Mishnah
Mishnah

Related for Kiddushin 2:10

הַמְקַדֵּשׁ בִּתְרוּמוֹת וּבְמַעַשְׂרוֹת וּבְמַתָּנוֹת וּבְמֵי חַטָּאת וּבְאֵפֶר חַטָּאת, הֲרֵי זוֹ מְקֻדֶּשֶׁת, וַאֲפִלּוּ יִשְׂרָאֵל:

If one betroths a woman with terumoth [terumah gedolah and terumath ma'aser], or with ma'aseroth [ma'aser rishon and ma'aser ani], or with (priestly) gifts [shoulder, cheeks, and maw], or with the waters of the [ashes] of the red heifer [They can be sold to those who are unclean, for (the exertion of) bringing or filling; but it is forbidden to take a fee for sprinkling or kiddush, i.e., placing the ashes in the water.], or with the ashes of the red heifer — she is betrothed. And even an Israelite. [This is what is intended: Even an Israelite to whom terumoth and (priestly) gifts fell from the house of his mother's father, a Cohein, which he (the Israelite) acquired, and which he can sell to Cohanim — if he betrothed a woman with them, she is betrothed. And even if terumah did not fall to him, but tevel, from which terumah had not yet been taken, since the one from whom he inherits it, a Cohein, was to have taken terumah, which would revert to him — this Israelite, too, who inherits it, separates the terumah, which, being his, he can sell to Cohanim. For gifts which were not yet taken are regarded as having been taken."]

Tosefta Kiddushin

A man who betroths a woman with idolatrous wine, with an idol, with [something belonging to] an idolatrous city [that was destroyed and everything in it turned to herem] or one of its inhabitants, with idolatrous skins, with an ashera [tree] or with its fruit, with the base [of an idolatrous altar] or what is upon it, with a markulis [stone altar to Mercury outside of houses or on roads] or what is upon it, or with anything upon which falls [the law of] forbidden [benefit from] idols—all of them, even if he sould them and betrothed [a wife] with their value—she is not betrothed. With the purifying waters or with purifying dust [from the red heifer ritual]—she is betrothed. (Rabbi Yehudah says:) If there is in the profits something worth a perutah [if you can generate incidental value from them, e.g. getting paid to move them from one place to another]—she is betrothed; but if not—she is not betrothed.
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