Mishnah
Mishnah

Commento su Miqwa'ot 6:4

הַסְּפוֹג וְהַדְּלִי שֶׁהָיוּ בָהֶן שְׁלשָׁה לֻגִּין מַיִם וְנָפְלוּ לַמִּקְוֶה, לֹא פְסָלוּהוּ, שֶׁלֹּא אָמְרוּ אֶלָּא שְׁלשָׁה לֻגִּין שֶׁנָּפְלוּ:

Per quanto riguarda una spugna o un secchio che conteneva tre tronchi [un'unità specifica di misurazione del liquido] di acqua [aspirata], se cadessero in una mikvah [che non contiene quaranta se'ah di acqua valida], non rendono non è valido, poiché [i saggi] hanno solo detto "tre tronchi caduti" [in un mikveh incompleto lo invalidano; ma in questi casi, non tutti i tre tronchi d'acqua sono mai caduti nel mikveh , poiché alcuni rimangono all'interno della spugna o del secchio].

Bartenura on Mishnah Mikvaot

שהיו בהן שלשה לוגין מים – absorbed and attached to them (i.e., the sponge and/or the bucket), but they are not apparent to the eye, therefore, the Rabbis did not decree that this is not called “that they fell.”
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English Explanation of Mishnah Mikvaot

If a sponge or a bucket containing three logs of water fell into a mikveh, they do not make it invalid, because they have only said: "if three logs fell in." This mishnah is a great example of how some later rabbis read and expound upon statements made by earlier sages. The earlier sages said that if three logs of drawn water fall into a mikveh that doesn't have forty logs of water, they render it invalid. The rabbis of our mishnah say that there must be three actual logs of water that fall into the mikveh, not a sponge or a bucket containing three logs of water. Note that the mouth of the bucket must be thinner than the tube of a water-skin. If not, we are in the situation in mishnah two of this chapter and we consider the two sources to be joined.
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