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  1. json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Arakhin/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json +0 -0
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  22. json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json +302 -0
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  36. json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json +320 -0
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  45. json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Zevachim/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json +0 -0
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  49. json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Moed/Bartenura on Mishnah Beitzah/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json +337 -0
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1
+ {
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+ "language": "he",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Arakhin",
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+ "versionSource": "http://mobile.tora.ws/",
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+ "versionTitle": "On Your Way",
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+ "status": "locked",
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+ "priority": 1.0,
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+ "license": "Public Domain",
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื•ื‘ืœื›ืชืš ื‘ื“ืจืš",
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+ "actualLanguage": "he",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
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+ "isBaseText": true,
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+ "isSource": true,
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+ "isPrimary": true,
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+ "direction": "rtl",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
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+ [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืœืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืฉื ื” ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ืฉืขืจื•ืช, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื™ืš. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื•ืคืœื ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœืื™ืฉ. ื•ืžื•ืคืœื ืืงืจื™ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืื ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœื”ืคืœื•ืช ื•ืœืคืจืฉ ืœืฉื ืžื™ ื ื“ืจ ื•ืœืฉื ืžื™ ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืคืœื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–), ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืคืจืงื• ืงืจื•ื™ ืื™ืฉ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืงืื™ ื ืžื™ ืขืœ ื ืขืจื›ื™ื, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืžื ื•ื•ืœ ื•ืžื•ื›ื” ืฉื—ื™ืŸ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื. ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื ื“ืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื), ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉื ื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ื™ืฉื ื• ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืื™ื ื• ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืงืื™ ืขืœ ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื, ืžืฉื•ื ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื ื ืงื˜ ืœื™ื”. ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ืืฆื˜ืจื™ืš, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื™ื“ืจ ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืขืจืš:",
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+ "<b>ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืื—ื“, ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืœื•ื ื™ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืฉื”ืขืจืš ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ:",
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+ "<b>ื•ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื• ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ื–ื” ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™:",
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+ "<b>ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ืœื™ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืฉื•ืง:",
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+ "<b>ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื“ืžื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ื“ืžื™ ืขืœื™:",
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+ "<b>ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื•ื™ื.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืืฆื˜ืจื™ื›ื ืœื™ื” ืœืืฉืžืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืื•ืชื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ื”ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื“ืื™ ืขื ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœื ืงืจื™ื ื ื‘ื™ื” ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืื™ืชื ื”ื• ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืชื ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื™ื ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ื:",
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+ "<b>ื ืฉื™ื ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ืืฉื” ืžืฉืœืžืช ื›ืฉืชืชืืœืžืŸ ืื• ืชืชื’ืจืฉ, ื•ื”ืขื‘ื“ ื›ืฉื™ืฉืชื—ืจืจ:",
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+ "<b>ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื“ืžื™ื:",
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+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืืช ืื—ืจื™ื, ืื ืืžืจื• ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืขืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืœื•ื ื™:",
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+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื. ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื ืงื‘ื” ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื“ืื™ ืื• ื ืงื‘ื” ื•ื“ืื™ืช:",
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+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ื• ืขืœื™. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉื•ื” ื“ืžื™ื ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ:",
37
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ, ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื‘ืคืจืฉื” ืืœื ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืžืขืœื”:"
38
+ ],
39
+ [
40
+ "<b>ื”ื ื›ืจื™ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืชืจื™ ืงืจืื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื—ื“ ืจื™ื‘ื•ื™ ื•ื—ื“ ืžื™ืขื•ื˜. ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ืžื™ืขื˜ ืืช ื”ื ื›ืจื™ื. ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืคืœื™ื, ืจื™ื‘ื” ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื›ืจื™ ื‘ืžืฉืžืข. ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืกื‘ืจ, ื ื›ืจื™ ื ืขืจืš ื•ืœื ืžืขืจื™ืš, ืฉื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ืฉืจื™ื‘ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื ืขืจื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืฉื“ื™ ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื ืœืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืจื™ื‘ื•ื™ื ืœื ืขืจืš:",
41
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื ื›ืจื™ ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืฉื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื ืขืจื›ื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื™ืชืŸ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื• ื”ืขืจืš ื”ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉื”. ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื ื›ืจื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื:"
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื•ืกืก.</b> ืœื ื ื™ื“ืจ, ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืœืžื™ืชื” ื”ื•ื ืขื•ืžื“:",
45
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ื•ื”ืขืจื™ื›ื•, ื•ื”ืื™ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืื• ื‘ืจ ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื” ื”ื•ื:",
46
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื™ื”ืจื’.</b> ืฉื ื’ืžืจ ื“ื™ื ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืื‘ืœ ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื™ื”ืจื’ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ืœื ืฉื ื ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืœื ืฉื ื ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื ื›ืจื™ื, ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ื ืขืจืš:",
47
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื•ื:",
48
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื˜) ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืืฉืจ ื™ื—ืจื ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื ืœื ื™ืคื“ื”. ื•ืจืณ ื—ื ื™ื ื ื‘ืŸ ืขืงื‘ื™ื ื“ืืžืจ ื ืขืจืš, ืžื•ืงื™ ืœื”ืื™ ืงืจื ื“ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืืฉืจ ื™ื—ืจื ืœื“ืจืฉื ืื—ืจื™ืชื™:",
49
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ ื•ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ. ื›ื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ื‘ืื ื”ื–ื™ืง. ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ืื ื”ื–ื™ืง ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ื. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืžื–ื™ืง ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื”, ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืœืื• ื›ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื˜ืจ ื“ืžื™ื, ืืœื ื›ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื”, ื•ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื” ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ, ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ื›ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื˜ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชืงื ื• ื“ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื” ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื, ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื’ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืžืžื•ื ื• ื•ืžืฉืœืžื™ื ืžื” ืฉื”ื–ื™ืง:"
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืžืชื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“.</b> ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืžืžื•ื ื ื“ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื:ื›ืดื‘) ื›ืืฉืจ ื™ืฉื™ืช ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืืฉื”, ื•ืœื ื ืคืกื“ื™ื ื”ื• ืžื™ื ื™ื” ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื‘:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ืžืชื• ื’ื ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื’ื ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื”ื•ืœื“:",
53
+ "<b>ื™ืฉื‘ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžืฉื‘ืจ.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืžื•ืฉื‘ ื”ืืฉื” ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืฉื‘ืจ:",
54
+ "<b>ืžืžืชื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื ืขืงืจ ืœืฆืืช, ื’ื•ืคื ืื—ืจื™ื ื ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื›ื’ื•ืฃ ืืžื•:",
55
+ "<b>ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืจื”.</b> ืœืื• ืฉืขืจื” ืžืžืฉ ืงืืžืจ, ืืœื ืคืื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื” ืžืฉืขืจ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืงืฉื•ืจื” ืœืฉืขืจื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉืืžืจื” ืชื ื• ืื•ืชื” ืœื‘ืชื™ ืื• ืœืคืœื•ื ื™ืช, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื” ืชื ื• ื’ืœื™ื ื“ืขืชื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื” ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืคื” ืœืืชืกื•ืจื™, ื•ื›ื ื˜ื•ืœื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื ื“ืžื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืืกื•ืจ, ืฉื ื•ื™ื™ ื”ืžืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืื”:",
56
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ื”ืจื’ื” ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืขืจื”:"
57
+ ]
58
+ ],
59
+ [
60
+ [
61
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉื’ืช ืื™ื ื• ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื”) ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ืš ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืงืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืฉืืชื” ืžืขืจื™ืš ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืคื—ื•ืชื™ื ืžืฉืงืœ:",
62
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื™ื.</b> ื“ื–ื”ื• ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืขืจื›ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืคืจืฉื”:",
63
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืฉืขืจื›ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื‘ืขืจื›ื•, ื“ืขื ื™ ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืฉื’ืช ื™ื“ื•, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
64
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข.</b> ื ืชืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข:",
65
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื“ื‘ื ืชื™ื ื” ืงืžื™ื™ืชื ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ืขืจื›ื• ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืขืจื›ื• ืขืœื™ื•:",
66
