1)

(a)Rava thought that shearings of wool were no longer Muktzah once they had been used to wrap food. How did Hahu Rabbanan bar Yomei refute that statement from our Mishnah itself?

(b)Why do we refer to that Talmid like that?

(c)How do we amend Rava's statement?

(d)Ravina accepts Rava's original statement as it is. How does he then explain our Mishnah, which considers the shearings Muktzah, even after he has used them for wrapping?

2)

(a)If someone cuts date-palms from the palm-tree to use as fire-wood, they are Muktzah, and may not be moved. What must one do, according to the Tana Kama, to remove the Muktzah-status?

(b)Rav holds like the Tana Kama, Shmuel holds like Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel, who is lenient. What does he say one must do - before Shabbos - to change the Muktzah-status of the palm branches.

(c)Rav Asi holds like a third Tana, who is even more lenient. Which third option does he leave us with - besides tying them or designating them (even in one's mind) for sitting on on Shabbos - to permit the palm-branches to be moved?

3)

(a)Under which circumstances may one go out into the street with a plaster of combed linen or split strands of wool on one's wound? How would one need to treat them?

(b)Is there any way that this would be permitted, even if they were not treated at all?

(c)How is this proven from the Mishnah in 'Tolin': 'ha'Kash she'Al Gabei Mitah'?

(d)Why was straw Muktzah?

4)

(a)Is there any way of clearing a bed of Muktzah straw, even without the above preparations?

(b)Rebbi Chanina ben Akiva is the Tana who requires the palm branches to be tied in order for them to be permitted on Shabbos. How do we know that?

(c)Why would the Din have been more lenient by a Beis ha'Mishteh or a Beis Avel?

5)

(a)Under which condition may one bring a box of earth into the house to use for all one's needs?

(b)Why could even the Rabbanan, who require palm-branches to be tied (for them to be no longer Muktzah), agree with this ruling - despite the fact that nothing is done with the earth to prepare it?

(c)One Beraisa permits scrubbing vessels with chalk and sand, another Beraisa forbids it. One of the two possible reasons of the Beraisa that forbids it, is because, not having prepared them, they are Muktzah. What is the other reason? Who will then be the author of the Beraisa?

(d)How does the Beraisa which forbids the scrubbing of silver vessels with 'Gartekun' fit into this?

6)

(a)The same Beraisa that permits the scrubbing of vessels with chalk and sand adds 'Aval Lo Yachof Bahem Sa'aro'. Why can the author of the Beraisa then not be Rebbi Shimon?

(b)How do we then reconcile this Beraisa with the second Beraisa, which forbids chalk and sand, and whose author is also Rebbi Yehudah?

50b----------------------------------------50b

7)

(a)If, as we just concluded, the author of the Beraisa which permits washing vessels with chalk or sand is Rebbi Yehudah, how can the Tana also permit washing one's face with them? Why does Rebbi Yehudah not suspect that they might remove hair from the beard (three possible cases)?

(b)May a person with a beard use brick-dust, Kuspa de'Yasmin or ground peppers, to wash his face - according to Rebbi Yehudah?

(c)What is 'Kuspa de'Yasmin'?

(d)Barda (a mixture made of a plant called Ohel, myrtle and violets) too, is permitted. When does Rav Nechemyah bar Yosef forbid washing one's face with Barda - In which point does Rav Yosef disagree with him?

8)

(a)Olives are naturally bitter. Why may beating them against a tree (to sweeten them) be prohibited, even during the week?

(b)Why should this be worse than putting bread to one's own personal use, which Shmuel permits?

(c)Assuming that beating olives against a tree is permitted during the week, why might it still be forbidden on Shabbos?

9)

(a)On what grounds did Mar Zutra decline to wash his face with Barda?

(b)Why did his colleagues disagree with him?

10)

(a)Rebbi Elazar ben Azaryah forbids one to remove a pot from the box of wool- shearings, where it was placed before Shabbos, because they may cave in, in which case, he is likely to return the pot, which in turn, will cause him to reposition the Muktzah shearings. Does this mean that, according to the Tana Kama, it is permitted to return the pot, if the shearings do cave in?

(b)Then what does the Mishnah mean, when it writes 'Notel u'Machzir'? If the Mishnah is speaking when the shearings did not cave in, what is the Chidush?

11)

(a)On what condition does Rav Huna permit pulling out a plant (which has not taken root) from the earth of a plant-pot?

(b)What similar Halachah does Shmuel teach us regarding a knife?

(c)How do we refute Rav Huna's statement, from the Mishnah in Kil'ayim: 'ha'Tomen Lefes u'Tzenon ... '.

(d)We also permit sticking a knife into a clump of tightly-packed palm-spikes that protrude from the root of the tree. What is the Chidush there?

12)

(a)Why does the Mishnah in Kil'ayim require some of the leaves of the turnip to be protruding?

(b)Which three Isurim, besides that of Shabbos, does the Mishnah in Kil'ayim come to permit, due to the fact that the turnip (or the radish) did not take root?

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