Study Shabbat folio 6B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
a 10-handbreadth high post from here, perpendicular to the public domain. This creates a symbolic wall which, in the halakhot of alleyways, has the legal status of a wall. And, he may place an additional post from here, on the other side, and that has the same legal status as if he closed the pub
The Talmud questions the language of the Tosefta: This is a full-fledged private domain. And why did they call it full-fledged? The Talmud answers: Lest you say: When do the Rabbis disagree with R' Yehuda and say that it is not the private domain? This applies only with regard to the prohibition to
It was also taught in the Tosefta with regard to the definition of a public domain that the Master said, with added emphasis: This is the public domain. The Talmud asks: What was this emphasis added to exclude? The Talmud answers: Here, the Tosefta came to exclude another halakha of R' Yehuda. As
The Talmud asks: And why do they call it full-fledged? The Talmud answers: This emphasis was unnecessary. But, since he taught the first clause of the Tosefta employing the term full-fledged, he also taught the latter section employing the term full-fledged in the interest of uniformity.
With regard to the places characterized as the public domain, the Talmud asks: And include the desert among the places considered a public domain? Wasn’t it taught in a different baraita: What is the public domain? A main street, and a large plaza, and open alleyways, and the desert? Abaye said: Th