Rabbi Ilai I
Rabbi Ilai (Hebrew: רבי אלעאי; sometimes referred to as Ilai the Elder;[1] others: Rabbi Ilai I,[2] or Alternative Hebrew spelling: רבי עילאי [2]) was a third Generation, and 2nd-century Jewish Tanna sage, father of the well-known Tanna sage, Judah ben Ilai, and disciple of Eliezer ben Hurcanus and Gamaliel II.
- For the fourth Generation Tanna sage with a similar name, see: R. Judah ben Ilai (his son). For 3rd- and 4th-century, and the third generation Amora sage, with a similar name, see: Rabbi Ilai II."
Rabbinical eras |
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Rabbi Ilai is cited once in the Mishnah, and six times in the Tosefta.
Quotes
A man is known in three things: by his purse, by his drinking and by his anger.[3]
gollark: Relative only.
gollark: How would you use that? Surely it can't locate your canvases.
gollark: The user can move relative to the object and you have to track that somehow.
gollark: I *think* once you create a 3D object around a center point its origin is fixed until you recenter it, but obviously you can move.
gollark: I think you don't actually have enough data to. Unless you constantly use GPS.
References
- ILAI, Highbeam Research
- Rabbi Il'ai (I) - רבי עילאי, sages of the Talmud
- editors, editors (1980). Babylonian Talmud (Eruvin 65b). Jerusalem: Menaqed.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
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