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื™ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืขื ื™ ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฆืžื•, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื:",
67
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ืื—ืช.</b> ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ืฉืงืœ:",
68
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื•.</b> ื“ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ืš ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืงืœ, ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืืชื, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื˜ืคื™ ื™ื”ื™ื‘, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
69
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคืชื— ื‘ื˜ื•ืขื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื”.</b> ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ืชื ื ื ืžื™ ืœื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ:",
70
+ "<b>ืคืชื—.</b> ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช. ืฉื“ื™ืŸ ื ื“ื” ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ื”ื•ื, ืื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืจืืชื” ื”ื™ื•ื, ืžื•ื ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื. ืจืืชื” ืฉื ื™ื, ืžื•ื ื” ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ื”ื. ืจืืชื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืžื•ื ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื. [ื•ืืคื™ืœื•] ืจืืชื” ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ืคืกืงื” ืœืขืจื‘, ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช ื•ืžืฉืžืฉืช. ื•ืžื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื, ืฉืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืื• ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจืช ื™ื•ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช. ื•ืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ื”ื•ื™ื ื–ื‘ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ื•ืื ืžืฉื›ื• ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื• ืฉื ื”, ืื™ื ื” ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉื‘ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื. ื•ื›ืฉื™ืฉื‘ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืจืืชื”, ื”ื•ื™ื ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื•ืžื•ื ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืขื ื™ื ื” ื›ื›ืœ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉ. ื•ืื ืœื ืจืืชื” ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ืื™ื ื” ื–ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ืฉืชืจืื” ืื—ืจื™ื”ืŸ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืจื•ืื” ืกืžื•ืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื—ื™ืงื” ืจืื™ื™ืชื” ื”ื•ื™ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื”. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ืื™ื ื” ืžื•ื ื” ืืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘ ืืœื ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ื ื“ื•ืช ื–ื” ืœืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช ื”ื‘ื:",
71
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคืชื— ื‘ื˜ื•ืขื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื”.</b> ื˜ื•ืขื” [ืฉืจืืชื”] ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื•ืชื” ืขื•ืžื“ืช, ืื• ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘, ืื™ื ื” ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืคืชื— ื ื“ื•ืชื” ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื ืงื™ื™ื. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื˜ื•ืขื” ืฉืืžืจื” ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ื˜ืžื ืจืื™ืชื™ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืžื ื•ืช ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื, ืื ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืฉืžื•ืจ, ืืœื ื™ื•ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื, ืคืชื—ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ืฉืื ืœื ืชืจืื” ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืœื‘ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ื–ื”, ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืคืชื— ื ื“ื•ืชื”. ื“ืื ื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืชื—ืœืช ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืฉืœืžื• ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ื”ืจื—ื™ืงื” ืจืื™ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื ืจืืชื” ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื•ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืชืืžืจ ืฉื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื, ืืขืคืดื› ื™ืฆืชื” ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘ ืœืกื•ืฃ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื‘ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ื–ื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืชืจืื” ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื ื™ืฆืื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกืคืง ืื ื™ื•ื ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื ืื• ื™ื•ื ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืžื ื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืชื—ืœืช ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื”, ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืจืืชื” ื‘ื•, ืกื•ืฃ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื ื“ื” ืœื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื, ืื• ืฉืžื ื™ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ืฉื›ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ืฆืชื” ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘, ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืจืืชื” ื‘ื• ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื. ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืื ืชืจืื” ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ืฉืœื ื™ืฆืื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกืคืง. ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืชื”ื ื‘ืกืคื™ืงื” ื–ื•, ืžืงื•ืœืงืœืช ื”ื™ื, ืฉืœืขื•ืœื ื ื—ืžื™ืจ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืกืคืง. ืฉื›ืฉืชืจืื” ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ื ืืžืจ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื. ื•ื›ืฉืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ื ืืžืจ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘ ื”ืŸ ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื ืชืžื ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช ื•ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”:",
72
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ื•ืข ืื—ื“.</b> ืœื”ืกื’ืจ. ื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ ืื“ื ืฉื ื‘ืจืจื™ื ืœืฉื‘ื•ืข ืื—ื“ ืื ืœื˜ื”ืจ ืื ืœื—ืœื•ื˜:",
73
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช.</b> ื ื’ืขื™ ื‘ืชื™ื. ื“ืชื ื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ืขืžื“ ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื• ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืฉื ื™ ืฉื—ื•ืœืฅ ื•ืงื•ืฆื” ื•ื˜ื— ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื“:ืžืดื—) ื•ื‘ื ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื ื‘ื ื™ื‘ื ื›ื•ืณ: "
74
+ ],
75
+ [
76
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืžืขื•ื‘ืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ื•ื ืœืฉื ื”. ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืคื™ ืžืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ:",
77
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืจืื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื•ืœื ื ืจืื” ืœื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืขื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื. ืฉื—ื“ืฉื” ืฉืœ ืœื‘ื ื” ื›ืดื˜ ื™ื•ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืขื”, ื•ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื”ืจื™ ืœืฉื ื™ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื ืดื˜ ื™ืžื™ื, ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื—ื“ ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื”, ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืœืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื. ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื” ื”ื•ื ื—ืกืจ, ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืœื ืื• ืžืขื•ื‘ืจ. ื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื—ื“ืฉื™ ื”ืฉื ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืœื ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ืกืจ, ืืœื ืžืคื ื™ ื™ืชื™ืจื•ืช ื”ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืขื” ื•ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืœืงื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ, ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืคืขืžื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืžื—ื“ืฉื™ ื”ืฉื ื” ืžืœืื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ืกืจื™ื, ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžืœืื™ื:",
78
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืœื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ:",
79
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื”.</b> ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืชื• ืœื. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื—ืœ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืœ ืขืฆืจืช ื‘ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื ืืคื•ืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘, ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ืชื ื•ืคืชืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™. ื•ื›ืฉื—ืœ ืขืฆืจืช ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื•ืข, ื ืืคื•ืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ืดื˜ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ:",
80
+ "<b>ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื ืื›ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืชืฉืขื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ื ืืคื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืื—ืจืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชื•. ื—ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ืื•ืคื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ืžืกื“ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ. ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชื•:",
81
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ืื™ื ื• ื ืžื•ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ื”ื•ื. ื“ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืกืคืง ื™ื•ื ืกืคืง ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ืื ื™ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื ืžืฆื ืฉื‘ืช ื™ื•ื ืชืฉื™ืขื™, ื•ืžื™ืœื” ืฉืœื ื‘ื–ืžื ื” ืื™ื ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ืืช ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ื•ืื ื—ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ืื—ืจ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื‘ืช, ืื™ื ื• ื ืžื•ืœ ืขื“ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœืœื™ื“ืชื•:"
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ืชืงื™ืขื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ (ืกื•ื›ื” ื“ืฃ ื ืดื’) ื”ืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”, ืœืื• ื“ื•ืงื, ื“ื–ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืชืงื™ืขื•ืช ื›ืฉื—ืœ ืขืจื‘ ืคืกื— ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืฉื›ื™ื— ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™ ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื™ื”:",
85
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉื ื™ ื ื‘ืœื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื ื™ ืœื•ื™ื:",
86
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืฉื”.</b> ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื:",
87
+ "<b>ื—ืœื™ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ื–ืžืจ ืฉืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง. ืฆืœืžื™ืœื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื–ืžืืจืดื™:",
88
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื” ืฉื”ื—ืœื™ืœ ืžื›ื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžื›ื” ื ื•ืคืœ ื‘ื—ืœื™ืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉื•ื™ ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื•ืžื›ื” ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขื• ืขืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื ืขื™ื ื”ืงื•ืœ:",
89
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื—.</b> ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืคืจืง ืชืžื™ื“ ื ืฉื—ื˜ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ื“ืฃ ืกืดื“):",
90
+ "<b>ืื‘ื•ื‘.</b> ื”ืงื ื” ื”ื“ืง ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžื•ื›ื— ื“ื—ืœื™ืœ ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ืงืจื•ื™ ืื‘ื•ื‘:",
91
+ "<b>ืฉืงื•ืœื• ืขืจื‘ ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉืœ ืงื ื”, ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœ ื ื—ื•ืฉืช.</b> ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื—ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื›ื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ืื‘ืœ ื—ืœื™ืœ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื•ืื‘ื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ืืช ื™ื•ืดื˜, ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ:",
92
