Study Ketubot folio 36A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
actual forbidden relatives prohibited by Torah law, and secondary relatives means, as it does in most cases, relatives prohibited by rabbinic law, that cannot be, for since those secondary relatives are suitable for him to marry and are not prohibited by Torah law, why do they not receive a fine if
Some say that we can explain that forbidden relatives refers to all relatives with whom sex are forbidden by severe prohibitions, both those for which one is liable to death by the court and those for which he is liable to karet, and secondary relatives refers to those relatives with whom one who e
§ The baraita stated: A girl who refuses to remain married to her husband receives neither payment of a fine for rape nor payment of a fine for seduction, because she was married and therefore lost her presumptive status as a virgin. The Talmud infers: But an ordinary minor girl has a fine for rape
And if you say that the entire baraita is in accordance with the opinion of R' Meir, and with regard to a girl who refuses to remain married R' Meir holds in accordance with the opinion of R' Yehuda, that not only a minor girl but a young woman may also end her marriage through refusal, and the bar
Rather, the Talmud suggests: The baraita is in accordance with the opinion of R' Yehuda, and with regard to a minor girl, he holds in accordance with the opinion of R' Meir, who says that a minor girl does not receive payment of a fine for rape, and therefore, an ailonit is not entitled to payment.