bs "jb 'pN
its
order in which they are to be recited. Sifra Tsav, Mill.
'31 '0 n33 . . . plOI for every crack on the surface there '31 1-IT33 'n\3 3U33 as Moses arranged the service of the
a
are several inside. lb. Ill, 2 HTP& ^plO(Bab.ed.45 ^^y)
Tabernacle, so he arranged &c; a. e.
the cracks in the kneading trough; a. fr. — 2) a strip of
a sheet. Tosef. Kil. V, 22 ed. Zuck., v. 010 II. TlD ch. same. Targ. Y. II Ex. XL, 23 (Y. I a. 0. "HO, some
ed. fTO). Targ. Y. ib. XII, 39; a. e.— Part. pass. Th&j f.
Ib. XIV, 8 (O.ed. Amst. nit?). Targ. Job XIII, 18 (ed. Wil.
lip); a. fr.— Targ. Ps. V, 4 (v. preced.).— Part. pass. 1103.
0"HSP"lD, read: Din^n" © m. (sericarius, sub. textor) 1
benedictions) in successive order over the cup. Yoma Y. Ab. Zar. V, 44 d '31 'pb'Wb 1103 flips let us get up early
45 b top roiEM 3"S pllOtt) that he must place them in and set in order those thorn-bushes (meaning, let us kill
order on the altar; "pnoi ffi33ii bS -pllOUJ that he . . .
those men).— Shebu.30 b IWH 11031 )W22 in3lMs.M.(ed.
i
must arrange them on the bridge or on the rim of the fi^anb n^b 1101) he has the appearance of one whose case
altar, until a large pile (of wood) is formed, when he has been prearranged (with the judge ed. of one who has ; :
must put them in order (on the altar) ; Tarn. II, 1 ; a. fr. preai-ranged his case). 2)to allow exemption from seizure
Part. pass. 1110; nillp &c. Taan.8 a ns^XTU
f. VOWS TWO (v. preced.). B. Mets. 1 1
b
mb ^"nOE ^1110 Wnun since . .
1"ib3 '0 it is because his learning is not properly system- we order his pledge (which consists of necessaries) to be
atised in his mind. Ber. 57 a lb 'O 1TI1313 his sins are sold for his debt, how can we allow him an exemption
arranged before him; hvxrb 'O'D *ixn what does this mean ? (so as to leave him a certain amount from the money
It means that they are arranged (ready) to be forgiven realized by the sale)?
Yoma 88 a B. Bath. 69 a nab 'on 0133N stones arranged
.
Ithpa. 11P0X to be arranged, (of prayers) to be offered.
for erecting a fence, contrad. to mil3X piled up (v.
Targ. Job XXXVI, 19.
110); a. fr.
always offer praise to the Lord first, and then pray (for '31 'On bs as to all Atonement
the acts for the Day of
what he needs), lb. 34 a '31 1TOa» 133b noli frtilfflRl here told in their consecutive order, if he advanced
in the first three benedictions of the T'fillah one is like (changed the order) &c. Sifra Tsav, Mill. ni331pn P\K Tion
a servant that offers praise to his master; a. fr. Part, — ft ft p the text arranges the sacrificial functions in their
pass. "Wtoa Men. 95 a '333 when everything in the Taber- proper succession. Yoma 73 a sq. '03 xba bxiU 111 David
nacle was arranged, opp. pbl033 when arrangements for did not put his questions (I Sam. XXIII, 11) in then-
moving were being made. 2) (corresp. to "pisii, Lev. — natural order. Meg. Ill, 4 "piosb "pltin the regular
XXVII, 8) to assess a person's value with reference reading (interrupted during the four distinguished Sab-
b
baths, v. rrohD) is resumed. Ib. 30 Xlfi HTCBIB 'Ob
to the vower's ability to pay,whence: to exempt from 7
T T t'
113 b 3in bS33 'pi103 "p ^3153 'p10313 "p13 as well sumed; '31 nilosn 'ob the regular order of Haftaroth
as we allow an exemption from seizure in cases of vows, is resumed; a. v. fr. d^SH '0 the Order of Seeds,
so we allow it in cases of debt; [Rashi quotes a Var. the Order of the Mishnah; 1313 'O the Order of
first
"p11UJ3, v. 1113]. Ned. 65 b '31 "pITOO y« n3^3 |EVSB (Var. Festivals, the second Order of the Mishnah &c. Sabb.
prmaw) from this you may deduce that no exemption 31 a a. fr.—Keth. 106 a in^bx(l) 'O, v. in^bx.—Esth. R. to
;
;;
I, 9 'en 1UN1 as the firstwords of a pericope (Lev. R. (VI), 8 inrro stbi iniastb aa 'jwon (ed. Zuck. iiniu) if a man
s. 3 K110 CKI).— PL O^t), constr. "H-lO, ""0. "nio — gives his wife a letter of divorce without witnesses.
n51U3, v. MHJO. — Keth. 103 b n33n '0 orders (rules) of
wisdom; niifVBS '0 rules for the conduct of the Nasi's iHp, "PHD (v. TO, a. rni; Sam. ISO, 1M0, v. Sam.
office. Sabb. 53 1
'
n^U&03 '0 the order of nature ; a. fr.— Pent. Gen. XXXI, 52; cmp. also ISO = IS ib. VII, 16; for
Esp. regular homilies on the weekly portion. Sot. 49 a interch. of S a. 1 a. n, v. letters n a. 1) to be sure, be
(ref. to Job X, 22) '21 ""'Sin O^mo ffii OK but if regular present; to witness.
homilies are held, it (the earth) will come forth bright Af. TTiOX, ISiON (corresp. to b. h. 1) fo tes^'/y. tW)
out of the dark. Targ.O.Ex.XX, 13 a. fr.-Keth. 21 a ni^rn5< 'X v. ; WWWT.
Ib. '31 "vitKpb WW -pit xb he would not need to identify
Slip, Hi"!©!
T
n
D ch., constr. "r^j a. DID, same, his own signature; '31 *
* Tl j^U "wm lrTW
I btfitl (or "^nopi
1) row, order. ' Targ. Ex. XXVIII, 17, sq.' (h. text "*>). Pa.) and thus he and the other man might identify the
Targ.O. Lev. XXIII, 44 (T.'nspne)} a. fr.— Pl.y*Wo, frtytfa signature of that man (the deceased) ; a. v. fr. — 2) to call
k*t??i
lf
y^i '-'p- Tar g- Ex - i-o. ( Y
ed vien "??)• Tar &-
- - -
to witness; to give warning. Targ. Deut. IV, 26. Targ.
o! Lev. XXIV, 6, sq. (Y. hwt).- Targ. Y. Deut.' V, 28 '0 Ps. LXXXI, 9. Targ. II Chr. XXXIII, 10; a. fr.
b^Sbl the upper ranks (angels). Targ. Y. Gen. XIV, 8 t> Pa. "ftp, into same, 1) to testify. Targ. Y. Ex. XX, 13;
VOip battle-lines. Targ. II Esth. Ill, 8 ^TjO 153 (ed. a. e —Keth. 21 a "HnOTD,
v. supra. Y. Snh. I, 18 b top xr^K
Vien. *~H0 133; ed. Lag. "H^iO^ia, corr. ace.) when among "•PS *liiT3 come, testify in my behalf. Y. Shebu. VI, end,
his trodps; a. fr. — 2) order or section of the Scriptures, 37 b fHtfff* xbl VTPO like one that ties up the mouth
. . .
the portion of the Pentateuch to be read at public service of witnesses that they may not testify; a. fr. 2) to team. —
on Sabbaths &c; in gen. Scripture lesson. Sabb. 116 b "pOS Targ. Y. Gen. XLIII, 3 TriOX KOj^jU ; a. e.
D h 3in33 'O (not 'n3"l) they closed the reading from the Ittaf.^tysP^ii. learning has been given. Targ. Ex. XXI, 29.
Pentateuch with a reading from the Hagiographa (v.
"IH&, v. -nrto.
rnasrt). Yoma 87 a bot. '21 '0 piOt) rVft was reading the
Haftarah a. fr.— Sot. 49 a tsl NlDllp, v. 6tfflW|:.-3) oroer
;
S"inp, rnnD/p/© m. (preced.) 1) witness. Targ.
orjpoH o/7/ie Mishnah. Keth. 103 b -p3nb 5fri& "Onx teach
0. Deut. XIX, 18. Targ. Pro v. XII, 19 ; a. fr.— B. Bath. 33 b .
confirm it. Y. Snh. Ill, end, 21 d '31 'lab "Jlbspl and they
received (heard) the witnesses in the absence of &c.
SPIIlp, v. WTWTb. a. a. fr. '0 )i» we know certainly— Fern. X-JfiC.
fr.-Ber. 17 b ,
"P"jP> "j"H"iO m. ("i1&) one who arranges traditions warning. Targ. Deut. V, 17. Targ. Is. VIII, 20; a. fr.— Y.
systematically, systematic scholar, opp^bsb^S dialectician. Snh. Ill, end, 21
d '31 ilBM xbn '0 Vop R. E. heard
— '03 S*F
. .
Y. Hor. 1II,48 C top "ion (Bab. ed. *Wf). Midr.Till. to Ps. evidence in the absence of the party; a. fr. to
h
LXXXVII (ref. to II Kings XX, 20) 'he brought the water know evidence, to have something to testify to. Mace. 5 ;
(of the Law) into the city', "10 XiniU because he (Ezekiah) a. fr. Y. Snh. 1, 18 b top 'ffl STv a. fr.— Pi. T^O, '(l-ino,
was a collector, v. next w. '-lino, "TTK?; constr. HWrtlO. Targ. Jer. XVIII, 18 "JfThO
(ed. Lag. T**, v. preced.). Targ. Y. Deut. XXII, 14 (not
yrip, N^Tip,
T 'T^ ch same Midr# TilL to Ps -
*
- •jiTi . . .) evidence of virginity. Targ. Ps. CXIX, 14 ; a. fr.
gallery around the altar for the priest to walk on. Midd.
"iHD c. (b. h.5 cmp. itiO) 1) aw enclosed place, esp.
Ill, 1 'Ort m there (at five cubits from the bottom) the
the enclosure for cattle near a dwelling; stable. Erub.
Sobeb was attached. Zeb. V, 3; a. IV.
11,3 (18
a
;
Misb. a. Ms. M. everywhere 1HO). lb. 22
il
; Y.
d
ib. lV,21 bot.; Tosef. ib. IU(II),9. Tosef. Sabb. (XI), 1. X fcODlO, &0^?i& ch. same. Targ. 0. Ex. XX VII, 5
Shebi. Ill, 4 *3l '0 illBW may put up (in the field) an '310 (ed. Berl. '^310, ed. Vien. "'MID, pi; Y. "O310; h.text
enclosure covering an area of &c. Tosef. ib.II, 15. Ib. 16 ;
3313). Ib. XXXVIII, 4 ni33iD (ed. Berl. "^310 ;
Y. '3310).
1TTOJ a.fr— Tanh. Ki Thissa 2 (play on IMOn, Cant. VII, 3)
n
;
nn
'31 imob !"rai1TT 'Ott (the meeting place of theSanhedrin is
D1D, v. n^Dio.
called) hassahar, because it resembles a merchant's store.— n !liD m. pl.="p33i0 (330) galleries. Tosef. Kel. B.