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืœื™ืง ืืœื ื‘ืื‘ื•ื‘ ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืกื™ื™ื ื”ื ืขื™ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืœื™ืœื™ื ืžืืจื™ืš ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ืžื• ื”ืื—ืจื™ื, ืฉื–ื”ื•, ื—ื™ืœื•ืง ื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืื™ืœื•, ื™ืกื™ื™ืžื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื›ืื—ื“. ื•ื—ื™ืœื•ืง, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืกื™ื•ื ื”ืฉืžืขืช ืงื•ืœ ื”ื ืขื™ืžื”. ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืงืจื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ืจ ื–ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืžืฉื•ืจืจื™ื ื‘ืคื” ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื™ืžื™ื, ื•ื”ื—ืœื™ืœื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžื—ืœืœื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžื”ืœืœื™ื ื™ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ ื•ื›ื ื•ืจื•ืช. ื•ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื”ืณ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื” ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืžื•ืจ, ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืณ ื•ืžื”ืœืœ ืžืื“ ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืœื:"
93
+ ],
94
+ [
95
+ "<b>ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืžื›ื™ื ื‘ื—ืœื™ืœ. ื“ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื—ืกื™ื ื•ืœื ืœืžืขืฉืจื•ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ืื ื”ื™ื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื:",
96
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคื’ืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืฆืคืจื™ื.</b> ืฉื ืžืฉืคื—ื•ืช ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื•ืช:",
97
+ "<b>ื•ืžืืžืื•ื.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื:",
98
+ "<b>ืžืฉื™ืื™ืŸ ืœื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืฉืื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืฉืžืฉืคื—ื•ืช ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ื™ื•. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ ื“ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื—ืกื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ ืœืื• ื“ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื ื”ื ื™ื—ื•ื ืœื ื’ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
99
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก ืื•ืžืจ ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก ืกื‘ืจ ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืžืขืฉืจื•ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื•. ื•ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื’ื ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื–ืžืจ, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื‘ืคื” ื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจ ื‘ืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืืœื ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืœื•ื™ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—) ื•ืฉืจืช ื‘ืฉื ื”ืณ ืืœื”ื™ื•, ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืฉื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื”ืณ, ื”ื•ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื–ื” ื”ืฉื™ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
100
+ ],
101
+ [
102
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืฉืฉื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื”ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื“ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืงื•ืจ ืžืžื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืคืกื— ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืงื—ื• ืžื‘ืขืฉื•ืจ ื•ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื• ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžื•ืขื“ื• ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืชืžื™ื“ื™ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื›ืดื—:ื‘ืณ) ืชืฉืžืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื™ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•, ืžืžื•ืขื“ื• ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืคืกื— (ืฉื ื˜ืณ) ืืช ื”ืคืกื— ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•. ื”ืœื›ืš, ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื—ื™ื ื•ืš ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืžื‘ืงืจื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื, ื•ื‘ื™ื•ื ื—ื™ื ื•ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืœืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ืฉืฉื” ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื”ืœื™ืœื” ืžื‘ืงืจื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื ืš ืœื™ืชื ื”ื• ืื›ืชื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื”ืฉื ื™ื, ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืืœื• ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ื ืชื™ื ืชืŸ:",
103
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืœืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื”.</b> ืกื™ืžื ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื ืงื˜, ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ ืžืงืœืขื™ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ื‘ื”ื“ื™ ื”ื“ื“ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงื“ื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืงืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื™ื•ื ืœื™ืœืš ื•ืœื‘ืงืฉ ื˜ืœื” ื•ืœื‘ืงืจ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ื ืœืงื™ื—ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”:",
104
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืื ืจืฆื• ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื˜ืœืื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื, ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื™ืจืฆื•:",
105
+ "<b>ืžืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ื›ืฉืชื•ืงืขื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉืชื™ื:",
106
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ืขื“ ืžืื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื. ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื-ื‘ ื”ืณ) ื•ืขืžื”ื ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืžืื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืžื—ืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช:",
107
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฆืœืฆืœ ืœื‘ื“.</b> ืฆืœืฆืœ ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ืฉื ื ื˜ืดื–) ื•ืืกืฃ ื‘ืžืฆืœืชื™ื ืœื”ืฉืžื™ืข. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืžืฆืœืชื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ื, ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืจื—ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืชื›ืช ืฉืžื›ื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•, ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื—ื“ื ืขื‘ื™ื“ืชื ืขื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืžื•ืขื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื—ื‘ืจื•, ื•ื—ื“ ื’ื‘ืจื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื”ื•:"
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœื•ื™ื.</b> ืชืฉืขื” ืœืชืฉืขื” ื›ื ื•ืจื•ืช, ื•ืฉื ื™ื ืœืฉืชื™ ื ื‘ืœื™ื, ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืฆืœืฆืœ:",
111
+ "<b>ื“ื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืืฆื˜ื‘ื ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”:",
112
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืงื˜ืŸ ื ื›ื ืก.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืงื˜ืŸ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืฉื•ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื›ื‘ื“ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื•ืœื”ื’ื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช:",
113
+ "<b>ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืื– ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื•ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืœืฉื•ืจืจ ืขืžื”ื:",
114
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืื•ืชื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื ื‘ืœ ื•ื›ื ื•ืจ, ืืœื ื‘ืคื”:",
115
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืชื‘ืœ.</b> ืœื™ืชืŸ ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืขื™ืžืช ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื•ืœ ื”ืงื˜ื ื™ื ื“ืง ื•ืฆืœื•ืœ ื•ืžืชื‘ืœ ืืช ืงื•ืœ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื:",
116
+ "<b>ืœื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœื•ื™ื ื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
117
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ื”ืืฆื˜ื‘ื ื”ืžื•ื›ื ืช ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ. ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื:",
118
+ "<b>ื•ืฆื•ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ืงืจืื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ื ืืช ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื‘ืกื ื•ืœื”ื ืขื™ื ืงื•ืœื ื›ืžื•ืชื:"
119
+ ]
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ [
123
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ื•ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืžืคืจืฉ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ:",
124
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ื ืื” ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื•ื” ืžืื” ืžื ื” ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืงืœ. ื•ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ืฉื”ืžืขืจื™ืš ืืช ื”ื›ืขื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืืœื ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื. ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ืื ื”ื ืขืจืš ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื:"
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื•ืœืช ื”ืžื—ื•ื–.</b> ืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืช ื”ืขื™ืจ. ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืฉื‘ื—ืช ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืžืคื ื™ ืžื“ืจืก ื”ืจื’ืœื™ื:",
128
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืช. ื›ืžื• ืžื—ื•ืœ ื”ื›ืจืš [ื›ืœืื™ื ืคืดื“]:",
129
+ "<b>ืžื—ื•ื–.</b> ืขื™ืจ. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืžื—ื•ื–, ืฉื ืžืงื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื:",
130
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจื“ืกื•ืช.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืจื‘ื” ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื ื˜ื•ืขื™ื:",
131
+ "<b>ืกื‘ืกื˜ื™.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื. ื•ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ืฉื ืžืขื•ืœื™ื ืžืื“:",
132
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ:",
133
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืื ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื. ื•ืื ืœืื•, ืžื’ืจืข ืžืฉื ื™ื ืฉืขื‘ืจื• ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื”. ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื, ืžืงื•ื ืจืื•ื™ ืœื–ืจื™ืขืช ื›ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืกืื” ืฉืœ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืขืช ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžืœืื” ืื™ืœื ื•ืช, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื•ื“ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื” ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ืŸ, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืคื•ื“ื” ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ:",
134
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ืฉื•ื™ื•.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ืžื›ืกืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื›ืกืช ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื) ื•ื”ืจืžื•ืช ืžื›ืก:",
135
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื•ื—ืฉื‘, ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื•ื—ืฉื‘, ืžื” ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘, ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ื”ืžืงื ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ:",
136
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื›ืกืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš, ื”ืงื™ืฉื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืžื” ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื—ื•ืžืฉ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ: "
137
+ ],
138
+ [
139
+ "<b>ื”ืžื™ืช ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ืฉื•ื•ื™ื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื:ืœืณ) ืื ื›ื•ืคืจ ื™ื•ืฉืช ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื ืชืŸ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื ืคืฉื•, ื“ืžื™ ื ื™ื–ืง:",
140
+ "<b>ื—ื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื”ืžื™ืชื•. ืžืฉืœื ื ื–ืง ืฉืœื:"
141
+ ],
142
+ [
143
+ "<b>ืคื’ื.</b> ืฉืžื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ื‘ืชื•ืœื” ืœืฉืคื—ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ืฉื™ืื” ืœืขื‘ื“ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืงื•ืจืช ืจื•ื— ื”ื™ืžื ื•:",
144
+ "<b>ืœืคื™ ื”ืžื‘ื™ื™ืฉ ื•ื”ืžืชื‘ื™ื™ืฉ.</b> ืื“ื ื ืงืœื” ืฉื‘ื™ื™ืฉ, ื‘ืฉืชื• ืžืจื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืžืชื‘ื™ื™ืฉ, ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืชื•:"
145
+ ],
146
+ [
147
+ "<b>ื ืžืฆื ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืคื™ื• ื™ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืขืฉื”.</b> ืฉื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื ืžืฆืืชื™ ื‘ืชื•ืœื™ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืื”, ื•ื”ืื•ื ืก ื“ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืขืฉื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื:",
