Study Bekhorot folio 3A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
What, is the baraita not referring to the animal when it prohibits giving it in receivership? If so, the baraita prohibits giving it to the non-Jew in exchange for half the rights to future fetuses, and certainly giving the non-Jew rights to all the future fetuses would be forbidden. The Talmud resp
The Talmud comments: The language of the baraita is also precise, as it teaches: The rabbis penalize him up to 10 times its value [damav], in masculine form, indicating that it is referring to the fetus and not the mother. The Talmud affirms: Learn from it that this is correct, and it cannot be pr
The Talmud comments that the language of the baraita: The rabbis penalize him up to 10 times its value, supports the opinion of Reish Lakish, as Reish Lakish says: In the case of one who sells large livestock to a non-Jew, the rabbis penalize him, requiring him to repurchase it from the non-Jew f
The Talmud asks: Does the phrase: For up to 10 times its value, mean specifically this amount and no more, or does it not mean specifically this amount? The Talmud suggests: Come and hear a proof from that which R' Yehoshua ben Levi says: In the case of one who sells his Canaanite slave to a non-Je
And there are those who say that there is another version of the previous discussion: Reish Lakish says that in the case of one who sells large livestock to a non-Jew, the rabbis penalize him, requiring him to repurchase it from the non-Jew for up to 100 times its value. We learned in a baraita: A