1
2) (cmp. next w.) moon. Ib. ed. Bub. 1 lT"Pn ">sro Vti -,5K Mets.11,8 [read:] flbUS yV>B<DrT1 'OH (v. VOD) the galleries
agan hassahar means, 'like a half-moon' (the semicircular and colonnades on turrets (v. ">331pN;).
seats of the Sanhedrin), v. fntfr I.— PI. SnrTtp, fino.
Tosef. Shebi. II, 19 ; Y. ib.III, 34° bot. 'pITtD (corr. ace.).— y^llO m -
P 1 (preced.
- ; cmp. ri«11h) flour of the second
Tosef. Dem. VI, 11 '31 O^bottJ "nM? H*2r\(W) ttT if one course, bran-flour (differ, fr. "jOils)! Keth. 112'; Y. Sot.
brought (into the partnership) stores of ears of his own 1, 17 b , a. e.—B. Bath. 98 h (from Ben Sira) 'Do bp ... brn
crop &c. ; a. e. '31 '00 bpl I have weighed everything . . . ,
and found
nothing lighter than bran, but lighter (in mind) than
&On&, rHnp m. ch. (**TO«**1T) light, esp. mom- bran is &c; a. fr. Sing. 310, with suffix — ',310. Hall. II, 6.
11™in& m., pi. Opinio ( b h.O^IHb; « preced.; cmp. calf. ' Hull. X, 4. Y. Yeb. XII, 12 c hot.; Tosef. Yad. II, 1
c
rwittt) crimson (or saffron) colored ribbons. Y.Sot.IX,24 'Ofi IS b513 he must wash his feet up to where the calf
top V"i3 "plbn 3fTJ "^ilripl with gold-embroidered ribbons begins.
hanging thereon (Tosef. ib. XV, 9 rvonrra nviint); [oth.
fcOlrlp, pi. K*ilfip ch. same. Targ. Jud. VIII, 26 ^3310, v. ^530.
NPOSiO,
-
v. KmiKD.
tl 'pp'HDID,
T : :
v. vpiao.
nWD,1Wl&,
T - T ~
"VfiO
T -
m. (dial, for
.,
1Ktt
T
110=132;
.
T
!
T
:
/. aroio, wpoib, v. amixo.
' '
Maim, to Ohol. Ill, 7 ed. Dehr.) a pile of joists, frame. T T : : r : :
v.
0hol.III,7 nwip bit) 'D (ed. Dehr. 1K11X, in comment. 1"WX, 310 I (b. h.) [to cut off, separate,] to fence in, mark
b a
Var. -OS); Succ. 20 (Ms. M. 1K110) ; Y. Sabb. IV, 7 top off. Y. Ab. Zar. IV, 43 c, sq. '31 50 Kirtltf bs any stone that
IS*. Bets. 31 b '31 'Oil "pa Kb d^S9 pSpSB I * we must not 1
mo 961 i3-no
5r\0 el 1 . same. Targ. II Esth. Ill, 3 tr>m 50 (not i-rrv^D).- S5J10, niPJRc m. (?3b) plenty, largeness; (adv.)
Part. a^O, 3-D. XSO (missing in
Targ. Hos. II, 8 "pa^Dl vi uch, frequently. Targ. Job XXXI, 25. Targ. Prov. X, 19
ed. Lag.).— Y. M. Kat. Ill, 83° top "|tiy«1 Mb* may the (ed. Lag. nsu-ib). — Targ. Ps. LI, 4. Targ. I Chr. XXII, 8
Lord fence in thy breach (guard thee from further a. fr.— PL £«&. Targ. Ps. XXXIII, 16 Ms. (ed.^ab). Ib. 17
trouble); Gen. R. s. 100. Y. Kidd. I, end, 61 d Y. Shebu ; (ed. "Sab; some ed. V^b); a. fr.
II, end, 33 c a. ,
e. '=1 fijnni W^O TP*& a fence is fenced
around, and a breach broken into, i. e. the good are
SFS$10 f. same. Constr. n»Mb (adv.) enough. Targ.
by Providence
Ps. exxin, 4 (h. text run).
assisted in their good work, and the bad in
their evil ways; '31 *pa"*D "i^W (not "031) but is it right HJ10 m. (b. h.; 130) coWar or m«zzfe. Sabb. 51
1
'. Y.
that the fence &c.?; Yalk. Prov. 935 ST^b "SO (corr. ace). ib. V, end, 7
C
; Y. Bets. II, end, 61 d , v. Han,
•110 II m. (preced.) [parftfton,] a /aryg cAes£ or basket 110 m. h.;cmp. lb a.no^) Snh. 92 b
(b. 1) foundation.
with partitions for various kinds of provision. Dem. V, 6 (Tanh.NoahlO ITID" ), v. pps Trnsf. principle. R.
i*Tfc 1 —
'=1 'Dn lnisw "'EX even if he buys the second time from
Hash. 20 b TO'WI 'D the Principle of Intercalation (title
the same chest and of the same kind (quality). Y.B.Kam. of a book). Ex. R. s. 15 riD3?ii 'D the principle of the
II, 3
a '31
"pPOttJ 'O a dealer's chest which stands at the lunar calendar. — 2) intimate union, circle, council. Y. R.
entrance of the shop;
trVnan 'bil
e.— PI. 3^310, "paiD. Kel. XVI, 3
a.
— [Midr. Till, to Ps. CXIX, 119 EPaib mBlS, v. Vp I.] counsel leaves; Snh. 38 a Num. R. s. 10; s. 11. lb.'p"1 NSi
;
n
"110 [cmp. t\1, to boil, fr. which l^b lime deuom. ;
HD
J10, "WJlO, H^D,^Jlblm.(^M)muft#u(fei T ©),] inno
or tt? (b. h. 1
to plaster, tvhitewash. Sot. VII, 5
largeness. Targ. Prov. VII, 21 "010 Ms. (ed. K^TD). Ib. b
"P03 they whitewashed it (the altar) with lime. Ib. 35 .
\* VM
i+ rT^aib (not '^D; prob. to be read fHSfft) most of
ment). Sabb. VIII, 4 '31 IIDls *13 as much as may be re-
the garrison are Samaritans (Romans).
quired for painting a little girl; ib. 80 b '31 3>3XK llbb '•"ES
to paint the little finger &e; Tosef. ib. VIII (IX), 20; a. e.
&OJ1D, fcT^lO II m. Cab II) 1) walk. Sabb. 66 top b
naan ieri 'b "Whrt Ms. M. it (the cane) serves merely Pi. T*D to cover with plaster. Tosef. Sot. VIII, 7 VttT»bi,
f*. Ab. Zar. HI, 7; a. fr.—Part. pass. T^toa; f.rfT**0.
to direct the walk (not as a support). — 2) (cmp. !"I5^H)
v.
1. e; B. Bath. 1. e a. e.— [Incorr. "V^O in
Tosef. B. Bath. ;
study, lesson, subject; practice, usage. Num.R. s. 12; Lam.
R. to I, 3, v. 173 I, a. US. Snh. 6 H^fcl
a some ed.]
"p^aiO (Ms. M. 'D
X233Q XWaJasjl) the general practice (as regards that 110 ch. same. Targ. Am. 11,1. Targ. O.Deut. XXVII,
subject). —
[Yalk. Prov. 935 Kinib •*», v. Mb ch.— Koh. nibtn (some ed. *PDFi).
R. to V, 8 MfjMO, v. xapO.]
^QllO, V. ^1-ID.
&O"^Jil0 m., pi. ivppa C.ao I, cmp. ni^ao) twigs.
Erub. 28b &<rai2H 'C (some ed. 'fl'WlW ; Ms. M. WWO, corr. SjllO m. (v. T!|D h.) brewer; [oth. opin. XS'Tlb beer].
ace; Ms. 0. *\:ao) twigs of a willow. Pes. n3 a V *& (At. 'nb) to the brewery, v. T^A. Ib. *Wa
'D why is the brewer (beer) called 'b?; v. lib.
"OJJlD m. pi., with suffix ^MD C.30 I, v. WD, -jWD)
j)/en£y o/" ft Targ. Y. Gen. XXVII, 28. 13110 I m. (preced.) brewer. Ber. 44 b ; Men. 71*
— ;
opinion: '0 (denom. of "lie) wise man] Hull. 27 a v. Xan I.— [Yalk. Ps. 755, read: mj, v. TWJ3.]
,
b
Hif. JWI, 'iin same. Ber. 51 '31 013 b» 'f*/.V^ V* >' ou
"O^lD II m. Sidonian.—Pl. B*?7te. Tosef. Kel. B. must not converse while holding up the cup of benediction.
Bath. VII, 10 ed. Zuck. (Var. &$*$ E. B. to Kel. XXX, 3 ; Sabb. 13 b '31 nrpoa WVm
and she told (me) all that
d
o^i-nx). happened to her." Y.Gitt.IX,end, 50 "p-noa/iua, v. nn-'D.
Pesik. R. 31 'SI ITWI "iai3> (the text, Is. XLIX, 8 sq.)
"HID (mostly pi. form VT^D) f. ("HO cmp.
; W II) scar/'
stands and speaks
s.
Tround around the head and hanging doivn over the neck, Messiah. Deut. R. s. 1 '31 ^aS n^Oa nr.X "^a who art
b
YTiWH! (not "Ol) hanging down over his arms. Succ. 51 speak to one another as it were; W"OH OS 'UJa speak
W3 "pTTioni "jini and the superintendent of the synagogue
. .
to men; Yalk. ib. 20. Ex.R.s.l IS* 1
?? JVianb to talk against
stood there with a scarf (as a flag) in his hand -niOStpal; ;
us. Tanh. T'rum. 9; Yalk. Mai. 587, v. 93J9I; a. fr.—n^Oa
Tosef. ib. IV, 6 frff l UB Y.
;
ib.V, 55 b top -fTfl03, v. tfO\
lain **b, v. Oin.— Yoma 75 a (ref. to ronw, Prov. XII, 25)
Snh. vi, i.
b
lb. vii, 2 (52 ) rein -prt map ttio •pri'fri
oi-inx? rwrrtJi "rax "im ins"ia nsn/a^ lax "in one says,
(Y. ed. •p'filO) they put a twisted scarf of coarse material let bim dismiss it (fr. niffl = nW; Ms. M. 2 nsrpsn) from
within a soft one and wound it around his neck a. fr. ;
his mind the other says, let him speak it out to others
;
the benediction (on putting it on: n"ixsnn *>X111P 'ItJW). isthrown out, dirt, disgusting matter. Targ. Prov.XXIII, 29
Sabb. 77 b (playful etymology) Tl "1% RS^6 'the WWA ed. Compl. (ed. Lag. X"!110, Var. X^IO; ed. Wil. KTObJ;
secret of the Lord is revealed to those that fear him' h. text rpto).
(the turban being the scholar's apparel) ; a. e.
8TVTTO, v. xnpno.
"pTWD,
T
v. "HIO.— [Yalk. Prov. 947 '0 ft 0">?Sa, v.
"iniD m. (b. h. inb; ino) 1) traveller, beggar. Snh.
rftw iM3 '0? nail Samaritan beggar (v. Midr. Till,
107 a like a
"PTO, v.
