Study Nedarim folio 25B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
Mishnah: What are examples of vows that are unintentional that are dissolved, as taught at the beginning of the chapter? One who vows: This loaf is forbidden to me as if it were an offering [konam] if I ate or if I drank, and then he remembers that he ate or drank. Or, one who vows: This loaf is k
The Mishnah lists another example of an unintentional vow: One who saw people entering his courtyard and eating figs, and because he did not want them to do so he said: The figs are forbidden to you like an offering. And then it was found that his father and brother were in the group, and there wer
Talmud: A baraita states: Just as vows that are unintentional are dissolved, so too, oaths that are unintentional are dissolved. The Talmud asks: What are the circumstances of unintentional oaths? For example: as in the incident of Rav Kahana and Rav Asi, who disagreed about a halakha. During th
With regard to the Mishnah’s statement: One who saw them eating, the Talmud states that we learned in a Mishnah there (66a): If one vows to fast or not to eat a certain food, dissolution is broached based on Shabbatot and based on Festivals, since one certainly did not intend to include these days
Rabba said: Everyone in the Mishnah, i.e., Beit Shammai and Beit Hillel, holds that wherever one says: Had I known that my father was among you I would have said: All of you are prohibited from eating figs except for father, then in that case all are prohibited from doing so and his father is permit