148
+ "<b>ื’ื–ืจ ื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืœื ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืœืืจืฅ:",
149
+ "<b>ื–ื” ืขืฉืจ ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืจื’ืœื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืขืœ ื–ื” ื ืชื—ืชื ื’ื–ืจ ื“ื™ืŸ:"
150
+ ]
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ [
154
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ.</b> ืชื•ืจืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื’ืช ื™ื“, ืฉืขื ื™ ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื›ืคื™ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ื•, ื‘ืชืจ ื ื•ื“ืจ ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชืจ ื ื™ื“ืจ, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ:",
155
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ื™ืœื“ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืจืš ื–ืงืŸ, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื–ืงืŸ, ื“ืœื ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืชืจ ืฉื ื™ื ื“ื ื•ื“ืจ. ื•ืชื ื ื“ืงืจื™ ืœืžืขืจื™ืš ื ื•ื“ืจ, ืœื™ืฉื ื ื“ืงืจื ื ืงื˜, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื™ืขืจื™ื›ื ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ื ืžื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื“ืจ:",
156
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื™ื ื‘ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืงืฆื‘ ื”ืขืจืš ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื ืงื‘ื”, ื‘ืชืจ ื ืขืจืš ืื–ื™ืœ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชืจ ืžืขืจื™ืš, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ ื“ืื™ืฉ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ืืฉื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืืฉื”:",
157
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืจืš ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ, ืฉืื ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืจืš ืงื˜ืŸ, ื•ืงื•ื“ื ื ืชื™ื ืชื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื, ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื›ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš:"
158
+ ],
159
+ [
160
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืจ ืื ื™ ืืฃ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ.</b> ืื™ืœื• ืžืชืจืžื™ ืืฃ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช. ื“ื”ื ื“ืืžืจืช ื“ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ืŸ ื›ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ื“ืžื• ืื”ื“ื“ื™, ื“ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืขื ื™ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฉื™ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขื ื™ ืœืคื™ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืœื•ื, ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ ืœืžืฆื•ืจืข. ื•ื–ื” ืฉืืžืจ ืขืœ ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ืžื“ืช ืฉื ื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœ ืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืคื—ื•ืชื™ื ืื• ื™ืชืจื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืจืš ืฉืœื, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืžืฆื•ืจืข [ืขืฉื™ืจ] ื•ืฉืžืข ื”ืขื ื™ ื•ืืžืจ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ื–ื” ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ:",
161
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ืžืฉืœื ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ื ืชื™ื ื”, ืžืฉืœื ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉื’ืช. ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ื ืžื™ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉื’ืช ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื“ืจ:",
162
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ืžืš ื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืš, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ืžื›ื•ืชื• ืžืชื—ืœืชื• ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืคื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
163
+ ],
164
+ [
165
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืื‘ื™ื• ืžืช.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื–ื” ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื• ื’ื•ืกืก ื•ื ื•ื˜ื” ืœืžื•ืช, ื•ืžืช ื•ื™ืจืฉ ืžืžื ื• ืจื‘ื•ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื•, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™, ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
166
+ "<b>ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ื‘ื™ื.</b> ืœื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืžืกื—ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื• ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื, ื“ืืดื› ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื. ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ืžื•ืฉื›ืจืช ืœืื—ืจื™ื ื‘ืจื™ื‘ื•ื ืฉื›ืจ, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืืœื ืื•ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ื”. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื›ืจื” ืœืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืฉื›ื™ืจื•ืช ืžืฉืชืœืžืช ืืœื ื‘ืกื•ืคื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืขื ื™ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ืกืคื™ื ื” ืขืฆืžื” ืœืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื“ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืžืขืจื™ืš ื—ืžืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื—ืžื•ืจื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ื˜ืœื• ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื›ืจ ืžื ื™ื— ืœื• ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจื• ื“ื”ื™ื ืคืจื ืกืชื•, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืžื ื™ื— ืœื• ืกืคื™ื ืชื•:"
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“.</b> ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืจื›ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
170
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื–) ื›ืขืจื›ืš ื™ืงื•ื, ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื›ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš:",
171
+ "<b>ื™ื•ื ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืงื˜ืŸ ืขืœื™, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืงื˜ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื‘ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื, ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื. ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขืจืš ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ. ื“ื”ื›ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ [ืฉื] ื•ืื ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ:",
172
+ "<b>ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืžืขืœื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืฉืฉืœืžื” ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื•ืื– ื”ื•ื ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ืฉืฉื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ืœื“:",
173
+ "<b>ื”ืŸ ืื ืขืฉื™ื ื•.</b> ื‘ืชืžื™ื”. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ืื ืขืฉื™ื ื• [ืฉื ืช] ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ื“ืขืจืš ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื™ืฉ ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข, ื•ืœื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ:",
174
+ "<b>ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืžื ื” ืœื”ืงืœ.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื, ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื—ืžืฉ. ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืงืจืื™:",
175
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืœืขื•ืœื ืฉื ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื•ืฉื ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื”, ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื ื” ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืžืฉื ื” ื”ืื—ืจืช. ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื‘ื›ื•ืจ, ื ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืžืขืœื”, ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืื“ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื˜ืดื•-ื˜ืดื–) ื•ืคื“ื•ื™ื• ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืžืขืœื”, ืžื” ืœื”ืœืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื ืคื“ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืฉืฉื™ื ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“. ื•ืฉื ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื•ืฉื ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืฉื ื” ืฉื ื” ืžืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืชืดืง ืœืขื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:"
176
+ ]
177
+ ],
178
+ [
179
+ [
180
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™ ื›ื•ืณ, ืื ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื›ืกืฃ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื›ืกืฃ, ื•ืื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื–ื”ื‘, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืื ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื ืืžืจ ืกืชื ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™, ืคื˜ืจ ื ืคืฉื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื”ื•, ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื›ืžื•ืชื• ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ืฉืงืœ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื–ืคืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฆืœื™ื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืื ืฉื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืœืžื›ืจื ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ, ื•ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืื ืฉื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™ ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื–ืคืช ืื• ื‘ืฆืœื™ื ื•ื ืคื˜ืจ:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืจืžื˜ื™ื”.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื—ืกื•ืจื™ ืžื—ืกืจื ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ื•ืื ืื“ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื, ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืžื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื•, ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืจืžื˜ื™ื”, ืืฉื” ืฉืฉืžื” ื›ืš, ืฉืืžืจื” ืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืœื™ ื•ืขืœืชื” ืœื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื•ืฉืงืœื•ื” ื•ื ืชื ื” ืžืฉืงืœื” ื–ื”ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืืžื•ื“ื” ื‘ืขื•ืฉืจ:",
182
+ "<b>ืžืฉืงืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืขืœื™.</b> ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืงืœ ื™ื“ื•, ื“ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืžื›ื‘ื™ื“ ื•ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืžื™ืงืœ:",
183
+ "<b>ื•ืžื›ื ื™ืกื” ืขื“ ืžืจืคืงื•.</b> ืงื•ื“ืดื• ื‘ืœืขืดื–. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื”ืœืš ืื—ืจ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ื™ื“ ืœื–ืจื•ืข ืขื“ ื”ืžืจืคืง. ื•ื›ืฉืžื›ื ื™ืก ื”ื™ื“ ืœืชื•ืš ื—ื‘ื™ืช ืžืœืื” ืžื™ื ื™ืฉืคื›ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืคื™ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื™ื“ ืฉื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื‘ืชื•ื›ื” ืขื“ ื”ืžืจืคืง, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื›ื ื™ืก ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืžื•ืจ, ืฉืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ ื›ืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืื“ื, ื•ื™ื”ื ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืจ ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืงืœ ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืœืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืชื•ื›ื” ืขื“ ืฉืชื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืชืชืžืœื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ื›ื ื ืคื— ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื™ื“ื•, ื•ืฉื•ืงืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ื”ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืžืฉืงืœ ื™ื“ื•:",
184
+ "<b>ื”ื™ืืš ืืคืฉืจ ืœื›ื•ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ืฉืžื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ื’ื™ื“ื™ื ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืžืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื“, ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืžืฉืงืœ ืžื›ื•ื•ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
185
+ ],
186
+ [
187
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืœื ื™ื“.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื›ืžื” ื™ืคื” ื›ืฉื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื• ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื” ื›ืฉืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืฉืœื™ืžื•ืช. ืฉืžื™ ืฉื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื•, ื›ืฉื‘ืื™ื ืœืฉื•ืžื• ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื‘ื–ื•ืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืจื•ืื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžื–ื•ืœื–ืœ, ื•ื–ื” ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื™ื“ื™ ืขืœื™ ื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื•. ืœื›ืš ืžืคืจืฉ, ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืœื ื™ื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืžื›ืจื• ืจื‘ื• ื›ื•ืœื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื™ื“ื•, ืฉื™ื“ื• ืื—ืช ืžื•ื›ืชื‘ืช ืœืจื‘ื• ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืžื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ื›ืฉืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื›ืจ ื›ื•ืœื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืžืžื ื• ืœืขืฆืžื• ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื›ืžื” ืฉื•ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืืก ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืจื‘ื• ื™ื“ื• ืื—ืช ืฉืœื ืžื›ืจื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ื ื• ืžื–ื•ืœื–ืœ, ื•ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
