mishnah|mishnayoth in English

noun

part of the Talmud consisting of a collection of oral religious laws of Judaism (Hebrew)

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1. Bounderish sideslipped Mishnayoth Cebus zibelines septenary cacotrichia unqualifiedness Hesperian

2. Fleche tetractinose Anaboly tagasaste Mishnah unboastfully hypergenetic otoconial

3. Introduces Mishnah, the oral law of Judaism received by Moses from God at Mount Sinai.

4. The TAlmud consists of what are known as the Gemara and the Mishnah.

5. It was later written down in two books called the Mishnah and the Talmud.

6. The Mishnah says: “Inside the Temple Mount was a latticed railing (the Soreg), ten hand-breadths high.”

7. And prophets handed it on to the men of the great assembly.” —Avot 1:1, the Mishnah.

8. (Mishnah) To stand favorably in judgment, their concern was “to achieve merits which would outweigh sins.”

9. According to the Mishnah, the regular Temple orchestra consisted of twelve instruments, and a choir of twelve male singers.

10. The distinction between halakha and Aggadah was one that existed at least from the time of the Mishnah and Gemara

11. The Mishnah says: “When Rabban Gamaliel the Elder died, the glory of the Law ceased and purity and abstinence died.”

12. But in the Mishnah we find a list of 39 activities forbidden by the rabbis on the Sabbath.—Shabbat 7:2.

13. This new spiritual framework was outlined in the Mishnah, compiled by Judah ha-Nasi by the beginning of the third century C.E.

14. The Mishnah was meant to be an outline of the oral law for further debate, a skeletal form, or basic structure, on which to build.

15. The first sage for whom the Mishnah uses the title of rabbi was Yohanan ben Zakkai, active in the early-to-mid first century CE.

16. Concerning him the Mishnah (Sotah 9:15) says: “When Rabban Gamaliel the Elder died, the glory of the Law ceased and purity and abstinence died.”

17. Whereas the Bible enumerates only 12 disqualifying Blemishes in animals and 12 in the case of a priest, the Mishnah subdivides them in the minutest detail

18. TAlmud (literally, “study”) is the generic term for the documents that comment and expand upon the Mishnah (“repeating”), the first work of rabbinic law, published around the year 200 CE by Rabbi Judah the Patriarch in the land of Israel

19. The Legends of the Jews by Rabbi Louis Ginzberg, is an original synthesis of a vast amount of aggadah from the Mishnah, the two Talmuds and Midrash.Ginzberg had an encyclopedic knowledge of all rabbinic literature, and his masterwork included a massive array of Aggadot.

20. Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the Afikoman, a half-piece of matza that gets "stolen" and hidden during the Seder ceremony and then is found and ritually eaten for dessert, is that its origin is a dictate in the Mishnah, which explicitly states: "One should not have any Afikoman after the Passover sacrifice" (Pesahim 10:8).

21. The answer is written in Gemara and Poskim: Our Rabbis have taught: All the restrictions that apply to the mourner hold equally good of the Ninth of Ab It is also forbidden [thereon] to read the Law (Pentateuch) {they rejoicing the hearth}, the Prophets, and the Hagiographa or to study Mishnah, Talmud, Midrash, Halachoth, or Aggadoth; he may, however, read such parts of Scripture which he