Sefer Ha Shorashim , Radicum liber, Hebraeum Бibliorum lexicon; by Kimhi, David Publisher Berolini, Bethge Pages 496, Hebrew, Latin via Archive.org
הכתב והקבלה, Haketav Vehakabbalah
הכתב והקבלה יעקב צבי מקלנבורג sold Torah Commentary by Rabbi Y. T. Mecklenburg, Demonstrating the Indivisibility of the Written & Oral Torah “Haketav VehaKabbalah (alt. HaKsav VeHaKabalah; Heb. הכתב והקבלה: The Written [Torah] and the [Oral] Tradition) was first published in 1839. Mecklenburg’s intent was “to demonstrate the indivisibility of the written Torah and its […]
Sefer Hamafteichos l’Sifrei Likutei Sichos
ספר המפתות לספרי לקוטי שיחות כרכים י-יד $40PayPal, free shipping
19 Kislev , Hayom Yom
sold “The 19th of Kislev…the festival on which “He redeemed our soul in peace,” and our soul’s illumination and vitality were given to us, this day is Rosh Hashana for Chassidus bequeathed us by our sacred forebears, identical with the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov “
Midrash Rabbah by Mirkin. Menukad. 11 Vols Set. מדרש רבה משה אריה מירקין
Midrash Rabbah (11 volumes, Hebrew text) Hardcover – 1980 by Moshe Aryeh Mirkin sold
Al Razi, on the Treatment of Small Children de Curis Puerorum
sold Al Razi, on the Treatment of Small Children (de Curis Puerorum) The Latin and Hebrew Translations (Sir Henry Wellcome Asian) Mul Edition by Professor Gerrit Bos, Professor Michael McVaugh
Mishnayoth, Supplement & Index
Mishnayoth, Supplement, and Index, Corrected, Enlarged, Revised by P. Blackman
Siddur, Rosh Hashanah by Joseph Lugassy
יוספ לוגאסי, סדור לראש השנה כמנהג ק”ק ספרדים עם תפלות האור המופלא האר”י זצוק”ל ונוסח התרת נדרים ומודעות ותפלות מהרב חיד”א Siddur le-Rosh Hashanah (Sephardim) It includes liturgies by the Ari z’l and HIDA. eBay Free Shipping, Free Return
Reuben Alcalay, Dictionary
sold out The Complete English-Hebrew Dictionary by R. Alcalay Vol. 1 (A-L), no dj
Kosel, Western Wall, Wailing Wall
“… kotel הַכֹּתֶל הַמַּעֲרָבִי appears only once (Shir Hashirim 2:9). Kotel likely has Aramaic origins, and Klein points out that the Aramaic cognate כתלא kutla is probably a loan word from the Akkadian kutallu – “back side”. It was used frequently in rabbinic Hebrew, but in modern Hebrew it’s generally reserved to describe the western retaining […]