Mishnah
Mishnah

Tosefta for Terumot 9:6

הַטֶּבֶל, גִּדּוּלָיו מֻתָּרִין בְּדָבָר שֶׁזַּרְעוֹ כָלֶה. אֲבָל בְּדָבָר שֶׁאֵין זַרְעוֹ כָלֶה, גִּדּוּלֵי גִדּוּלִין, אֲסוּרִין. אֵיזֶהוּ דָבָר שֶׁאֵין זַרְעוֹ כָלֶה, כְּגוֹן הַלּוּף וְהַשּׁוּם וְהַבְּצָלִים. רַבִּי יְהוּדָה אוֹמֵר, הַשּׁוּם, כַּשְּׂעוֹרִים:

Non-tithed produce, its growths are permissible in a kind whose seed disintegrates. But in a kind whose seed does not disintegrate, [even] the growths of its growths are forbidden. Which is a kind whose seed does not disintegrate? For instance, <i>Luf</i> [plant], garlic, and onions. Rabbi Yehudah says: onions are like barley.

Tosefta Bikkurim

And so too Rabbi Shimon would say, [the Sages] did not state that produce that grows from [the seeds of] first fruits must be eaten in Jerusalem. "Tithes" -- about which "tithes" did they speak [when the Sages ruled that aftergrowths must be treated as tithes (see Ter. 9:6)]? [They ruled that aftergrowths are treated as tithes only] with regards to anything whose seed disintegrates [after planting], with regards to [produce] that is taken in and out of Jerusalem, with regards to [produce] that does not have the value of a perutah, and with regards to [produce] that is not [subject to the laws of] redemption. Rabbi Shimon ben Yehuda says in the name of Rabbi Shimon, one is not liable [to bring] first fruits that are attached to the ground.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Tosefta Terumot

These are the types of chasiot (=plants belonging to the leek family): the lof, the garlic, and the onions, and the porrets. Rabbi Yehuda says, there are no "types" of chasiot except for porrets.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Previous VerseFull ChapterNext Verse