(n.) The body of the Jewish civil and canonical law not comprised in the Pentateuch.
Example Sentences:
(1) Diseases of the gums and pains originating from the teeth were cited from the Talmud.
(2) Otherwise, I won’t achieve my goal.” To Ronen, he explained that the Talmudic doctrine din rodef amounted to a death sentence for Rabin – an explication that only people familiar with the internal discourse in the Orthodox community over the preceding year would have understood.
(3) In this connection, there is no incongruity perceived between the existence of the evil eye, devils and spirits possessing a person and the teachings of the Talmud.
(4) References were brought from the Bible and Talmud which prove that distinctions--morphological and functional--were recognized between incisors, canines, and molars.
(5) While Donald Trump hosts Saturday Night Live and Ben Carson’s autobiography is parsed with Talmudic scrutiny, Paul, suffering from anemic poll numbers, only just escaped being bounced from Tuesday’s primetime Republican debate in Milwaukee.
(6) Talmudic tradition emphasizes the necessity to acquire means for reestablishing the intactness of a healthy family.
(7) It is no more justifiable than saying that the only future which religious Jews - as Jews - can envision is one in which non-Jews live in complete slavery and subjugation: a claim often made by anti-semites based on highly selective passages from the Talmud .
(8) The first reported episode of rapid whitening of the hair is recorded in the Talmud.
(9) The Talmud tells us: "The whole of the Torah is for the purpose of promoting peace."
(10) The concept of the delinquent adolescent is reviewed in terms of definition, culpability, and rehabilitation in concert with psychiatric and Talmudic perspectives.
(11) The Biblical verse "If a woman emits semen and bears a manchild" (Leviticus 12:2) is interpreted by the Talmudic Sages and more recent Jewish sources to mean that if a woman emits her "semen" first, she will bear a male child but if the man emits his semen first, she will bear a female child.
(12) In spite of their spatial and temporal dispersion, the talmudic literature and its commentaries proceed from a fundamental unity.
(13) The Talmudic concept has evolved that the delinquent child is a product of a disturbed family and a pathological environment.
(14) Jews were able to bridge the educational gap of a 500-year period of exclusion from universities and medical schools in the Middle Ages through the Talmud, which started as a commentary on the scriptures in the 5th century BC, but developed over the centuries into a comprehensive body of learning incorporating law, art and the sciences.
(15) In the Talmud, there is a detailed symptomatic evaluation of insanity, in the context of legal liability.
(16) In this article, I deal with the multiple references to the liver and liver disease that are found in the books of the Talmud.
(17) According to several local newspapers, Youssef then described the men as "enemies of the nation" who used mosques to promote "the commandments of their holy book, the Talmud ".
(18) Described in the Talmud are a variety of anatomical ear abnormalities such as double ear, pierced ears, small ears, cut off ears, and pendulous ears.
(19) Contrasting with Malick's new agey, Romantic reverie was the old age study of the holy word contained in Joseph Cedar's Talmud tragicomedy Footnote , probably my favourite film of the festival.
(20) At one meeting it discussed the regulatory position of a registered school, the Talmud Torah Chaim Meirim Wiznitz school in Hackney, which had been the subject of a critical report by Ofsted.
Talmudist
Definition:
(n.) One versed in the Talmud; one who adheres to the teachings of the Talmud.