Mishnah
Mishnah

Tosefta sobre Peah 2:7

שָׂדֶה שֶׁקְּצָרוּהָ כּוּתִים, קְצָרוּהָ לִסְטִים, קִרְסְמוּהָ נְמָלִים, שְׁבָרַתָּהּ הָרוּחַ אוֹ בְהֵמָה, פְּטוּרָה. קָצַר חֶצְיָהּ וְקָצְרוּ לִסְטִים חֶצְיָהּ, פְּטוּרָה, שֶׁחוֹבַת הַפֵּאָה בַּקָּמָה:

Se um campo foi colhido por não-judeus, colhido por ladrões, mastigado por formigas ou quebrado por animais do vento, é isento [de Peah ]. Se ele [o proprietário] colheu metade e [então] ladrões colheram metade, é isento, uma vez que a obrigação de Peah se aplica apenas a grãos em pé.

Tosefta Peah

The following divide a field for Peah (see Peah 2:1, following Kulp tr.): a stream, a pool, a private road, a public road, a public path, a private path in constant use in summer and the rainy season, fallow land, a plowed field, and a different seed, and the harvest [specifically done] for animal fodder, and three furrows of newly broken land (see Kilayim 2:6), and a water channel that makes harvesting on one side impossible (see Peah 2:2). Rabbi Yehudah says, if he [is able to] stand in the middle and harvest on both sides, it divides [a field for Peah], but if not, then it does not divide. [If] it was devoured by chagav (a species of locust), devoured by govei (another species of locust), undermined by ants, or a storm or animals broke it, everyone agrees that if he plowed [the field after it was ruined, see Y. Peah II.1.10, Guggenheimer tr.], it (i.e., the newly plowed field separates), and if not, it does not separate.
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