^"i?. to Ps. XIX, end, a Lev. R. s. 5; Rashi: a Samaritan
peddler that offers his goods by degrees, from the worse
lOTD, v. ww.
T - T "
to the better). — 2) travelling merchant, in gen. merchant.
nthd, v. wi«. Tanh. Ki Thissa 2, v. IfiO; a. e.—Pl. O^n/iD, ynqio.
a. 1. note).
TOrfO, (jO!C?) (b. h. »*to) to move about, be unsteady,
^pllD, v. TO930. v. noo.
fcttYnOTto, v. «tm Hif. o^on, B*nsh to shake; to siving (v. 20">n), con-
-
t t :
touch directly. Zab. V, 1 IX Sin TX ^^Oan
trad, to 353 to
nib,
r -
v. "iKio.
- t
il^Oa Sinm he who moves a zab (v. Sp (by shaking the
board on which he stands) or whom the zab moves.
PP^HIID, v. Tp-iBO.
Hull. 124 b "J^oni and shook them; a.fr. — [Ex. R. s. 23;
Lev. R. s. ll'; ib. s. 16 "JOWl, read p*aft v. 0*0 h.]
PI1D, Hlto (b. h. nib) [to ttwfc,] to talk; to tell. Shebu. t
VIII, 3; 6 no nnx na yyp "o^x (Y. ed. nia) I do not know Nif. oio* 1
: to be shaken, moved. Tosef. Zab. IV, 6 OX
what you are talking abodt. Ber.51 a
*b no told me. Sot. ratCO l^n if they moved (on account of his rapping,
and did not merely vibrate). Tosef. Toh. X, 8 [read 13331
44 b '31 r&Wi TQ n\U if one talks between putting on the :]
: — ;
'31 "paiD"3 tP xbia provided they are not shaken up by 2584) nasty secretion, vomit. Targ. Prov. XXIII, 29 some
the vibrations of the partition. ed. (Ms. Var. X'^D ; ed. Lag. XT110, read xnvp), v. XHTO.
12*0 (T2u J ch. same, 1) to be unsteady, go astray. :pO (b. h.; pour (oil), to anoint; to
cmp. T^pa) to
Targ. Koh. II, 15 (ed. Lag. Xac).— Snh. 67 a (missing in oil. Dem. I, yam oil for vessels. Ib. 4
3 'ai "O rpcb
some ed.) nac, v. X"Tap. — 2) to move, sicing. Targ. Lam. '31 T|0 T15J1H5 with which the weaver oils his fingers.
II, 8 BM6 (h. text ITO3). Sabb. VIII, 1 pp "QX "pob "H3 as much as required to
A/". a-c^x, ttfefa to s/jaie. Targ. Y. Lev. XV, 10; a. e.
rub one small limb. Tosef. Ter. X, 10 yam "|fi3 Ty<O m X? -
Sotah. Sot. 2 a , a. e. 'O rWY) the chapter concerning the H33 nx fiapp (not rcoaa) the rock b}- their side anointed
Sotah (Num. 1. c). lb. 'SI nbipb"<pa "0 nxnn ba whoever them with oil like a confined woman that anoints her
sees a Sotah in her disgrace, will vow abstinence from child; Pirke d'E. El. ch. XLII tpVQ . . p^O (corr. ace).
wine. Teb. 85 lj
"Wl 'O a convicted adulteress. lb. "WTO Nif. T|5i3 to be oiled, perfumed. Tosef. Ter. X, 10 px
VWto pEO as back his wife suspected of adultery
to taking l3aa '3U3 B"SX . . . "1TM the non-priest need not hesitate to
a. fr —
Y. Keth. VII, 31 c '=1 X*n HeftO ft* if she is declared rub it (on the priest's body), although he himself (his
a Sotah, let her get out without dowry, and if she is hand) is perfumed thereby. [Nithpol. 7(3"in03, v. 7|3pIL]
not be— PI. niaio. Sot. I, 5 Ort nx -ppca DU51T there (in /
the Nicanor gate) they made the suspected women drink "[10 ch. same. Targ.EuthIII,3. Targ. 0. Deut. XXVIII,
(the bitter water). lb. 8 a nnX3 'D TUB fpOO "pX two 40 T^CPi (some ed. !pW*J ed. Berl. Cp'OTi).
suspects must not be made to drink at the same time: Ithpe. -prix to be poured., rubbed. Targ. 0. Ex. XXX.
a. fr. —
Sotah, a treatise, of the Order of Nashim, of 32 ed. Berl. (ed. Vien. ~p:rn).
Mishnah, Talmud Babli a. Y'rusbalmi, a. Tosefta.
"[iO ("p£>) m. (b. h. fUB; -pO = -pC) bough, bush. B.
s:uio, v.-^-ii. Kam. X, 2 (114 a ) '31 ht3 PlX yip*1 *& (some ed. '£; Y. ed.
ttsiOrt; v. Eabb. D. S. a. 1. note 100) he must not cut off
yirDElO, Targ. Is. XXI, 8 ed. Lag., v. lOfePHa. the bough of his neighbor's tree &c. Y. Keth. II, end, 27 a
13V,33 when the bees have settled on his neighbor's bough
!
*™IIQ lO pr. n. m. Sutar. Y. Ber. I, 2
C
top (for which (or bush); a.e.— PI. CfPfe, constr. ^310. Succ. 13 b Tosef. ;
Yalk. Ez. 340: ^xa"TOTO). Maasr. C3Xn 'o boughs of fig trees. Erub. 101 a 'O
Ill, 5
'31 n^Slp boughs of thorn-bushes and bundles of twigs
NTL210, 10
m. (Saf. of TJ3, cmp. nasp) [that which
of which one made a movable hedge before a breach
is reserved,cmp. SOiaJ) reward, wages. Targ. Y. Ex.
Tosef. ib. XI (VIII), 11, D^Slp bU3 H3TO1 ^Vw ed. Zuck.
XXII, 30 n^aioa as his reward (for not barking at the
(Var. n310); v. tJSftO.
Israelites, v. Ex. E. s. 31). Targ. Y. Lev. XIX, 13. Targ.
Y. Deut. XXIV, 14, sq. Targ. Job XIV, 6. lb. VII, 2 tab. fcCHO ch. same. Targ. II Sam. XVIII, 9 (h. text -3/v:;).
Targ. Jud.IX,49. Targ. Is. XVII, 6 (ed.Lag. a. otli. nrio);
"10 m. (X02 = Xtfj::; cmp. Xta, Ps.LXXXIX, 10) [load,]
a. e. —V. xrpio.
large basket. B. Kam. 20 a '31 lnxpo *0 (quot.by E. H. G.
to Kel. XVI, 3; ed. ir&a).— PI. D^xio, TX10. Kel. XVI, 3 S31D, pi. X^SjTO, v. X30.
E. H. G., a. E. S. a. 1. Var. (ed. BHM&j; Tosef. ib. B. Mets.
V,l; 13 (quot. by E.S. I.e.; ed.Zuck. 7X0ni,read: pxen"), riDlO, IB (b. h. n=Ti')=Ti ;C. Makhsh. I, 3. Y. Sabb.
v. va n. XV, end, 15 b
. B. Mets. 105 b , v. ftVT] II. Pesik. E. s. 15
'ob 'D3 from bush to bush; Cant.E. to 11,9 ; Yalk. ib. 986.
"''10
(cmp. Syr. KID a. rYB cupio, P. Sm. 2540; 2546, Ab. d'E. N. ch. XXXIX '31 IT 'O ISIp cut this linib off the
a. nil I) to be bright, cheer up. Keth. 62 b 'O . nrr \ft .
tree. Pesik. E. s.10, beg. C2J1p bo ITn 'On (not nTn) this
'3* K&
he lifted up her eye (attracted her attention), thorn-bush. Tosef. Erub. XI (VIII), 1 1 (not n3->0), v. T|iO.
she saw him, her heart was overjoyed, her spirit fled Lam. E. V,13 nnx to 'ra, v.tnrt; a. e—PI. n^sio. Y.Bets.
(she fainted). IV, 62c top BTOUP 'D, v. 7)10.
a
Af. -•ox to look up with jog. Ib.60 nsxb <*t6ta xp rvtn
(not nin) the child looked up to her with joy (showing rD^lO, TOO f. (b. h. : -30) cover of twigs; booth ; esp.
that he recognised his mother). Succah, the booth covered with twigs &c. for the seven
days of Succoth. Maasr. Ill, 7 rGTO the lodge of VV9
S"*i"H0 m. ("TO, cmp. Syr. X110 mucus nasi, P. Sm. Genezareth gardens (inhabited during vintage) ^""ST'n 'o
— ;
booth. Num. R. s. 4 (ref. to tflP, Ex. XXV, 29) nnuj also pricks (v. nbai/ia); Midr. Till, to Ph. XCII, 13 'pb^O; ed.
'D pM 'p'vaSB they put the bread up in the shape of
. . Bub. jlbtJ (corr. ace). Y. Ab. Zar. Ill, 42'' bot. O^biom
abut; '31 'D...i"ibttb31ZJ each cake forming a roof over that (ed. Krot. D^Dfn, corr. ace), v. baD.
below (tubes being placed between them to allow the air
to strike). Succ. 1,1 '31 HtVbi ionia '0 a Succah which is 31& ch. same. Targ. Y. Num. XIX, 2.— PI. N^IO.
*
Targ.
higher than twenty cubits is unfit for ritual use. lb. 2 Ps. CXIX, 119 (ed. Lag. KOblDS; h. text D"W3).
combined huts of the potters, v. supra; a. fr. Succah, S>1D pr. n. pi. Sulla. Cant. R. to II, 17 (ref. to wfl
name of a treatise, of the Order of Mo'ed, of the Mishnah, -ira ib.) 'D -iM XtTobD 3Drl 13 when the (Roman) govern-
Talmud Babli a. Y'rushalmi, a. Tosefta. ment will receive the payment for the massacre of S.
"DID (b. h. rWto a. trite) pr. n. pi. Soco, Sokho, name fcOS^lD m. (ibD) offal, dross. Targ. Trov. XXV, 4
of two towns in Judaea. Ab. I, 3, v. Dianas*.
(some edlxaxbsiD; h. text D^p; v. blD ch.).
nisio (rrtep), rffrs 'D <b. h.) succotk ¬n,
name of an idol. Srih. 63 b nbl5.3-in .
'3 '0 Succoth B'noth
Snn 3^D/bD f. bread-basket (?). Gen. R. s. 65 xb
(read:
D"" 10 m. (solea, accus. pi.) sole, slipper without
2) reasoning. Targ. Prov. XXI, 11 xa-om mniartciDS wearing his slippers; Y. Yoma VIII, 44' bot. tlO^blO. 1
(Ms. "manb31D3, some ed. i"P3rib31D3, corr. ace.) when the n^blD, bj'!3lb, r^VlO, v. preced. h. a. ch.
wise man is reasoned with.
n
D?^& m. (b. h. D|0; bbp II) 1) ascent, ladder. B. Bath.