188
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื—ื•ืžืจ ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ืžื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ื ืขืจืš ื™ื“ื™ ื•ืจื’ืœื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื•:",
189
+ "<b>ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™ ื•ืžืช ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจืš ืืœื ืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืขืžื•ื“ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื“ืžื™ ืขืœื™ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉื•ืžื•ื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืจื™ ืœื ื‘ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ื›ืš ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืช, ืืขืดืค ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ืื•ืžื“ื ื ื•ืœื ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื:",
190
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื ืคืฉื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘:",
191
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ.</b> ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืฉืืจ ืื™ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื”ื:"
192
+ ],
193
+ [
194
+ "<b>ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™.</b> ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืขืจืš ืจืืฉื™ ื•ืขืจืš ื›ื‘ื“ื™, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื•:",
195
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื‘ืณ) ื ื“ืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื ืคืฉื•ืช, ื”ืงื™ืฉ ื ื“ืจ ืœืขืจืš, ืžื” ืขืจืš ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื›ื•ืœื•, ืืฃ ื ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ื•ืœื•:",
196
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ.</b> ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื”ื, ืฉืื ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืื•ืชื• ืื‘ืจ ืขืœื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืœื‘ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื‘ื“ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื•ืœื•:"
197
+ ],
198
+ [
199
+ "<b>ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื•ื”ื ื™ื“ืจ ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช, ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ. ื•ืกื™ืคื ืืฆื˜ืจื™ื›ื ืœื™ื”. ื“ืžื™ื• ืฉืœ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืฉื•ืžื• ื”ื ื™ื“ืจ, ืœื ืืฉืชืขื‘ื•ื“ ื ื›ืกื™ื”, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ืื•ืžื“ื ื ื’ื™ืœื•ื™ ืžื™ืœืชื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื, ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื™ื“ืจ ืงื™ื™ื ืืžื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื”:"
200
+ ],
201
+ [
202
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื–ื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
203
+ "<b>ื•ื ืคืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื—ื–ื™ืง ื‘ื• ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
204
+ "<b>ืžืช ื”ืฉื•ืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืฉืœื.</b> ื•ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ืœืžืชื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืื“ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
205
+ ],
206
+ [
207
+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ื™ืชื ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื:",
208
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื›ืคืจื” ืืชื• ืœื ืžืฉื”ื™ ืœื”ื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืื• ืœื›ืคืจื” ืืชื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžืขื›ื‘ืชื• ืžืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ, ืฉื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื•ืชืจ ื”ื ื–ื™ืจ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื, ื–ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืคืฉืข ื•ืžืฉื”ื™ ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•:",
209
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื•ืœื” ืžื›ืคืจืช ืขืœ ืขืฉื” ื•ืขืœ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืื• ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื” ื›ืคืจื” ื•ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•ื™ื™, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืขื›ื‘ืช ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ืœื ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื”:",
210
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™.</b> ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™:",
211
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืืชื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื’ื˜ื™ ื ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื“ื™ื ื• ืฉื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื’ืจืฉ, ื•ืœื ืจืฆื” ืœื’ืจืฉ, ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื”ื’ื˜ ื•ื”ื•ื ื›ืฉืจ:"
212
+ ]
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ [
216
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืœืžื›ืจืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื•ืช ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื•ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื›ืœ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืงื— ื™ื‘ื ื•ื™ืงื—. ื•ืื™ ื‘ืขื•, ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ื›ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ ื˜ืคื™. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื›ื™ ื—ืฉื‘ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืฉื‘ืฉืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ื”ื›ืจื–ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”ื• ืืœื ืชืžื ื™ ืกืจื™ ื™ื•ืžื™, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืฉื›ื ืžืœืชื ื˜ื•ื‘ื ื™ื“ืขื™ ื•ืฉืžืขื™:",
217
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื•ื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื”:",
218
+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘.</b> ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื•ืฆืืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื. ื“ืื™ ืื™ื›ื ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ืŸ ืืžืจ ืœื”ื• ืœืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื™ืฆื™ืืชืŸ ืจืื• ืœื™ ืฉื“ื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืื ื”ื™ื ื™ืคื”, ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ืžืข ื”ื”ื›ืจื–ื” ื ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืฉื•ืืœืŸ. ื•ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ืฉื“ื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืฉื›ืš ื•ื›ืš ืกื™ืžื ื™ื”, ื•ื›ืš ื•ื›ืš ืžืฆืจื™ื”, ื›ืš ื”ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืชื‘ื•ืื” ื•ื›ืš ืฉืžืื•ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื” ืœื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื™ืงื— ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”. ื•ืื ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœื•ืงื— ื“ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ืœื™ืงื— ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœืืฉื” ื“ื ืกื‘ื ืคื•ืจืชื ืคื•ืจืชื, ื•ืื™ื›ื ื“ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื˜ืคื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ื•ื˜ืœ ื–ื•ื–ื™ื ื—ืกืจื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืจื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืกื•ื—ืจื™ื ืœื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื‘ื›ืš. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืœืžื›ืจืŸ, ื•ื”ื›ื ืชื ืŸ ืฉื•ื ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื. ื”ื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื“ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื, ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื• ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืขืœ ื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื” ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืจื•ื•ื—ื ืœื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ื›ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”, ื“ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืœื ื’ื‘ืชื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ื™ืฉ ืœื” ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื, ื’ื‘ืชื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช. ื•ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื“ื” ืื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžื™ืชืชื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœืคืœื•ื ื™ ืืฆืœื• ืžื ื”, ืื• ืฉื ื“ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื–ื” ื•ืžืช ื‘ื ื“ื•ื™ื•, ืื• ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื–ืžืŸ ืคืจื™ืขืช ื”ื—ื•ื‘ ื›ืฉืžืช, ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืื™ื ื™ืฉ ื“ืคืจืข ื‘ื’ื• ื–ืžื ื™ื”. ื•ื›ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืœืœื•, ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื ืืคื•ื˜ืจื•ืคื•ืก ื•ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื›ืจื–ื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืงืจืงืขื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ ื“ื™ืชืžื™ ืžืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ื”ืจื™ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื ืฉื‘ืข ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืจื–ื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืฉื˜ืจื•ืช ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ:",
219
+ "<b>ื™ื“ื™ืจื ื” ื”ื ืื”.</b> ืขืœ ื“ืขืช ืจื‘ื™ื ื ื“ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื”ืชืจื”, ืฉืœื ื™ื—ื–ื™ืจื ื” ืœืขื•ืœื. ื“ืฉืžื ื‘ืขืจืžื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
220
+ "<b>ืงื ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืขืจืžื”:",
221
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ื ื• ืฆืจื™ืš.</b> ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื”ื›ื ืื ืื“ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืื™ ืœื, ื“ื‘ืฉื›ื™ื‘ ืžืจืข ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ื‘ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ื—ื•ื˜ื ื•ืœื ืœื•. ื•ื‘ื‘ืจื™ื ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื›ื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื‘ืฉืืœื”, ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื•ืžืจ ืœื• ืœื—ื›ื ืœื ืœื“ืขืช ื›ืŸ ื ื“ืจืชื™ ื•ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื›ื ืžืชื™ืจ ื ื“ืจื•, ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื ื—ื›ื ืฉื™ืชื™ืจื ื• ืœื›ืš ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ื–ื•. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืกื‘ืจ ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืœื ืœื“ืขืช ื›ืŸ ื ื“ืจืชื™ ื•ื˜ืขื™ืชื™, ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืœื•, ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื“ื•ืจ ื”ื ืื”, ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขื‘ื™ื“, ื”ื•ื” ืžืชืฉื™ืœ ืขืœ ื ื“ืจื™ื” ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื’ืจืฉื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข:",
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+ "<b>ื”ืขืจื‘ ืœืืฉื” ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืขืจื‘ ืœืคืจื•ืข ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”. ืœื ื™ืคืจืข ื”ืขืจื‘ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื“ื™ืจื ื” ื”ื‘ืขืœ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืฉืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจ ืื•ืชื”. ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื“ืขืชื• ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื” ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ื‘ื ื‘ืชืจื: "
223
+ ],
224
+ [
225
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื“ืžื• ื’ื™ืจื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืœื™ื›ื ืงื ื•ื ื™ื:",
226
+ "<b>ืืœื ื”ืคื•ื“ื” ืคื•ื“ื”.</b> ื‘ืขืœื” ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื–ื•ืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœืืฉื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ืŸ ืฉืœื•. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜, ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉืžื ื™ืืžืจื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ:",
227
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื• ืžืื”.</b> ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ื—ื•ื‘ื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื•, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืื™ ืœืื• ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ื” ืื•ื–ืคื™ื” ืืœื ื”ื™ืžื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ืžื ื™ื” ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ืื•ื–ืคื™ื”, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•. ื•ืขื“ ื›ืžื”, ืขื“ ืคืœื’ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื ื›ืกื™ื ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ ื”ื—ื•ื‘, ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืื• ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ืื•ื–ืคื™ื”, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืขืฉื•ื™ ืœืงื ื•ืช ืงืจืงืข ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืžืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื”:"
