Mishnah
Mishnah

Talmud for Kilayim 3:2

כָּל מִין זְרָעִים אֵין זוֹרְעִים בַּעֲרוּגָה, וְכָל מִין יְרָקוֹת זוֹרְעִין בַּעֲרוּגָה. חַרְדָּל וַאֲפוּנִים הַשּׁוּפִין, מִין זְרָעִים. אֲפוּנִים הַגַּמְלָנִים, מִין יָרָק. גְּבוּל שֶׁהָיָה גָבוֹהַּ טֶפַח וְנִתְמַעֵט, כָּשֵׁר, שֶׁהָיָה כָשֵׁר מִתְּחִלָּתוֹ. הַתֶּלֶם וְאַמַּת הַמַּיִם שֶׁהֵם עֲמֻקִּים טֶפַח, זוֹרְעִים לְתוֹכָן שְׁלֹשָׁה זֵרְעוֹנִין, אֶחָד מִכָּאן, וְאֶחָד מִכָּאן, וְאֶחָד בָּאֶמְצַע:

It is forbidded to sow [different] species [of seeds that are normally grown in large fields] in one bed, but [diffrent] species of herbs may be sown in one bed. Mustard and small peas are [considered] seeds, [while] large peas are [considered] herbs. [If] a border [around a bed] that had been one handbreadth high was lowered, it remains valid, because it was originally valid. A furrow or a [dried up] water channel that are one handbreadth deep, one may sow three [different] species of seeds, one [species] on one side, and one [species] on the other side and one in the middle.

Jerusalem Talmud Peah

It happened that someone sowed a seah of peas and it produced 300 seah. They said to him, the Holy One, praise to Him, has started to bless you. He answered, get away from here, if bad dew had not descended on it, it would have produced twice as much.
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Jerusalem Talmud Sheviit

MISHNAH: Rice, millet, poppies, and sesame that took root before the New Year are tithed for the past year and are permitted in the Sabbatical year58They may be treated as private property of the farmer and be harvested during the Sabbatical year. If tithes are given for this crop from another place, it must be from produce of the preceding year.. Otherwise they are forbidden in the Sabbatical59Forbidden to be harvested and stored as seeds but permitted to be taken by everybody. and tithed for the coming year60In a year not Sabbatical..
Rebbi Simeon from Shezur says, Egyptian bean which one sowed originally for its beans has the same rules70This refers to the next Mishnah, that according to some opinions, Egyptian beans (cf. Kilaim Chapter 1, Note 45) follow the rules of rice. Now beans can be planted either as produce for their beans or as vegetable for their pods. The obligations of a field of beans therefore are determined by the intentions of the farmer. If the farmer changes his mind during the growing season then, as it is stated in Tosephta 2:5, R. Simeon from Shezur, whose opinion is reported in Mishnah 8, is of the opinion that now produce and vegetable are inseparably mixed in the ripe bean pod and that after “threshing”, separating the beans from their pods, beans and pods have to be mixed for the purpose of taking common heave. The baraita quoted here explains the same in different wording; for the full text see Note 84. The objection here already implies the ruling given in Halakhah 8 that practice follows R. Simeon from Shezur. {In the Babli, Roš Haššanah13b, a baraita is quoted closer to the Tosephta.}. Rebbi Simeon says, large peas have the same rules. Rebbi Eleazar says, [only] large peas when they formed pods before the New Year.
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Jerusalem Talmud Sheviit

What means תרמילו? They produced pockets78R. S. Lieberman (Tosefta ki-fshutah p. 502) explains as Greek καλύκιον, “small calyx, pod, seed pouch”, with an exchange of liquids n-l..
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