"DID, 'C "] 2 pr. n. pi.
l
En Sokher. Sot. 49 b '3> DS>p3 Ill, 6, v. "nap II. Gen. R. s. 68 '03 D">T-i1il D^blS 13 bo
'O the valley of 'E. S. — Y. Shek. V, 48 fl
; Men. 64 b , v. (Gen. XXVIII, 12), that is, they went up and down the
'D he put one hand on his eye and the other on a bolt;
to go down, the other to rise (on the social scale). Sabb.
Men. 64 b '3tJ (corr. ace; v. Rabb.D.S. a. 1. note 5); Yalk.
26 a '31 lis bir/DD from the Promontory of Tyre (along
Ezra 1067.— 2) StHrth 'Q-dam, lock. Y. Bets. Ill, 62 a top "D
"no X"im*i it is permitted to catch fish (on a Holy Day)
the sea-coast) to Haifa. Ruth R. to IV, 21 (play on *)iabte)
Pi. ff*b 1) same. Cant. R. to VH, 1 (ref. to ntftTO ib., Part. pass. D^pa. B. Bath. 100 a KPXTia fqpm&p when
a. Num. VI, 26) '31 DlblB nb OVT^OM naiX a nation to the partitions are distinctly defined; a.e. — 3) to finish.
which peace is assigned everyday; (Gen. R. s.66 ff'n:n'2 Targ. Y. Gen. XLIV, 18 Tosef ta (ed. b*Ona).— Meg. 25 a
':• tibia nb ~;- i-e).— 2) to
:
mori, name (cmp. KB, DWJ); '31 nTQ'wb mpria^p hast thou exhausted all the praises
)
to distinguish. Y. Peah VH, beg. 20 a iai'pa bpin the of the Lord? Ber. 12 a
X"iam3 "01 BttJWl nns he began . .
neighboring palm-tree serves as a mark for it (that the the benediction under the impression that it was beer,
(took their names &c, in order to be able to observe a. e. xnnsaiC D^Fipn -pratt "WO this tradition will be
their career), and all of them turned out great men; named from myself and from thee. 2) to be concluded, —
Gen. R. s. 1. Y. Dem. V, 24 c bot. "W^S D^ai and he . . .
proved. Sabb. 31 b '31 "fi DTOH it can be conclusively
makes a mark (on the pile), and says to the priest, so proved that it was R. . . who said &c. ; D'1^nDri it is
far I have marked (as tithe); a. fr. [Gen. R. — s. 42 end proved.
"pXEO nx til+Gai, v. pie n.]—Part. pass. D"*10a, D*10a; f.
r.-^cp &c. Y. Peah 1. c. TSiz 'zz ii'n if it (the olive DID II (or Dap) (preced.) [to tie up the eye,] to blind;
or the sheaf left behind) was noted in his mind (so that to be blind.—-V. "ab, xa*0 1.
122
; ;
966 2*r/^0
W)D
a
Nif. 010^3, Dib3 to be blinded. Taan. 21 Witf? .
.
W KmDDID^DDniD, v^iis^D.
T
V. "WJ. ^w^?.
rrDisaiD, 'ftejte, v.
a
NQ*D I m. (preced.) fcftnd, blind man. Hag. 1, 1. lb. 2
pO/lD to be red, v. poo.
TJ'Wnnfca 'D blind in one eye. Taan. 21 a i'W n\UO'D
,
blind in both eyes. Ex. E. s. 36 '31 V>nu> '01 npB a seeing pTaiD, SfJS'lD, 'K31D I m. (-poso, saf. of par;
and a blind man that were walking &c. B. Bath. 12 ;
cmp. pios) [dark,] red. Targ. 0. Lev. XIII, 30 (h. text
Nidd. 20b rnraa '03, v. nar^; a. fr.— PI. d^oio, "poio. STtt). Targ. 0. Gen. XXV, 30 ed. Berl. (v. fc^Tb). Targ.
Gen. E. s. 53 mnsn3 'D nain . . . rtWSi when Sarah was Y. Lev. XIII, 24 XpolO (ed. Amst. 'oio) red spot; a. e.—
remembered,many childless women were remembered with Pes. 25 b a. e. '31 ^SD "O -pm NOll rmn ^KD what reason
,
her, .many blind persons had their eyes opened. lb. (ref.
. . hast thou to assume that thy blood is redder? may be
to Gen. XXI, 19) '31 13? '0 npina ^3fi all men are to be thy neighbor's blood is redder, i. e. you dare not save
considered as blind, until the Lord opens their eyes. Snh. your life your fellowman's life. Sabb.
at the expense of
b
34 b 'On XP11J cannot be performed by blind persons a. fr.— ;
134 a '01 SpIS" 1
Wl
an infant that looks red. Gitt. 67
b
a
Fern. Koto, ft&D, Keth. 17 'D "IN **1 suppose the bride
. . '0 KlffQ red meat. B. Mets. 58 v. 11TI; a. fr.—Yeb. 64
1
',
is lame' or blind. Y. Sot. II, end, 18 b '0 »Ti KO10 Kin XpDIO pns" surname of R. Isaac ben Joseph.— PL pfMMO,
1
1351 0*3115; ed. Amst. and oth. ma nst> 69 a .— 2) inflammation of the eye. Y. Ab. Zar. II, 40 d top
of Moses, h. text
'31 •
Y.I '31 n"01 p" ©. 1
The entire passage came into Targ. Y. Sabb. XIV, 14 d top, v. nSDD.
0. by mistake; v. Berl. Mass. p. 60.]
"P^D pr. n. Sumki, a fictitious name in a charm
pDD"lD, V. pD^D. formula. Gitt. 69 a .
iTEftD II pr. n. m. Sumah. Num.R.s. 14 nans 13 '0. ^r^lDpQ^D f. (pOID) redness. Targ. Prov. XXIII, 29
i\TV ni3pT O10 (ed. Lag. pS5p OTP, corr. ace, v. Oil" ).
1
"jplDID, v. poo.
srjpp^io, v. pw».
^IplfflD, v. njrfaa 20 b
SfJpSlD, 'HD pr. n. '0 l=pn Bed-Field. Y. Snh. II,
pulled over the front end of the pole, E. Hai G. a. Ar.) Kin 'o'fcWJOia ^Stn the sun paints red.
Kel. XIV, 4.
with the hair on.—PL njJTWC. Y. Ned. VIL end, 40° -pS
Di^bj^D,
. DlpwbppD, Di-nr^D, v.
'0 p*5^X (not riaiCO) like those garments made of goat-
sub 'pao.
skins (the hair of which is not used for clothing). —V.
-:-rq.
D"D to 6e ftri^f, ^arf, v. to*J.
fcCDlD, v. xnTOO.
DID m. (b. h.; v. Nold. Mand. Gr.p. 147) horse. Pes.
113 b . 8ucc. 26 b 'cn rOTB the (short) sleep of the horse, 3FI0, v. 5^0. [Targ. 0. Lev. XIV, 42 and some ed., v.
to I, 9 tTOpa 'O mares. — Fern. fiWO. lb. Pirke d'R. El. restles s. 'Pesik. R. s. 32 ; Yalk. Is. 339 '2! nart HTWa '0 so'arah
ch. XLH; X^WO.—PL HTWe. Ex. R. s. 23, end rVDpa *D, (Is. LIV, 1 1) means stirred up, for the nations have stirred
v. supra. her (Israel) up (with ref. to Ps. CXXXVIL, 7). [Pesik. R.
l.c. rnaran p
'o, read, with Yalk. L c, rr*as.]
S"D'D I b. h., she-horse, v. 0*0. 'O 0.1 na^lp the splitting of the Red Sea (for the passage
d bot.; a.fr.
of the Israelites); Y. Ber. 1,
b 'D (X) tXSSTA x": 'J ""2 why didst thou Targ. Jon. II, 6 ; a. fr.
v. ST -2 II. Snh. 105
a
not come riding on horseback ? ; a. fr. [Ab. Zar. 4 Wltfl — ^plDlI (b.h.)to cut; tobecut off;to end. Tanh.B'resh.12
xncto, "two. Targ.
'z rrz, v. x-cr:.]— PZ. -pWD, JJWB, '31 mrjn riSOl and destroys the good and the bad.
Y. Ex. XV, V. Targ. Gen. XLIX, 17. Targ. Is. XXX, 16 Pi. ?"\"D to cut, diminish; to exterminate (corresp. to
,",1Dt3ed. Lag.(ed.Wil. xr'012 some ed. '^VttC our horses).
;
b. h. n'S2). Gen. R. s. 100 '21 V[*fA \/tfl "^2 who can an-
Targ. Ex. XIV, 23 tV&ta constr. a. fr.— Cant. R. to 1, 9 (ref.
;
nihilate the dust? ...the beasts of the field? &c. Eo.s.42
to TW Hab. Ill, 8) [read:] "pSD "piOTO 'horses' in the '21 -ass nx epical "jVih nrx s-ra Var. in Yalk. ib. 73 for
plural. C~©a (ed. 0* 02) why wilt thou reduce (weaken) thyself
,,,
'z 17 212 ynx 'the land of Tob' (Jud. XI, 3) that is the Targ.Prov.H, 22 a. fr.—Part. tf+fX lb. XI, 31 a. e—Koh.
; ;
122*
—
;
which you cannot see from all sides). Ned.62 a TttDrt '01 fodder. Gitt.69 b bot. 'bl Kia water in which date-stones
xab and honor will finally come of itself. Gen. R. s. 71, have been soaked ; a. e.— [Tosef. Sabb. XV (XVI), 3 "fcBIb
beg. (ref.LXIX, 34) 1tt)tfi IBlb nh iaib VJJX1 nV
to Ps. lair bio, v. bBb.]
. .
}
stealest, thou wilt finally deny &c. Kidd. 31 a -pal 'ba, B.Kam.VIII,18; Targ. Y. I Deut XXXIII, 23 (h. text tr);
v. 1M. Meg. 7 a '31 C)ib3>1 -j^ltta msap nbnna at first v. ""sa^b.
they established it (the festival of Purim) in Shushan, and
then for the whole (Jewish) world; a. v. fr. iai 'b &6 — nriDSiD pr. n. pl.(?) Sofafta. Y. Snh. II, 20 a bot.
xbx ... this is not the end of it ..... but. Gen. R.s.38 (ref. 'bl bxiblb; (Y. Ber. Ill, 6 b 'nBbim y»a»),
to Prov.XVII, 13) '31 b^ua 1 'b i& after all, not only he
who requites evil for good, but even he who requites evil pSiD, v. pBb II.
for evil &c. Y.Shebi.III, end,34 d ; a.fr.-2) remnant, esp.
pi. fVte fruit remaining on the tree after harvest time, late SpD'lD m. (pBb II , cmp. XpBbist) large wine vessel.
fruit.Y. Yeb. XII, 12 d bot. 'b btt IBIib WfR (prob. to Yalk.Esth. 1048 the Persians had a large goblet ... "npnai
be read 16133) if one betrothed a woman, giving as 'b quot. in Levy Talm. Diet. (ed. Frf. a. oth. SOp3 Nim
a
consideration a branch of a tree of his containing re- Xj?b1B) which was called Sufka; (Targ.IIEsth. 1, 8 fctprfiO).
mainders (mostly worthless). Pes. 6 b '31 lataal "Bib . .
