פירוש על נזיר 9:1
Notes by Heinrich Guggenheimer on Jerusalem Talmud
An alternative spelling of תְּפוּשָׂתוֹ.
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Shulchan Arukh, Yoreh De'ah
(55) These are the vows that a husband cancels: vows that bring bodily affliction [lit. afflictions of a soul] and (vows) that involve things that come between him and her. Vows that bring bodily affliction that are permitted to her, she has a permission for all times. And (vows) that involve things between him and her he only permits for himself, and while he has benefit from it, (that is) during the time she is under him. And after she divorces, during all the time she still could come back to him, but if she remarries all these are cancelled. And anything that has no affliction and does not come between him and her he cannot cancel.
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Shulchan Arukh, Yoreh De'ah
There are those who say that if a slave takes a vow that obligates him on something, such as he vowed not to eat meat or the like, and his master says: "The vow is annulled." (in other words) because he did not compel him in a situation (in which he should have compelled him,) he was showing that he was releasing him.
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