- Rav
Ḥisda (Hebrew: רב חסדא) was a
Jewish Talmudist who
lived in Kafri,
Asoristan in
Lower Mesopotamia near what is now the city of Najaf, Iraq. He was...
- is not a
Hebrew name but
rather an
Aramaic one: בית חסדא, 'the
house of
Hisda'." Fitzmyer,
Joseph A.: "The
adverb Ἑβραϊστί (and its
related expressions)...
-
Nachman b.
Ḥisda, Ḥanan b.
Ḥisda (named
after Ḥanan b. Rava), Mari b.
Ḥisda, Pineḥas b.
Ḥisda, Taḥlifa b.
Ḥisda,
Yenuqa b.
Ḥisda, and Q'shisha b.
Ḥisda. These...
-
writes that its
Aramaic resembles more the
language used by the
scholar Ab
Hisda of Tyre in the 11th century.: 34 Eph'al, Israel. The
Ancient Arabs: Nomads...
-
language style resembles more the
Arabic language used by the
scholar Ab
Ḥisda [Isda] of Tyre (Abū'l-Ḥasan aṣ-Ṣūrī) in his
poems of the
eleventh century...
- they do not
bring evidence from a fool." Ben
Stada is Ben Pantera.
Rabbi Hisda said, "The
husband was Stada, the
lover was Pantera." The
husband was "actually"...
- said that Abraham's
servant did not
disclose Bethuel's fate to Isaac. Rav
Ḥisda interpreted the word "days" (יָמִים, yamim) in
Genesis 24:55 to mean "a...
-
Ḥisda, who when she was a
child was
sitting on her father’s lap
while he sat and learned. Rava and Rami bar Ḥama were
sitting before him. Rav
Ḥisda jokingly...
-
separation was desired. Some
commended early marriage for its benefits:
Rabbi Ḥisda maintained that
early marriage could lead to
increased intelligence. A large...
- and led
Israel astray. "Jesus son of
Stada is
Jesus son of Pandira?" Rav
Hisda said, "The
husband was
Stada and the
lover was Pandera." "But was not the...