.
if there are in a man's field late figs, but he watches his ffCpSnD m. (preced.) sufficiency. Targ. Prov. XXVII,
field for the sake of the grapes; v. nsib.— [Tosef. Kel. B. 27. Ib. XXV, 16 ^3pB1b (not 'Bin).
Mets. II, 8 "pBIb ed. Zolk., read: "paib.]
iD iDm. (b. h.; "iBb) 1) scribe, tvriter of documents,
^D, SD1D ch. same. Targ. Job XXVIII, 3 ; a. fr.— copyist of prayers &c. Gitt. VIII, 8 '31 BS 'b 3n3 if the
Y.Snh.X,29 a bot. '31 iT>S/ib Win, v. pin. Ab. Zar. 41 a scribe wrote the letter of divorce for the husband and
'31 tsaVl . . . tftp^-a at first . . ., but finally &c. ; a. fr. a receipt for the wife &c. Keth. 51 a , a. e. 'b fllSb, v.
rwnis;. B. Bath. 21 1
'
Kna 'b (Ms. M. IBb) town-scribe
D^Jj^D, 'pMDto m. pi. (SiBb) cakes made of (libellarius); B. Mets. 109 b top IBb; B. Bath. 21 a XPib 'b
spongy dough, a sort of crackers. Hall. I, 4, expl. Y. ib. (some ed. IBb), v. Tosaf. a.l. ;
(Bashi principal of a town-
:
57 d K-Jp^b. Hall. 1. c. 5 'b nBlbl h0*» nrtnn if his first school keeping assistants, v. infra) ; a. fr.— 2) a scholarly
intention was to make regular dough (for bread), man, opp. lis illiterate. Ber. 45 b '31 'b IftX if one a
and is
then it was changed for crackers. Y. 1. c. Ilfcta 11DS3U3 'b scholar (knowing the prayers) and the other illiterate.
crackers baked over fire, opp. nana baked in the sun. 3) primary teacher. B. Bath. 1. c. 'b
school teacher,
Kel. V, 8 ; a. fr. 'W a Jewish teacher; "WaiK 'b a teacher of secular
branches (oth. opin.: a gentile teacher). Ib. Nna 'b, v.
SIDlD, v. otbb. supra. Tosef. Meg. IV (III), 38 13T13 laba 'Wll but the
Bible teacher teaches (these passages) in his usual way;
DIJ^SID, Y. Ber. IX, 13 a bot. 'bl -,a Talk. Joel 537
; a. fr.—PL b^sib, 'pBib. Gitt. 24 b '=1 'plttwn 'b, v. lab.
wx &^B1B-t |b, read bii^bEDN'l, I am a follower of Y. Hag. 76 c
I, , a. e. b^JIBal "o, v. D*Stt$a. Ber. I.e. bn^lDIBa
Vespasian; cm p. "aSfbBbX.
'b when both
of them are scholarly men (knowing the
prayers); fr.— Kidd. IV, 13 'b 4aVj *6 must not be a
a.
fcC^BlD, 'ID m.(v. tyto) metal spike at the butt-end
teacher of primary schools — 'b rbba the Treatise Sof'rim,
of the spear (v.Sm.Ant.s.v.Hasta). Targ.IISam.XXI,l6
one of the small treatises attached to the Talmud, contain-
(h. text yp).—*Pl. (in Hebr. diet.) Wpift. Tosef. Kel. B.
ing rules for writing Torah copies; (in Septem Libri &c,
Mets. V, 6 'bl *i*t i-fcn ed. Zolk. (ed. Zuck. *»3BBb) the
ed Kirchheim: min IBb n3ba).-Esp. Sofer, pi. Sof'rim,
handles of weapons and spikes.
title ofthe scholars of the ante-Taunaic period, beginning
wayvte,
sophista) sophist, teacher of
raj.,.,
R. s. 21 aiffinb Vol
blpa IS (not bib .; some ed.
'b ji«U3 . .
a. fr.
— 'b 1*131
enactments or interpretations dating from
'Bib, corr. ace.) up to where no arithmetician the Soferic period. Yeb. II, 4 'b *TQ belonging to the
can count;
Pesik. Babod., p. I07 b '31 Db^BOMtt} blpa is prohibitions ascribed to the Sof'rim. Snh. XI, 3 "lb lain
(corr. ace.).—
PI. fWWto. Targ. I Chr. XII, 32. '31 'b disregard of Soferic enactments is
more strictly
dealt with &c, v. Iain I. Ib. 88 b 'b 'na llpis© -ibT a . .
p-'STlD, v. pBbll, a. p*i&t> ch. law which is founded on the Torah, but the interpretation
of which dates from the 8oferic period. Tosef. Kidd.
>En© m. pi. (bBb, v. bsb) scrapings, esp. [scraped] V, 21 ; a. fr.— 'b *,lpn, v. WR,
— — ;: ;
&T1DTO, V. "*».
WO; f. trrno; pi. rrrVClO. Tosef. B. Bath. Ill, 6 On&Tl . .
t :
t»1 'D D^rnxn ed. Zuck. (Var. nvrrc, some ed. tttWO,
nSDlO f. (v. =]io) late fruit. Tosef. Maasr. Ill, 12 'O corr. ace.) wood or stones piled up whether for his un-
bl ="xr (ed. Zuck. nt^DX) if there are figs left on the titled field (for building) or for his fence; v. "VTO a. "OX.
tree, but he guards his field &c; v CpC.
"llD m. (="\!XO, v. TtX'p) fermentation, froth, leaven
Kj~vViC,v. x-rspp. trnsf. (cmp. "fixi?, SiD^r a. *fpfi) germ, original nature,
b
character. Snh. 92 "hio his haughty nature ;
[oth. opin.
")"C*"P'C, v. o^wp^n. ,
house; a. e. — 2) to cause to deviate, to corrupt. Snh. XI TO I (or tf"3TO) m. name of a bitter herb. Pes.
II, 4 (ref. to Deut. XVII, 17) 13? rx tlfrfOO Uf xVr "nbai 39* vT D11D.
provided they (the wives) do not corrupt his heart; ^SX
z" ~-"C~" "X even one wife, if she might corrupt his
SHTO II pr. n. pi. Sura, 1) a town in Southern
Babylonia between the canals, seat of the college founded
heart, he must not many. Kidd. 68 b (ref. to Deut. VII, 4)
';= rvois this
by Bab. Erub.8 a B.Mets.67 b a.e. tn xri3B"2, v. HRMB5U
. ,
3"-"C";n to intimate the extension of the
prohibition of intermarriage to all nations that might
is
B. Bath. 89 a 'On irffP 0"i; a. fr. 2) tttft 'D Sura on the —
b
Euphrates (Soura-Soura, mod. Surie). M. Kat. 24 (v.
lead astray; Yeb.23 a Ab. Zar. 36 b TOOn W .
'31 (v. Babb. D. S. a. L note) he visited his fields &c. Gitt. Sn*TlD m. (rnp H) overhanging part. Targ. 0. Ex.
38 b '31 * T«W, Rashi (ed."n^pi) those who examine their *V%
I
XXVI, 12 (some ed. '~c).
property on the Sabbath; a. e. V. ispl. —
"iPPIDm. (rrtpni) corruption, sin, offense. Yoma86 b
"fiD II (b. h.) pr. n. tin -0?8) the gate of Sur, name
of a Temple gate. Y. Erub. V, 22c .
T
VOT* let my
ijrniiD
: ^
sin be recorded Yalk. Ps. 718
T
;
'
WO. : t
"jltl/lD, S^n"!^ ch. same. Targ. Gen. XXXI, 36. I^pmb, Tosef.Kel.B.Bath.V.ll ed. Zuck., v.^p^o
Targ. Job XXXIV\
fr.— Lev. K. s. 27; a.e. 37; a. — PL SnnlD, Midr. Till, to Ps. XII, v. tnto II.
KJSiryie, TSrnib. Targ. Job II, 1 ed. Lag. (oth. ed. "TtJ,
'-lb).— Cant, r! to V, 16. rn& or ni& f. (b. h.; nib, v. Ultra) dress, cloak. Kel.
XVI, Dehr. (oth. ed. ninib or ninib pi),
7 'b fflBW ed.
SniDnn^lD,
T
^PJjnniD f. same. Targ. Job XXII, v. bttBK. [Var. in Mish. ed. bttfc^b, prob. meant for biiNb
29 Ms (ed. Bt»rVP). "lb. XXXVI, 14 Ms. (Var. Ms. a. ed.
.
=biab, as a gloss to our w.; R. S. to Kel. 1. c. nia&OttJ, Var.
nvVo). Targ. Y. Lev. X, 17 'n*ib. Targ. Y. Deut. IX, 21 ni&m]
niSCb; Hai G. MS'Wb, Var.
'nsrnsio; a. e.
sharing in many respects the sanctity of the Holy Land. error*. Tanh. Vayhi 10 (ref. to nmb, Gen. XLIX, 11) fW
'31 filSb &6tf 'b (not mib) suthah means error, as we read
Ab. Zar. but in Syria &c, contrad. to ^"N
I, 5 '31 'bb.l
(Palestine) and to 'pxb nsin (v. ]ns). Hall. IV, 11. -|rPb' "0 (Deut. XIII, 7): when an error in law is com-
1
Shebi. VI, 2; 5, sq. Ohol. XVIII, 7; a.'fr. mitted, it shall be washed clean in his (Judah's) borders
(by the Sanhedrin); cmp. Gen. R. s. 98, quot. s. v. Iin.
"J^tSp*
1
")^ (Sopiaxi) in the Syrian language; S>niD">D Dint?, with art. "&n, contract, of binbnn, v. binbn.
a
'b (i7ii!JTaa9ai 2.) to understand Syrian. Y. Ned. X, 42
bot. (not nr*tiD).
"linp m. (inb) surrounding; 'b 'b all around. Targ.
O. Num. *I, 53 ; a. fr. (v. *fm).— Sabb. 13 a , a.fr. Ka-db 'b 'b
^P^n^iD,
Itt :
v. »pii"isi6.
't t :
'31, v. 6W5 I.
MrP'OTlD, Targ. Y. Gen. XXX, 38, ed. Amst., read: &Pinb, SfnlTO f. (preced.) 1) going around,
circuit (cmp. lib I ch.). Targ. Jer. XIV, 18.— 2) circulation,
"
exchange. Targ. 0. Gen. XXIII, 16 'b bbpna received as
l
pQn lD !
pr. n. m. Surmaki (cmp. *>paib). Yoma 10 a —
exchange. 3) trade, traffic; goods. Ib. XXXIV, 10. Ib.
(Ms. mT *TO, v. Rabb. D. S. a. 1. note). 21 (ed. Berl.Mrh«T&).— Lam. R. to I, 1 TCll (Tttta in 8)
'31 "o UliTZ">X if I come to you with this ware (shoes),
. . .
DTlD m. Sores (1), name of a plant (?). Y. Ned. IV, wilt thou sell it for me? Ib. N^libl t> 'pi he bought
38 d top '31 'b TO a solution of S. &c, a spiced drink
an assortment of shoes.
(perh. *n«3?).
fl™nnp f. h. (b. h.) same, traffic; goods. Pesik. R.
