mişna

listen to the pronunciation of mişna
Turkish - English
mishnah
From the Hebrew "to repeat, do again," this refers to the "repetition" or "second version" of the law, that is, a collection of legal and procedural interpretations of the law codified by the rabbinic academy of Yavneh c 200 CE It includes some haggadic material as well
From the Hebrew verb "to repeat," a collection of Pharisaic oral interpretations (halakah) of the Torah compiled and edited by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi about 200 c e
Mishna: the first part of the Talmud; a collection of early oral interpretations of the scriptures that was compiled about AD 200
Lit "Repetition" A compilation of the rabbinical oral laws or traditions These oral laws were written down by 200 AD See also Gemara, Talmud
The first layer of the 'Oral Torah,' a six volume work written down around the 2nd Century C E that elaborates on the laws of the (written) Torah
   See Talmud
The code of Jewish law edited by Rabbi Judah, the prince in the 2nd century Next to the Bibles, the most sacred of Jewish books The rules for the Sabbath are mainly found in the mishnah
The first normative, post-biblical compilation of Jewish law Completed in approximately 200 C E under the editorship of Rabbi Yehudah Hanasi ("Judah the Prince") The Mishnah is divided into six "Orders" and these are each divided into smaller "tractates " A tractate is made up of numbered chapters, which are in turn made of numbered paragraphs that are called, confusingly, "mishnahs" -- note the lower case "m " The grammar of a hyperlink (formerly known as a citation) to a law in the Mishnah is: <"Mishnah"><tractate><chapter><mishnah>
A collection of Jewish legal texts, based on study of the Scriptures and the Oral Law The definitive version is attributed to Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi (c 135 - c 220), and its study is an essential part of Jewish education
The Mishnah is a six part review of Jewish law compiled in the 2nd century, which served as the focus of Talmudic interpretation; also, a single passage from that work See Talmud