228
+ ],
229
+ [
230
+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ืชื™ื”ื ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ:",
231
+ "<b>ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืกื•ืช ื•ืžื˜ื” ืกื ื“ืœื™ื ื•ืชืคื™ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฉื™ื™ืจื™ื ืœื• ืžืขื•ืช ืœืงื ื•ืชืŸ ืื ืื™ืŸ ืœื•. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ืžืš ื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืœืงืจื ื”ื›ื™, ื•ืื ืžืš, ืชืขืฉื” ืฉื™ืฉืืจ ื”ื•ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ื”ื•ื™ื” ื•ื—ื™ื•ืช, ืžืขืจื›ืš, ืžื“ืžื™ ื”ืขืจืš. ื•ืžืฉืžืข ื”ื•ื ื™ืฉ ืœื• ื”ื•ื™ื” ื•ื—ื™ื•ืช ืžื“ืžื™ ื”ืขืจืš, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืืฉืชื• ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื ื™ื•:",
232
+ "<b>ืžื›ืœ ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื›ืœ ืื•ืžื ื•ืช ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื:",
233
+ "<b>ืžืขืฆื“ื™ื.</b> ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืจืดื ื‘ืœืขืดื–. ืฉืžื—ืœื™ืงื™ื ื‘ื” ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื•ื—:",
234
+ "<b>ืžื’ื™ืจื”.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืกื›ื™ืŸ ืืจื•ืš ืžืœื ืคื’ื™ืžื•ืช. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืงืจื, ืžืฉื•ืจ, ืกื™ื’ืดื ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
235
+ "<b>ืฆืžื“ื•.</b> ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจ. ืฉืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ืื•ืžื ืชื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจ ื•ื—ืžื•ืจ ื ื›ืกื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื›ืœื™ ืื•ืžื ื•ืช:"
236
+ ],
237
+ [
238
+ "<b>ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื•ืขื˜.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืขืฆื“ื™ื ื•ืžื’ืจื” ืื—ืช:",
239
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืฉื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
240
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ืขื˜.</b> ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœื•, ื•ืœื ื–ื‘ื ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™. ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ืกื’ื™ ืœื™ื” ื‘ื”ื›ื™, ื”ืฉืชื ื ืžื™ ืชืกื’ื™ ืœื™ื”. ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื•ื• ืื™ื ืฉื™ ืžื•ืฉืœื™ ืœื™ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืœืื•ืฉื•ืœื™ ืœืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื”ืฉืชื ืฉื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืœืงื— ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืœื ืžืฉื›ื— ืžืืŸ ื“ืžื•ืฉื™ืœ ืœื™ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื–ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™ ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ:"
241
+ ],
242
+ [
243
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืœื• ื ื›ืกื™ื ืฉืœื•:",
244
+ "<b>ืฉืฆื‘ืขืŸ ืœืฉืžืŸ.</b> ืœืฉื ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื•:",
245
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ืกื ื“ืœื™ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ืขืœื• ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื‘ื—ื–ืงืชืŸ ืžืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ื”:",
246
+ "<b>ืืขืดืค ืฉืืžืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื ืžื›ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืชืŸ ืœืฉื‘ื—.</b> ื›ืกื•ืช ื™ืคื” ืฉืœื”ืŸ ืžืฉื‘ื—ื ื•ืžืขืœื” ืืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื’ื‘ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืฉืื ืชืœืงื— ืœืขื‘ื“ ื›ืกื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื“ื™ื ืจ ื”ื•ื ืžืฉื‘ื™ื— ืžื ื” ืขืœ ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืฉื•ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื•:",
247
+ "<b>ืœืื˜ืœื™ืก.</b> ืœื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื•ืง:",
248
+ "<b>ืœื›ืจืš.</b> ืฉื“ืจืš ืกื•ื—ืจื™ื ืœื‘ื•ื ืฉื ื•ืงื•ื ื™ื ื”ืžืจื’ืœื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ืงืจ:",
249
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืžืงื•ืžื•.</b> ื‘ืžืจื’ืœื™ืช:",
250
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืขืชื•.</b> ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืฉื”ื”. ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ, ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืชื ื”ืงื“ืฉื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื“, ืฉืœื ื™ืฉื”ื” ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื˜ืขืžื, ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื“ื–ื™ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืืชื• ืœืืฉื”ื•ื™ื™ื ื”ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ื•ืืชื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ืคืกื™ื“ื, ื•ืžื”ืื™ ื˜ืขืžื ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืชื›ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
251
+ ]
252
+ ],
253
+ [
254
+ [
255
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”:",
256
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืคื”ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ื. ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืฉื ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื”, ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื•ื’ื•ืณ. ื•ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช ืขื“ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื•ื’ื•ืณ ื•ื ื’ืจืข ืžืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ืš ื”ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื‘ืฉื ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื ืขื“ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืกืœืขื™ื, ื ืžืฆื ืกืœืข ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืกืœืข ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื–ื” ื”ืกืœืข ื”ื™ื•ืชืจ ื—ืœืงื•ื”ื• ืœืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ. ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื”, ืœืžืดื˜ ืฉื ื™ื ืžืดื˜ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืžืดื˜ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืฉ ื›ืืŸ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ืฉืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื”, ืื•ืชื• ื”ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืงืœื‘ื•ืŸ ืœืคืจื•ื˜ืจื•ื˜, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื”ื”ื›ืจืข ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืฉืงืœ ื•ืฉืงืœ ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื•. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืฉื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื ื•ืชืŸ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื ืœื™ืงื— ืกืœืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœื—ื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงืœื‘ื•ืŸ ืœืคืจื•ื˜ืจื•ื˜. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ื’ื™ืจื•ืข, ื•ืื ื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื, ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช ื•ื ื’ืจืข, ื•ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืขืฆื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ืื“ื ื—ืก ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื• ื•ืœื [ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ] ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืคืกื™ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืœืขื™ื:",
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+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืœืื• ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืกืžื•ืš ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงืืžืจ, ืืœื ื”ืื™ ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ืจ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ื‘ื ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืืžืฆืข ืฉื ื”, ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื—ืฆื™ ืกืœืข ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื”, ื“ื›ืžื” ื“ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœื” ื›ื•ืœื” ืฉืชื ืœื ืžื’ืจืขื ืœื” ื›ืœืœ ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ื” ืืœื ื’ืื•ืœืช ืฉื ื” ืฉืœื™ืžื”. ื•ืžื” ื˜ืขื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ื‘ื ืœื’ืื•ืœ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืฉื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืฉื ื” ืฉืฉื™ืช, ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉืฉื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืกืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ืฉื ื™ื ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื ื•ืชืจ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืฉื ื™ื, ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื ื•ืชืจ ืฉื ื”, ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื”ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื•, ืœื’ืจื•ืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืงืœ ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœื:",
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+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื ืจื™ื•ื— ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื ืฉื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืื•ืชื” ื™ืฆื™ืืช ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ื” ืฉื™ืฆืื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืงื“ืฉื” ื‘ืคืœื’ื ื“ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื“ืื™ ื—ืฉื‘ืช ืœื”ื”ื•ื ื™ืฆื™ืื” ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื ืžื™ืคืจืงื ื‘ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืืœื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื•ืื™ ืืžืจืช ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื•, ื”ื•ื” ื”ื›ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื™ื“ื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื“ืœื ืฉืงื™ืœ ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื”ื›ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ื™ืฆื™ืื” ื’ืžื•ืจื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืœื ืžื™ืคืจืงื ื‘ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืืœื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื:",
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+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื™ื” ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืงื“ืฉื•ืช:",
260
+ "<b>ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื–ืจื•ืข ื‘ื• ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื–ื•ืจืขื™ื ื‘ืžืคื•ืœืช ื™ื“ ื•ื‘ื–ืจื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ื•ื ื™ืช, ืœื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ืจืข ืžืงื•ื‘ืฅ ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ื•ืœื ืžืคื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžืคื•ืจื“ ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
261
+ "<b>ื ืงืขื™ื ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื–ืจื™ืขื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื—ื–ื• ืœืžื™ื“ื™, ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื ืžื“ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื” ืžืชื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคื™ ื ืคืฉื™ื™ื”ื•, ื•ื ืคื“ื™ืŸ ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ:",
262
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ ื ืžื“ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื• ืœื–ืจื™ืขื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ืขืฉืจื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืกืœืขื™ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืงืจืงืข ื”ืŸ ื ืงืจืื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžืŸ:",
263
+ "<b>ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื›ื•ืœื• ื›ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืกืฃ, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื›ื•ืœื• ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืื—ื“: "
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ื›ืœ ื”ืื“ื.</b> ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ืืœืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ื” ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
267
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ื’ืื•ืœ ื™ื’ืืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื•ื’ื•ืณ:"
268
+ ],
269
+ [
270
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืžื™ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™. ื”ื•ื” ืคืจื™ืง ืœื” ืื™ื ืฉ ืื—ืจื™ื ื ื“ื”ื•ื” ื ืคืงื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ:",
271
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ื‘ื ื• ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœืื‘ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื•ืœื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“. ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื•ืœื ืœื‘ืŸ: ",
272
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ืื—ื“ ืžืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื•</b> ืฉืœ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ, ื•ื‘ื ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ื’ืืœื” ืžื™ื“ ืงืจื•ื‘ื•, ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืœื”ืชื—ืœืง ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