"OHID m. (0"p) 1) (cmp. meanings of aTioxoTioc a.
s. io (play on inb, Cant. VII, 3) Vn -ciani 'bn . . . nswa
azoxo7nr)) [castrated,] 'b "piab aphozresis, dropping of a
bblSa when they (the Sanhedrin) were in session, there
a a
radical letter. Mekh. Bo, s. 3; Pes. 61 ; Y. ib. V, 32 bot.
were traffic and profit in the world. Ab. II, 5 nblan ^3 i6
expl.lb3H (Ex. XII, 4) lb33n, = v. b35. Ex. R.s. 42, end
G'Ona 'bb not every one that has a large trade obtains
"pBVi^b ywb (corr. ace), v.n3ba III. — 2) (a contemptuous
wisdom. B. Mets. Ill, 2 '31 'b nU51S ftbft IS** how (can
perversion of t
w*WP) 'b "jltf^ Syrian, in gen. Aramman this be)? Shall this man traffic with his neighbor's cow?
language. Sot. 49 b ; B. Kam. 82 b sq. '31 nab 'b 6 "i"ja
Sifre Num. 23 WKlfinal in^inba ^S SttW I might under-
what has the Syrian tongue to do in Palestine? Speak stand, that the Nazarite must abstain from trading in
either Hebrew or Greek. Y. Sot. VII, 21 c top 'b Wn ^ wine or using it as external medicine; Num.R.s.10. Ab.VI
'31 bp 'b do not despise the Syrian language, for it is
'b blS^ab. by contentment with small business ; a. fr.
employed in the Torah (Gen. XXXI, 47) &c. Gen. R. s.74 ;
^b-iB (corr. ace); Yalk. Gen. 130 ib1& (corr. ace); (Yalk.
t :' t : :
T :
DnD (b. h. an r)
;
to press out, wring, cause to flow. ^JO (b.h.; cmp. qsnil) to rub, sweep. Pirke d'R.
Sabb. XXII, 1 '31 'J'orrte "p« you must not press fruits (on El. ch. XIV yisn ^5 1i5a3 prrio . . j13S?3 in the pain
the Sabbath) for the sake of the juice. lb. 144 b '
pUffl
'
M TM of its growth, it (the serpent) shall sweep along (drag
_. ; .^ nn3
y S q Ueeze(j pomegranates. Y. ib. X, 10 c top
t jj e itself) with its belly on the ground.
Part. pass. CflTC,
'31 nsxbl DaSOMI -Prion -wringing clothes and washing pl.^&r>O,l^&0lO8icept away, driven about. Tanh.P'kude3
are in the same category of labor. Bets. 3 a ainp"; iOi' lest like a dog 'SI 'O XiniU (some ed. CpttJn, Spxn) that is
he may squeeze (fruit); a. fr. Hull. 27 a X^X I3H21 n"X — pushed this way and that way. Yeb. 47 a D"<Bini D""111
'31 BIjW read not (Lev. I, 5) v'shahat (and he shall cut), pB"l1M0l 'D broken down, pushed about, swept (from
but i'sahat (and he shall get the blood out) &c, v. XBn I. place to place) and tossed about; [Rashi: covered in
mourning, v. nBn a. C]En I]. Yalk. Ps. 735, v. t)30.
13110 ch. same, to a&sor&. B.Mets.ll4 b WP1 xirba T3
Nithpa. C]nnp3 to be swept, be inundated, ruined by a
his cloak had absorbed the scent (of Paradise; Ms. F.
flood. Keth. i,V(i2 b ) -pro nsnnp? (Y. a. Bab. ed. mis;,
rTtrtaii M^JrTLi he wrung his cloak out; v. Rabb. D. S.
euphemism) thy field has been ruined, i. e. it is thy
a. 1. note 60) ; Yalk. Lev. 675 Wl ms^a '0.
misfortune, and I cannot be made to suffer for it. Ib. 2 a
tflti '3 it is thy misfortune (that I was taken sick). Ib.
n
Pl&, SHC 1) (b.h. nr-r) to S!(?k. KTO.
Part. Vy3\ f.
3Xn the
VII, 8 Ifllffl '31 . . . father has to bring evidence
Targ. Y. Gem VII, 18.— Y. Sabb. VII, 10 a bot. Vin '31 "pi
that these blemishes arose while she was betrothed and
swimming (on the Sabbath).— 2) (=h.nnO, v.Ez. XXVI, 4)
therefore it was his (the husband's) misfortune ; a. e.
[to scrape, siceep,] to ivash, bathe. Targ. Lev. XIV, 8
a. fr.— Y. 1. c. '31 WTQ buz went bathing with &c. Bab. Nif. v,np3 to be swept away, struck doivn; (homilet.
ib. 141 a '31
soa3 Wl )kq he who bathes in the river &c. = nBD3) to be smitten toith leprosy (v.nnsp). Tanh.Thazr.
Y. Pes. X,beg.37 b xnm nnp had taken a bath and was 11; Yalk. Kings 229; Zech. 586 (interpret. C]n33, Jer.
thirsty. Y. Ter. VII, end, 46 c '31 *,inp take ye a bath, for XLVI, 15); Yalk. Lev. 555.
your Creator will help you &c. Ib. "p?np ycxi 13> until
they shall have taken a bath. Ruth R. to II, 19 "jinm
^inp I ch. same, to sweep away; to reject, despise.
Targ. Prov. 111,34. Ib. X, 3 (h. text P,1n).— Par*, pass.
'31 "TJbO (not inoa) they went down to bathe &c; a. fr.
Tpnp hurried. Targ. Esth. VIII, 14 (h. text Cpni).
Pa. Tpx to wash, cleanse, bathe. Targ. Job IX, 30 (Ms.
Ithpe. ^nnpN to be stcept atvay; to be inundated,
SWUDK, v. 5t«5). Targ. Lev. XIV, 9 (not "Tip"!); a. fr.—
ruined. Targ. Prov. XIV, 32 (h. text nnT). Targ. Y. I
Ruth R. 1. ]*yV3U "pa^p 'Q (or ftl ) when they
c. n-r-i
tyg Gen. XLIX, 4.
were washing his body. Lev. R. s. 28 mnpX biW (not
TiGX) he went in and scoured him (Mordecai); a. e. ^jijP II (v. C]Bn I) to put on as a cover, to tilt over,
invert. Snh. 104 a mimiX 'D .. (X3D1X) X^31X he inverted
J i '.2 nQ f. (one) pressing, wringing. Sabb. 144 a ^33
a fuller's trough over his head. Ned.51 a mil^l b3? manpl
'C fruits designated to be pressed (for the juice). Y. ib.
and over &c. Sabb. 110 a rrtt«"* xblp"n tflTW^n
tilted it
VII, 10° top '31 rcxb-O '0 tTtflS . . CrtOSM the dyers in
(Ms. M. incorr. C|10mbl) and let him put a basket over his
Jerusalem made the wringing (of dyed clothes) a special
head. Ib.l21 b Hull. 8 b/ 3l
. ^B3 ... "o"^sb one must not cover
work : a. e.
up meat with groins; a. e. — Part. tpnp; f. XB^np.
pass,
T
Ab. Zar. 51 b Hag, 15 a "hUW ^B^npn iD3 "iin3
77 h
^"^OQ
i.Z^
or
^O"
>pnp
1
D
"In (b.h.) to go around; esp. to travel as a merchant—
pD n nD, Y. Dem. I, 22 a read:
, pM*. [Num. R. s. 13 nmiD WW, read, as Yalk. Lev.554, a. Yalk.
Prov. 959 nmriO, v. nip III.]—Denom. IPflD.
bsD"nC
T
m. (P,np II) an inverted vessel, opp. XE"p7.
a i-ib '0
Pes. 4 (ed. hpTlO Ms. M. *ff*>) if the grain is
;
nnc-ch-same, \)togo around, turn (corresp. to h.33p).
roasted in an inverted vessel &c, v. XE^pT I.
Targ. Koh. XII, 5. Targ. Cant. IH, 2 (ed.Vien..4/.); a.fr. (V.
TTC 972 nw
to
Ithpa. "innpN, J%?e. "inPipN 1) £o £t*rn around, turn
or /"row, to be carried around. Targ. 0. Gen. XLII, 24.
pTtmb, "pimab, v .
v ^T b.
Targ. 0. Ex. X, 10 (v. Berl. Targ. 0. II, p. 22). Targ. V0D, HI2& (b. h. hob; v. .TJ5) to deviate, to turn to
T T T T ' It'
0. Num. XXXIV, 4, sq. (some ed. Pe., others Af.). Targ. or from. Koh. R. to 1, 16 PipiO a?n the heart deviates
I Sam. V, 8; a. fr — 2) to be seated at the table. Targ. Ps. (turns to evil). —Esp. (of woman) to be faithless. Y. Sot.
1, 1. Targ. Gen. XXVII, 19. II, 18 b top; Y.Kidd.I,60 d '31 P-CITS Tli»D ubia *,?3N 'Amen',
that I have not been faithless as a betrothed, as a married
InD m. enclosure, v. "inc.
woman &c. — V. PJUID.
VII, 24. Targ. Ez. XXXII, 22, sq. (some ed. yinrnnp). »0 #
v. BID).— Part. iBD; f. S^»&; pi. "pop, T*tft a) (of the
'; Tosef.ib.XI(XII), 15; Y. ib.XII, (corr. ace. ; B. S. to Kel. XVIII, 3 DapO). [The phonetic
end, 13 d '31
Span nb 't> p ftfcfcl but did not Ben S. bring corrupt, of 2 into p in the Babylonian Talmud has been
sorcery from Egypt only in this way (by making incisions in reimported as Variant into Tosefta. —
For the phonetic
his flesh)? Y.Snh.VII,25 d top'3l'-JlC)",:&lu;3>-pso they did relationship between t and k, cmp. Lidd.-Scott. Gr. Diet,
to Ben S. in Lydda, when they made two scholars lie in sub lit. K.]
wait for him &c. Y. Yeb. XVI.l 5 d hot, Sabb. 1. c. (in editions
;
not controlled by censors, v. Babb. D. S. a. 1.) bsia 'D bsa T t3pm. = 1ippiX, colonnade.
,
'31 XI ppp (v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note). through a colonnade into the M. Kat. 11,13 street. Tosef.
'Ob PJHIPB P1DP a shop having an entrance from a colon-
SFlEffiD,
t : •
v. KB&fturo.
T :
nade; a. e.— PI. "pi-CD. Tosef. Kel. B. Mets. II, 8 yftJ'Wl
ed.Zuck. (ed.Zolk.ywa&m, corr. ace), v.ppiD. V.^ptTX, —
J^ril^D f. ("cp) aberration, madness. Targ.Koh.II, 15 sappix.
(ed. vlen. '1E0).
Snh. 58 b IBiOrt,
HS^D f. (C]ED) having a pustulate face. Y. Sabb.
hand.
Tanh. Haye 3, v. liapo, lapp;
v. ffbi Ex. B.
a. fr.
s. 15 "hap, flBO;
to hinder, accuse. Pesik. B. s. 13 nnK 'nsisn nms (bs) (of the culprit)and one on the other side (contrad. to
":":V"- thou art hostile to me on account of that Tufa a. Tinxba standing in front and behind). Sabb.
