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Related do Bawa batra 9:12

Tosefta Bikkurim

The ways in which he is like men: He imparts impurity with white discharge like men. He marries but is not married (נישא not נושא), like men. And he may not seclude himself with women, like men. And he is not provided sustenance (ניזון not נתזן) along with [a person's] daughters, like men. And he does not [permit himself to] become impure by the dead, like men (i.e., male priests). He is subject to transgressing the prohibition against "rounding off [the corners of the head]" (Lev. 19:27) and [if he is a priest] he is subject to transgressing the prohibition against "defiling oneself with the dead" (Lev. 21:1), like men, and he is liable for performing all the commandments in the Torah, like men.
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Tosefta Bikkurim

Ways that he is like both men and women: One who strikes him is liable, as with men and women. One who willfully kills him is executed, and one who unintentionally kills him is exiled to the cities of refuge. [After he is born,] his mother observes the period of blood-purity, as with men and women (see Niddah 28a:15), and she brings a sacrifice, as with men and women. And he possesses all the rights of inheritance, as with men and women. And he partakes of a portion of the priestly gifts of the countryside (e.g., the shankbone, maw, and jaw, Deut. 18:3) like men and women, and if someone said "Behold, I will become a nazirite if this one is neither a man nor a woman," behold he has become a nazirite.
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Tosefta Ketubot

A man who dies and leaves sons and daughters, when the property is large, the sons inherit and the daughters are fed and supported. How do the sons inherit? They [the court] don't say: "If their father were still alive, he would have given them X"—rather, they see each one as if he were their still living father [at the same social status], and pay them. How are the daughters fed and supported? They don't say: "If their father were still alive, he would have given them X"—rather, they see them as they are [now in social status] and so how much they need support, and pay them. Rabbi says: Each of [the daughters] takes a tenth of the property. Rabbi Yehudah says: If he married off his first daughter [with a certain dowry], he has to give to the second like what he gave to the first. They said to him: There are those who marry off their daughter and receive money, and those who marry off their daughter and pay after her money. And so Rabbi Yehudah used to say: One who marries off his daughter without explicit [stipulation of a dowry], he should not give her less than 5 selaim, for in the old days that was enough to buy for her everything she needs.
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Tosefta Ketubot

If he wrote [in a contract] to financially support his wife's daughter [after his death], or his wife's son—behold, they are like creditors and take precedence over everyone else [like the people collecting the ketubah payments in the previous halakhah]. He shouldn't say to them: "Go and do work, and I will support you", but rather they [can merely] sit [idly] and are elligible for financial support. If he wrote to support his wife's daughter and she gave him a receipt [that she doesn't need this], he (sic!, should read "הימנה") does not have the power [to decide on behalf of her minor children that they shouldn't receive financial support], for they act for a minor's benefit but they do not act for a minor's disadvantage.
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