-
Tannaim (Amoraic Hebrew: תנאים [tannɔʔim] "repeaters", "teachers",
singular tanna תנא [tanˈnɔː],
borrowed from Aramaic) were the
rabbinic sages whose...
-
expounds broadly on the Tanakh. The
rabbis of the
Mishnah are
known as
Tannaim (sing.
Tanna תנא). The
rabbis of the
Gemara are
referred to as Amoraim...
- 100
years toward the end of the
Second Temple era. (142 BCE – c. 40 BCE)
Tannaim ("teachers"): The
sages of the
Mishnah who
lived in the Land of Israel...
- the
early 2nd
century (third
generation of
tannaim).
Johanan HaSandlar (c. 200–c. 300), one of the
tannaim,
whose teachings are
quoted in the core text...
-
codified in the Gemara. The
Amoraim followed the
Tannaim in the
sequence of
ancient Jewish scholars. The
Tannaim were
direct transmitters of
uncodified oral...
- was
based on
religious adherence rather than
ancestry (Galatians 3:28).
Tannaim were the
rabbinic sages whose views are
recorded in the Mishnah, from approximately...
-
second century, the
period of the
Mishnah and the
Jewish sages known as the
Tannaim.
Jewish teachings of the
Tannaitic period were
characteristically transmitted...
- and the Midrash, that did not
follow the words, was
recognized by the
Tannaim and the Amoraim,
although their idea of the
literal meaning of a p****age...
- Mishnah) can be
derived using them.... The
rabbis of the
Mishnah are
known as
Tannaim (sing.
Tanna תנא). The
rabbis of the
Gemara are
referred to as Amoraim...
- in the
Tosefta in
Shabbat 11:15 and
Sanhedrin 10:11 respectively. The
Tannaim and
Amoraim who
recorded the
accounts in the
Talmud and
Tosefta use the...