'="
blessing; it is given to you. lb. s. 12 a. e. (interch. with ; 134a 'm rfjtftii mmb
(v. Babb. D. S. a. 1. note 8) let
Hif. fOOt}, _Ti (with bs) to bring charges against, the borders (folds) of the garment. Koh. B. to XI, 2 yva'p
accuse. lb. s. 36 '31 vvti b? "Bia* 1X12 come, let us bring "iBD^b the two serpents placed themselves by the
. . .
charges against the Messianic generation, so that it may side (of the cave); Pesik. B'shall., p. 94 a X1Bt)b; a.fr.—
not be created. lb. '=1 E'rapa BI*iK "]i<*n how dare you [Targ. Ps. LXXTV, 6; CXLIX, 6, v. Whn.]— IL "pap,
attack &c. N*">ap, "t>, % Targ. Y. I Gen. HI, 24 (Y. II ma©, corr.
ace). Targ. Ex. XXXVII, 7, sq. Ib.XXV,14 (Y. 'S); a. fr.—
"|T2C, ")U"^" I ch same Targ-
- - Y Num. XXII, 22 f±ftah
-
[K*.ap wages, v. K'nato.]
^IlV (0. ed. Vien. "jBOpb
'
ed. Berl. "iBO?). Targ. Ps. XXXVIII, 21 "£20 Levita (ed. t\iS ""S2D m. (preced.) coming from the side. — PL
4/.). lb. CIX, 4 WOO (Ms. »Bto); a. e. ^Bp, '"p money given in settlement of another case than
a
i/lp&CK 1) same. lb. XXXVIII, 21 , v. supra.-2) (denom. the present transaction. Shebu. 42 .
of -fJC) to mislead. Yoma 20 a ^Bpifk BftflttTl IT& rrfa (not
'C^SO) has no permission to seduce to sin. D n 5j") TJtD, v. K^bD-IBO.
m
'{iq II, iq, S^DD, SOB$ '^m.(preced.)=h. pIGQIHIQu m. pi. (<JTpio|xaTa) covering for a couch,
]
yj
:
::, 1) hinderer, enemy. [Targ. 6. Num. XXII, 22; 32, v. mattresses. Koh. B. to HI, 9 (not 'pb'ranBO).
:
Hebrew diet.), v. "]"-°- Ex. B. s. 15 '3"i 'B "O 3Tca levies as soldiers strong and
sound men &c. ; Tanh. Haye 3 p2f¥*ftl "b 3^3073 (read
fDtap pr. n. ch.=h. Jiaab, Sitnah [enmity,] name of
3^roa).
a well. 'Targ. O. Gen. XXVI, 21 ed. Berl. (oth. ed. fiaattJ;
Y. Kaar). riT"|I3p f. pi., B3=Pl^-)BDK3
/
(v. K^BOK). Tanh.
P'kude 3 [read, as in ed. Warsaw:] OlDb iron *>Si31 Ubl2
^D, ra^p (Saf. of pa-a) [to cause dripping,] to
Pi.
'BS ^na KlilUJ in his fourth stage man is like the horse
scarify sycamores &c. —
Part. pass. f. pi. niBBlOp fruit
that runs in races.
burst open (naturally or through scarification). Dem I, 1
Y. ed. a. Ms. M. (ed. ffitt BWa , corr. ace.).—V. Sit^Bp. "pDlOTQbt v. j^BoiTjp.
Trnsf. original immoral condition; evil nature. Y. Ab. Yeb.65 b rtVn O^ftg (not *2 ...)='b fia what about her (my)
Zar. II, 41 a top "insiiObb nin he returned to his old con-
old age? — Trnsf. old men, elders. Tosef. Hull. II, 24 (in
dition (heathenism). Koh. R. to VII, 8 ntn 1= jWflK Hebr. diet.) '31 b^VO -bbft 'bWU ntfJBX is it possible that
1
these elders &e, v. iia^ttJ
ITlK^Db ibnBH because but for it (Samuel's forbearance) ?.
Talm. Miinz., p. 33 note). for a common meal, picnic. Pes. 89 b 'b 125S1 TOan "iBK
&O n p I ch. same. Lev.R. s.22, beg. 6&an na»ab "b fcC2 n D, v. KSab.
— :;
WD 975 msra
"O^P pr. n. '01 xv\ 'd btti rTQi the Lake of Sibkhay frU^p m. (v. at? n, cmp. XJ^aid) twig. PI. VWTQ. —
(Mero'm, Samachonitis). B. Bath. 74 1
'
(Ms. M. ^^p); Koh.R.'to V, 8 [read:] K^a *p*xb 'd the twigs (of the
Midr.Till. to Ps. XXIV; Y.KiLIX, 32 c bot. tt^T; Y.Keth. palm tree) are useful for garden hedges Lev. R. s. 22, ;
XII, 35 b bot. "QSHeh (corr. ace). Y. B. Bath. V, 15 a beg. '31 XldtJ (corr. ace; Ar. abiab WD); Yalk. yw
to Deut.
Lake
XXXIII, 23) 'D9Q iffl haC MT
^BWI BWj
this means the
(ref.
Koh.971 'pSSlia
39 c n^ffo, v. ^aid.]
m
"|3blA K3Ta (corr. ace.).— [Y. Ab.Zar.
of S.— Targ. Y.I Deut. 1. c. Tosef.B. Kam. 1,
fcCTO, SrilD f. l)=KrWb. Targ. Gen. XLH, 38 *p3 p, &sS^iTp> SO ch. same, affliction, misery.
(0. some ed. "no)! Targ.JobXV,32 (ed.Wil. Tab); a.fr.— Targ.Is.VHI,21. Ib.XLI,17; a.fr—P/."pBW*, '5b. Targ.
2) eldership, receiving the title of 830. Y. Bice. Ill, 65 d Y. Gen. XLI, 52.
i-llM rhnatt? )-0 m? 3rol (not am) and he informed him
therein of his (expected) appointment as elder.— PI. Wb, JHI^D, Y. Meg. H, 73 a bot., read: fWttX
'3d. lb. Ol dip 'd yV« "pSQ for the sake of those appoint-
D1IPD, Gen. R. s. 52 some ed., v. d^d.
ments (which will take place), rise, come to &c.
S^U I m. (b. h.; Hid) [that which is to be removed; Sb^D m .pl *iyt> (bad, cmp. biad) [bunch of] violets
[Ar. s. v. 135: root of the Cyperus rotundus, v. Low Pfl.;
cmp. S^IS,] dross, base metal; refuse. Bekh. 51 a xVa
p. 269]. Targ. Y. Num. XXI, 12.— Snh. 99 b (expl. d^lll,
fTff3& 'd SOd" Ar. (ed. Ma*d) in order that one may not
1
them base metal (ref. to Ez. XXII, 18). Midr. Till, to Ps. B'midb. 2 Var. 'at3 (some ed. 'aid), v. pad3d.—Y'lamd.
CXIX, 119) 'd !-iU«a d"<&58n bsi* ed. Bub. (ed. d"»aid maw, to Num. I, quot. in Ar. Xd"m rra3 dliaad a"5 3ri13 (read
corr. ace.) after he has eaten the grapes, it (the cluster) 'jld^a . . . awa^d . . .) writes on the sigma the number
becomes refuse. of courses.
TOII m. (v. iad I; cmp. M^Mb; for the apocopate fcOrp I, v. v>d.
form cmp. 51 a. MSI) groicth, sproutings, esp. luxuriant
growth (in good or bad sense). Tosef. Ukts. 1, 2 (T'bul SjTD, 'SO II, 'd 1S3 pr. n. pi. Wfar Signa (cmp.
Yom IH) mbsiDtf bia 'bM the foliage covering the clusters p33dj. Tosef] Ter. IH, 18
' wad1S3 ed. Zuck. (Var. 'd '33).
of grapes, niBSI bii: the cobweb-like covering of fruits; Kei. V, 4 Maa^d, ('ad). Men. VHI, 6 (86 b ).—Eduy. VH. 8
Ukts. 1,2.— H. tW?', b**b> Deut. B.s. 3 (ref. to Deut. ^ra^d ")3 Ms! M. (ed. ^aad).
VII, 13) V\ 'd It-mix ''IS fra as the fruit of thy ground
W^&III.v.xa^aid.
be of luxuriant growth, so will be the fruit of thy
will
womb (strong people). Num. R. s. 16; Tanh. Sh'lah 12 ^S^Tp, H^^p, v. preced. art.
(ref. to Is. XVH, on the
11) 'o drPttJS (i) . . . 132KUJ dVtl
day that he intended to plant you in the land, you became
D^DJTp, p^^p, 'SO m. (signum, (Ji'yvov S.) 1) sign,
ensign, banner. Gen. R. I2d s. 6, end 'd MM MUM nittJia
a luxuriant growth (degenerated); Num. R. s. 7. [Sifra — Koh. daad, read diaad) the Book of
'31 5T151!T«b (Ar. ed.
Sh'mini, oh. VH, Par. 6, v. aid II.].
Deuteronomy was to Joshua a (commander's) banner
JTO,
t
KJPD,
tt
: :
v. a">id,
t i»
w*b.
t T ;
...he took it up and showed it to the sun &c; Yalk.
123*
— ;
Josh. 22 »1»W «aU5(corr.acc). Ex.R.s.45 '31 btt5 61336 bd3 (not 01116) for this (the section of Amalek) is the order
(some ed.d336;corr. ace.) the commander (of the mutinous of the day. — [In later Hebr. '6=nbsn '6, the order of
legion) took the royal ensign and fled.; Yalk. Ex. 394 ^3316 prayers, Prayerbook.] — 2) piling up, putting in order,
(pi.) ;
Tanh., ed. Bub., Ki Thissa 1
5 ; Y'lamd. to Num. X, 2, esp. on the altar, the golden table &e, opp.plb*6, removal.
quot.in Ar.'31 6^356 1^63 they (thesingulare8,\.)^bii'q) took Yoma "pa.^p '6 the putting (on the show-bread) of the
24 1
'
the ensigns &C.—PI. 6*3316, "JWe, '50 (v. Boprajj rrt»?J"<?, frankincense from the vessels; d*13*X '6 the offering of
';6. Cant. R. to I, 9 '31 BhV» '6 bd3 the Lord took away the sacrificial parts. Men. XI, 6 d*3p '6 the arrangement
their (the Egyptians') ensigns &e; Yalk. Ex. 232; Tanh. of the tubes for the show-bread. Ib. 29 a , a. e. lplVo
B'shall. 23 ni31"»3.6 (some ed. rvn3*336, corr. ace); Mekh. 1111*63 when it (the show-bread) was removed, it was
B'shall., s. 2 niB3.a (Var. rmsaa, corr. ace; v. StBSa); Y. as fresh as when it was put on; a. fr.— 3) [that which is
Sot. VIII, 22 b bot. inblUdSSiD ^BMl (corr. ace, or DWG).— arranged before a person,] offering, present. Lev. R. s. 9
Midr. Till, to Ps. XX, end ibia ^336 -[lira ihl 1*3a ed. 11115 1^6 take what he has brought as his tribute.