273
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ื›ื”ืŸ.</b> ืžื™ื“ ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
274
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืืžืจ</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื ื’ืืœื” ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื™ ื•ืœื—ื‘ืจื™ ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื’ืืœืชื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื›ื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืžื ื™: "
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ื’ืืœื”.</b> ืœื ื’ืืœื•ื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืœื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื•ืœื ืื—ืจ:",
278
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื”.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืฉืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืคื•ื’ืข ื‘ื• ื”ืŸ ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœืชื•ื›ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื ื—ืœื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื:",
279
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืืช ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื“ื’ืžืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ื›ื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืช (ืฉื) ื•ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื‘ื™ืชื• ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืžื” ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื ื“ืžื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ืชื ื•ื”ืขืจื™ื›ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื“ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ืืœื ื ืคื“ื” ื‘ื“ืžื™ื, ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืœื ืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื ื“ืžื™ื. ื”ืœื›ืš ื›ื™ ืคืจื™ืง ืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื”ื•ื• ื“ืžื™ื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื›ื™ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ื™ ืžื˜ื™ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ืคืงื ื‘ื—ื ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื•ืื ืœื ื ื’ืืœื” ื™ื”ื‘ื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื“ืžื™ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœื™ื ื•ืฉืงืœื™ ืœื”:",
280
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ื’ืžืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื’:ื›ืณ) ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ืณ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ืžื” ื”ืชื ื‘ื—ื ื ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ื—ื ื. ื•ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ื™ืœืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืžืชื ื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ืœื ื ื™ืœืฃ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื“ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ื™ืœืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืชื•, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืœื ื ื™ืœืฃ ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช ืฉื”ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:",
281
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืจื˜ื•ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืขื–ื•ื‘ื”. ื›ืžื• [ื”ื•ืฉืข ื™ืณ] ืื ืขืœ ื‘ื ื™ื ืจื•ื˜ืฉื”:",
282
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื ื” ืื—ืจ.</b> ื•ื›ืฉืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื™ื›ื ืกื• ื‘ื” ื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืฉืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืื“ื ื”ืงื•ื ื” ืงืจืงืข ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื‘ื”ื”ื•ื ืงืืžืจ ืงืจื ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฆืืชื• ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื ืžืฉืžืข, ื“ืื›ืชื™ ืœื ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื ื“๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืงื“ืฉ ืคืงืข ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:"
283
+ ],
284
+ [
285
+ "<b>ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืฉื“ื” ืžืื‘ื™ื•, ืžืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื ืคืœื” ืœื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื ื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”, ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”, ื•ืื ืœื ื’ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
286
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืื ื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”, ืคื•ื“ื” ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื” ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”, ื•ืื ืœื ื’ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ. ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœื•, ื“ืขืชื™ื“ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ืœืื‘ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืžื›ื™ืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉืืจ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ื’ื•ืืœื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื” ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืœืืฉืจ ืœื• ืื—ื•ื–ืช ื”ืืจืฅ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื•ื–ื” ื™ื•ืจืฉ ืืช ื›ื— ืื‘ื™ื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
287
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•, ื•ืงืจืงืข ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื• ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
288
+ "<b>ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื•ื™ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื”, ืื™ื ื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช:",
289
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื“ื” ืœืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ืื• ืœื•ื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืงืจืงืข ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืžืื‘ื•ืชื™ื• ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื’ื•ืืœื” ืœืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื”) ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื:"
290
+ ]
291
+ ],
292
+ [
293
+ [
294
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื‘ืœ. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’:",
295
+ "<b>ืคืชื— ืืชื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื›ืžื” ืืชื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืจื™ื•ื— ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœื• ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ. ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื“ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื•ืืœื• ื‘ื›ืžื” ืชืคื“ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื“ืžื™ื” ืงืฆื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ. ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืœื• ืฉื‘ื˜ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื•ื’ื“ ื“ื‘ื˜ืœื• ื™ื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืงืจืืชื ื“ืจื•ืจ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœื›ืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื”, ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืœื ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื’ืœื• ืžืชื•ื›ื”, ืฉืื– ื”ื™ื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื”:",
296
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ ืฉื•ื™ื™ื” ื•ืจื‘ื™ืข ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ื—ืžืฉื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื ืคืชื— ืืชื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื”ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ, ื›ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžืฆื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ื‘ืื“ื•ืŸ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื–) ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ, ืืœืžื ืžืฆื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ืงื•ื“ืžืช ืœืžื›ื™ืจื”. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืคื“ื™ื•ื ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืืจ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ื“ืจื•ืฆื” ืื“ื ื‘ืงื‘ ืฉืœื•:",
297
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืจืขืชื”.</b> ืฉื”ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืฉื‘ื” ื™ืชื™ืจื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ื—:",
298
+ "<b>ืื™ืกืจ.</b> ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช:",
299
+ "<b>ืœื ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืืœื ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืฉื”, ืฉืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืื™ืกืจ, ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื”. ื•ืืžืจ ืœื• ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื™ืขืชืš, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืš ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื”. ื•ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™, ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ, ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื:"
300
+ ],
301
+ [
302
+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืžื ื›ืกื™ื• ืขื“ ืขืฉืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื—ื–ืจื• ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื—ื–ืจื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื›ืื—ื“, ืžืฉืœืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื”. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ืืžืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข, ื•ื—ื–ืจื• ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื›ืื—ื“, ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉืจ, ื•ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืžื ื›ืกื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืžื ื›ืกื™ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื—ื–ืจื• ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ื›ืื—ื“ ื•ื ืžื›ืจ ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉืœืฉ, ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ื‘ื ื›ืกื™ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืกืœืขื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื–ื” ืœืขื•ืœื:"
303
+ ],
304
+ [
305
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืœืื—๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืฉืืžืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
306
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ. ื“ืœื”ืื™ ืœื ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืืžืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขืœื” ื”ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืขื ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ืื™ ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™ืš ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ื ืžืฆื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžืคืกื™ื“. ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ ื™ืชื ื• ืื•ืชื• ืกืœืข ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื–ื” ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื•, ืื‘ืœ ืขืœ ืกืœืข ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื–ื” ืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื—ื•ืžืฉ:",
307
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉืœืฉื™ื.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš ืืžืื™ ื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื‘ืฉืœืžื ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ื• ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ืŸ ืœืžื™ืชื‘ื ืœื”ื ืš, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงืจืŸ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื“ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืขื• ืœืžื™ืชื‘ ืงืจื ื ื›ืžื” ื“ืฉื™ื™ืžื•ื” ืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื ื“ื™ื“ื”ื•. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื, ืœื™ืชื ื• ืœื”ืื™ืš, ื“ื”ื ืงืจืŸ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืœื™ืžืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื”ืจื™ ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื™ื ื• ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืžื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ืžืชืจืฅ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ืžื˜ื™ ื—ื•ืฉื‘ื ื ื“ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืœื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ืื™ ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™, ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื™ื“ื ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื™ื™ื”ื•. ื•ื”ื ื“ืœื ืชื ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื“ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืง ืชื ื ื•ืœื ื—ืฉ ืœืžื™ืชื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
308
+ "<b>ืื ืจืฆื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืœื™ืชืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ื›ืฉืคืชื—ื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ, ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ื, ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ื•ืขืœื•ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ื”ื ื—ืžืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ:",
309
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ืžืคืกื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื“ื™ื ืจ ืžืžืื™ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื™ื™ื”ื•:",
310
