Must someone who uses another person's Eved pay the owner for the work?
- He is always Potur; Avadim are legally like land.
- He is always Chayav.
- He is Chayav to pay for times that the master would have used the Eved, and is otherwise Potur.
- It depends on the quality of the Eved's work.
- The master must pay the person who used the Eved, because he kept the Eved busy, which keeps him in shape.
When is a cracked coin compared to a government's invalidating a currency?
- Never.
- When the currency is no longer in use here, but may still be used in a different country.
- When all countries have invalidated it.
- Machlokes between answers A and B.
- Machlokes between answers B and C.
Which currency may be used to redeem Maaser Sheini in Yerushalayim?
- Kozbi'os.
- Foreign currency in an open international market.
- Yerushalmi'os.
- The coins of the Malachim Harishonim.
- An IOU.
When may a supplier be told to accept this money in payment for merchandise already delivered, and use it in a different country (such as Mishan)?
- Always.
- Only when travel and customs conditions make it possible to get there with the money.
- Never.
- Machlokes between answers A and B.
- Machlokes between answers B and C.
What was written on Avraham's coins?
- Avraham and Sarah on one side, and Yitzchak and Rivkah on the other.
- "Zakein" and "Zekeinah" on one side, and "Bochur" and "Besulah" on the other.
- Avraham on one side, and Yitzchak on the other.
- Yitzchak (his son) on one side, and Terach (his father) on the other.
- "Yerushalayim Ihr Hakodesh" on one side, and "Hame'aras Hamachpeilah" on the other.