Bub., not -jiaSG ; oth. ed. 1*336 b3a 1^51, read : '6 "]ina 1^31) 4) the daily ration.— PI. 6*111*6. Ib. s.5 ail Via '6 the
recognises his regiment by its colors; Yalk. Ps. 681 'pa', 6.— portions (of honey) designated for the bear (in the
[Tosef. Ab. Zar.V(VI), 1 'pttPWl some ed., read with ed. vivarium).— 5) (=^1?) determination of a maw's obligation
Zuck. ywan.] — 2) watchword, signal. Snh. 89 a inx '6 (to the sanctuary dec.) based upon his financial ability (v.
inx '63 .... nblS the same watchword (divine oracle) is 116 Pi. 2); exemption from seizure. B. Mets. 1 13 b Ip^S
passed to many prophets, but no two prophets prophesy 3*1*3 "paisa '6 the original exemption law is stated with
under the same watchword (use the very same ex- reference to vows (Lev. XXVII, 8). Y. Naz. II, 51 d bot.
pressions). — 3) sign in the heavens, constellation; v. '31 *^2> 111113 if one said (pointing to a person), 'I vow his
|
Mil D I m. (13b, Pi. to surrender, cmp. I Sam.
XXI, 23. Targ. Esth. II, 15 (h. text lift). — PI. JTflplt?,
the king, must renounce his father &c; Pesik. R. s. 23 24 — "pTp, v P ??-
-
1
8PTD,
It : •
v. Np16.
't s
•
Neg., c'h.II, Par. 2; Neg. 1,1 tewi '63 (white color) like
huckster (who cannot lay in stock for a year), 'and thou
the plaster of the Temple walls (less intense than snow),
lb. 2 ; Sifra "pnBh the mixture of red and
1. c. '31 '63123
shalt have no assurance of thy life' that is, he who —
buys from the shop-keeper; ib. Ill, 47 c *pl*H (corr. ace)
white colors (in plagues) resembles blood mixed with
Y. Sabb. VIII, ll a bot.; Esth. R. introd., beg.;
—
milk a. fr. Esp. lime or orpiment used as a depilatory
;
(during Passover) must be burnt ; expl. I*pl6 1313>n3 , v. forbidden fruits one day; ib. II, 22 c top St*3113 (corr.
pn6; ib. 48 b ; Mekh. Bo s. 9; a. e. ace); Y. Keth. I,25 d bot. trQTto ('1*6); a. fr.— Y. Kil.
/>!
II, beg. 27 c (in Chald. diet.) *pl'*63 in the market-stand.
"flTp, Jp I m. (116), corresp. to b. h. flSjg, 1) ar-
rangement, order. Gen. R.s. 32 dVii> btt) illlid the natural rPp I^D, "Ip f. 1) same, v. preced. — 2) (adj.) very
order, v. yi^t? II. Y. Meg. IV, 75 a bot. dl* bttJ 11116 yrtVB fine. Erub. 53 a '6 ana 3p3 the eye of a very fine needle.
— —
an-no 977 KPffitftC
tTD, v. TOG.
SriTD, Pesik. Shek., p.ll a read: , WW.
itd,
T -
hitd,
T T -
v rm>.
.
T -
nSI^&m. of Siva. Nidd. 20 a ID Kffliata (Ar-KB^d,
Var. Nitre, v. Ar. ed. Koh. s. v. N3^6 a. W«B) of the niTp, HITI*} f. (b. h. %\ fi16) talk, conversation.
dark color of a Siva cloak; [oth. opin.: dirty-dark, v. B. Bath. 78 b HW 'd IfiS ipTWttl me W* ilp ^BNI and
Ar. 1. c.]. why do they call a young ass sayyahl Because it follows
a persuasive talk (of itsmust driver, Avhereas the old ass
CM*
T
f., constr. PS'Pp (3.16 I) fencing in, protection.
be struck). ms, Num. XXI, 27) dX
Ib. (play on "jlh^d
Targ. Mic. VII, 4.
n&O 'd 1HK -^iiattJ TO
d">bB if a man makes him- . . .
self like (is as obedient as) the young ass that follows
TPD m. (116) a coat of whitewash. B. Bath. 53 b .
&c. Ib. (play on IS ib. 28) SlM 'B lisp intf -^Hart rrr . . .
89 a ); a. e.
C$E*PD
T
ch. same. B. Bath. 22 a '03 11.1 tfbl dltiJa he-
•
cause they had not been present at the final lecture of "n D
m. (nnd, v. ^rip) swimming. Yoma 77 b bld^
Raba's course; [oth. opin.: at the final meeting when the 'D3 ISI^BSyou might think one could cross the river
11
election of the chief of the academy was held]. by swimming; Yalk. Ez. 381 TIU03 (read: ^niU3).
1TD m. (b. h.) Sivan, the third month of the Hebrew JIM p (b. h.) pr. n. m. Sihon, King of the Amorites.
calendar, of thirty days, varying between the tenth of Hull. 60 b ; Gitt. 38 a '63 T*W BXlal -{vaBf the districts of
May and the eighth of July. Targ. Esth. VIII, 9. Targ. Ammon and Moab became permitted (a legitimate con-
IIEsth. Ill, 7; a. e.— Sabb.87 b R. Hash. 7 b '31 '63 nttitt)
.
quest) to the Israelites through Sihon (who had con-
the sixth of S. is the New Year for the two loaves (the quered them from Ammon and Moab, and from whom
wheat crop); a. e. Israel took them by the right of conquest). B. Bath. 78 b ,
v. mpp; a. fr.— [Gen. R. s. 12 •JIM'* IBB (some ed. "pm&;
?^& m. (rp) help, assistance. Y. Sabb. XVIII, end, oth. ^imia), v. fttnfc]
16 c (ref! to pisea, Mish. ib. 3) '5fi 1.1T ^X wherein does
the assistance (rendered to travailing animals) consist ? Lev. H Dm, (d16; cmp. B^pn), only with art. Bip.1 (cmp.
R. s.24 '6^> 135033115 13 jWIK '6 jtfm '& dittrt> . . . mniM dK ytii) [sivinging the forefinger, cmp. the expression *V fiB3,]
'31 when the spirits that are not made dependent on hassit, the distancebetween the tip of the thumb and that
assistance, require assistance, how much more do we of the index finger when held apart, or between the root
(human beings) who are made dependent on assistance &c. of the thumb and the tip of the index finger, when the
Ib. (ref. to "jlSdi . . "pre, Ps. XX, 3) '31 '61 mw help and former is leaning against the latter (*)1B3). [Commentators
assistance come from Zion. Esth. R. to I, 1 ^19 "jWpb "Ol differ in the definition of our w. Maim, to Kel. XIH, 4 —
'31does the Lord need the assistance of the nations? distinguishes between '6rt s6a a. '6!i am &6a.] Sabb.
Ex. R. s. 43 '6 -|b lias they have given thee (the Lord) XIII, 4 blS3 'en 3m
&6a3 the double size of a hassit;
a
an assistant (in the golden calf) ; a. e. ib. 106 ViBB Ifia dpr 31 R. J. showed the double measure
?1*p, S^I'D, 'VO ch. same. Targ. Job VI, 13. Targ. the single measure (Ar. with the thumb stretched) Tosef.: ;
Y. Gen. XLIX, 25; a. e.' ib. IX (X), 3 blB3 '6.1 &6a. Orl. 111,2; a. fr.— Num. R.
s. 18; Tanh. Huck. 1 '31 13 ttJi '6M i6a within a distance
SD^D m. (B16II) 1) ending, failing. Targ. Y. II Deut. of a hassit (in the human head) there are several wells
XXVIII, 65 -pS^S C]1*6 (not S)1B^) failing of eye-sight.— (seats of mucous secretions).
2) pi. constr. iB1*p the fruit left to the end, late fruit.
Targ. Am. VHI, 1, sq. (ed. Lag. *V*#, "^p). Targ. Mic. KFlQ^tSPp, USD f.(dBp)seaZ, signet ring. Targ.Y.Gen.
VII, 1 (h. text iSDX) ; v. 6,16. XXXVIII, 18. Targ. Esth. VIII, 2; a. e.— B. Mets.74 a *im
: ; — ;
K^Sp '0 putting the seal (mark) on the wine bought gives
IT;&, iTp m. foal, young ass. B. Bath. V, 3. Ib. 78 b ,
possession.
v. nmj, R. Hash. 3 a '31 'C>b rraVilO "pHiO he was named
TltS^p m. (aiTioVY);) corn-merchant, in gen. wholesale Sihon, because he was (quick or untamed) as a foal in
provision dealer, contrad. to "^lin shop-keeper, and bs>3 the desert. Pesik. Ekha, p. 123 a v.fiBS;
, a. e.— PI. WJ^
rYOn the producer. B. Bath. V, 10. Tosef. Dem. Ill, 13; )*VT*b. Y. Taan. n, 65 b '31 JTTOIWIfl &13B2S '0 foals
a. fr.— PI. niiiim Dem. II, 4 '31 i-Dtal 'Dn the wholesale (sucklings) within and their mothers without; (Bab. ib.
provision merchants and the corn dealers. Kel. XII, 16 a fYHbtlhl ..niannn). Y.B.Mets.II,8 c bot. [read:] KblO
1
a. e.— [Midr. Till, to Ps. XXIII -,1'jibn, v. "paS^X.] 'ob ftUD . . . bi3Ki he must not feed foals with a foal . . .
read: Ntjb^b
T
m. pi. (ai- fctrP^U- m. swimmer, v. Kuno.
t -
T :
' :
D^D, v. Sib.
Yalk. Gen. 16, a. Is. 356 fW^&a). [Nidd. 20 a K3Ht3 Ar. —
ed. Koh., v. fiXlib.]
T T - T T -
fc^JP m. (v. &#W?) help. Targ. Lam. IV, 17.
fcG^D, v. rwit.
TT
^^P* 'S^D f. 1) same. Targ. Ps.XLVI,2 (ed. Wil.
X^O, JP& m. (510 I) fence, hedge. Orl. 1, 1 tb StolSh KWW3, KtCpp).— Kiatt)1 '0, Ki»10 )"Q '0 divine assist-
'read
he that plants for the sake of forming a hedge (not for ance, providential grant. B.Bath.55 a v.ip&i^K. Meg. 6 b ,
the fruit); a. fr. — Trnsf. (cmp. T]S) guard, preventive Kill '10 "p 'D success depends on divine grace (not on man's
measure, protection. Nidd. 3 b . "p^aib "o H103> li-pai
. . work alone); a. e. 2) support of an argument, con- —
'0 "pi'iaSH but at least set a guard to thy words (add a firmation, opp. WOW
refutation. B. Mets. 48 a Kb VOp
restriction), for wherein does this case differ from other '0 Kbl Knaiin (Ms.F.a.R.2 .. fiiraiin ..) no argu- fiWS
Biblical laws around which we (theKabbis) place a fence ? ment either against or in favor of his opinion could be
Y. ib. I, beg. 48 d Ab. d'R. N. ch. I, v. Wo I. Ab. 1, 1 1109
. derived from the text.
rtlinb '0 make a fence around the Law. Ib. Ill, 13 mit>a
'31 '0, v. rrti&a; 1101S>b '& nillOSa tithe-giving is a preserver
PpO, tp£ m . (q!, B n) sword. Kel. XUI, 1. Ib. XIV, 5.