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืœืื•.</b> ืฉืœื ืคืชื—ื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืœื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื, ื•ื–ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
311
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื–ื” ื”ื’ื™ืขืชืš.</b> ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืš, ื•ืœื ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื™ื ื• ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืžื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืืœื ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืคืชื—ื• ื”ื ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ืขืœื•ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืœื ืฉืžื• ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื–ื” ื”ืื—ืจ, ืื‘ืœ ืื ืฉืžื•ื”ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื‘ืขืœื•ื™ื• ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืœื ืื™ื™ืจื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ: "
312
+ ],
313
+ [
314
+ "<b>ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืžืฆืื ื•.</b> ืžืงืฆืช ืฆืื ื•. ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื—ืจื ื•ื ื•ืชื ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ:",
315
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื ืืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ืฉืœื ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืœืขืฆืžื• ื›ืœื•ื:",
316
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืจืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื—) ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื• ืžืื“ื ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•. ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื•, ืืœื• ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื›ืœ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ. ืžืื“ื, ืืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ื•ืฉืคื—ื•ืชื™ื• ื›ื ืขื ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœืŸ. ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•, ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื”, ืืœื ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืœื ื™ื—ืจื™ื ืืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื, ืžื•ื—ืจืžื™ื:",
317
+ "<b>ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื—ืก ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื–ื‘ื–ื ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜:"
318
+ ],
319
+ [
320
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžื—ืจื™ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•.</b> ื•ื‘ืชื• ื ื”ื™ ื“ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ืจื” ื‘ืงื˜ื ื•ืชื”, ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ืจื” ื‘ื ืขืจื•ืชื”:",
321
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉืœื”ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื™ืดื“) ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืš ื™ื”ื™ื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื”ื•ื™, ืžื” ื”ื ืื” ื‘ื›ืš ืื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืจื™ื, ืื™ื”ื• ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ื–ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ื” ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ืจ:",
322
+ "<b>ื ืจืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื ืจืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืœืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ, ื“ืžื•ื“ื” ืœื• ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ืกื•ื‘ืจ ื›ืžื•ืชื• ื‘ืงืจืงืขื•ืช, ื•ืœื ื“ื™ื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ื. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืกื‘ืจ, ื”ื•ืงืฉื• ืžื˜ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœื™ืŸ ืœืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื—) ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื• ืžืื“ื ื•ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•, ืžื” ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืื—ื•ื–ืช ืขื•ืœื ื”ื™ื ืœื”ื, ืืฃ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ื. ื•ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ื”ืงื™ืฉื. ื•ืžื“ื ื—ื™ืช ืจื‘ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืฉื™ ืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืžื•ื“ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ื‘ืžื” ื ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื•, ืฉืดืž ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
323
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื—ืจืžื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉื”ื—ืจื™ืžื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืœืชืชื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
326
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื•ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ. ืื‘ืœ ื—ืจืžื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ื“ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืื—ืจืžื™ื ื”ื•, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืœื ืžืขื•ืช:",
327
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืกืชื ื—ืจืžื™ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืžื—ืจื™ื ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ื ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžื—ืจื™ื ืงืจืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”, ื ื•ืชื ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ื™ืช, ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜, ื•ืœื ื™ืคื—ื•ืช ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื ืื• ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœื–ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืœื‘ื“ ืื• ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืคืจืกื•ืžื™ ืžืœืชื:",
328
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ, ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื›ื•ืณ:"
329
+ ],
330
+ [
331
+ "<b>ืื ื ื“ืจ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื ื“ืจื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื—ืจื™ืžื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื”, ื ืžืฆืืช ืฉืœื• ื”ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื ื“ืจื•, ื“ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื” ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ:",
332
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื.</b> ื“ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ืื ืžืชื”, ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœ ื‘ื” ื—ืจื, ื“ืœืื• ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื”ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื›ื“ื™ ื˜ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื” ื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ืฉื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื—ืจื™ืžื•, ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืื ื™ืžืฆื ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื–ื•ืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•, ื•ื›ืื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื™ืชืŸ ื–ื”, ืฉื–ื• ื”ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื”, ื•ืžืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉื” ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ืžืขืชื” ืื™ื ื• ืžืื‘ื“ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืคืกื™ื“ ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•:",
333
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ื ื• ืจืฉืื™.</b> ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื ื•ืฉื” ืจืฉื™ื:",
334
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื’ื•ืคื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื—ืจื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื• ืืœื ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ืืœื ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ ืื• ืœื‘ืŸ ืื—ื•ืชื•, ื•ืื•ืชื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื“ื™ื”ื™ื‘, ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื–ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื”ื—ืจื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื ืงื˜ ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ืื• ื‘ืŸ ืื—ื•ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืœื• ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื• ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื™ืชืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ืœื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื• ืื• ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ืจ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื—ื–ื™ ืœื™ื” ืžื™ื—ื–ื™ ื›ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืžืกื™ื™ืข ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื’ืจื ื•ืช ืœื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืœื–ืจื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชื ื• ืœื• ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื‘ืฉื›ืจื•, ื•ืืฉืชื›ื— ื“ืœื ืฉืงื™ืœ ืœื™ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ืืœื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืฉื›ืจ:",
335
+ "<b>ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื˜) ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืืฉืจ ื™ื•ืœื“ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ:",
336
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื—ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืืœ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื•) ืืš ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืืฉืจ ื™ื‘ื•ื›ืจ ืœื”ืณ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื™ืฉ ืื•ืชื•:",
337
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™.</b> ืœื”ืขืœื•ืชื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืืชื• ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืœื”ืขืœื•ืชื• ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•:",
338
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉื [ื–ื‘ื—] ืื—ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื•. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ื ืคืงื ืœื”ื• ื”ืš ื“ืจืฉื ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืืœ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ ืœื”ื• ืœืœืื•, ืฉืื ืžืชืคื™ืกื• ืœืฉื ื–ื‘ื— ืื—ืจ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืœืื•, ื•ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื‘ืขื™ ืœื”ื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืžืฆื•ื” ืœื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืœื‘ื›ื•ืจื”, ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืžืืœื™ื• ื”ื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื•ืจืณ ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืš ื“ืจืฉื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
339
+ ]
340
+ ],
341
+ [
342
+ [
343
+ "<b>ื”ืžื•ื›ืจ ืืช ืฉื“ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื” ืื™ื ื• ืจืฉืื™ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ, ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ, ื”ืžื›ืจ ื‘ื˜ืœ ื•ืžื—ื–ื™ืจ ื”ื“ืžื™ื:",
344
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื’ืื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชืจืฆื” ืœื•ืง๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ, ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืœื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื”) ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืชืงื ื”, ืฉืชื”ื ืงื ื•ื™ื” ืœื• ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืื ืžื”ื“ืจ ืœื” ืžืงืžื™ ื”ื›ื™, ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื”. ื•ืžื•ื›ืจ ื ืžื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื” ืื ื’ื•ืืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืš. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชื” ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื• ืฉืœ ืœื•ืงื— ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉืžื›ืจื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืืช ืฉื ื™ ืžืžื›ืจื•, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ ื›ืžื” ืฉื ื™ื ืžืฉืžื›ืจื” ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืžื—ืœืง ื”ื“ืžื™ื ืœืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืžื›ืจื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืฉืžื›ืจ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืฉื ื” ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ืžื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืชื ืžื›ื™ืจื” ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืฉื”ืชื” ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื—ืžืฉ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ืžื•ื›ืจ ืœื’ืืœื”, ืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ืœื•ืงื— ื—ืฆื™ ืžื ื”:",
345
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืžืžื ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื. ื“ื”ื ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘, ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื”ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืชื‘ื•ืื” ืชืฉื”ื ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื—. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืชื‘ื•ืื”, ื•ื ืจื” ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื—ืจืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืื” ืฉื“ื” ื ื™ืจ ื•ืœื ื–ืจืขื”, ืื• ื”ื•ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฉื”ื ื™ื—ื” ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื™ืจ ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”, ืื™ื”ื• ื“ืืคืกื™ื“ ืื ืคืฉื™ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื:",
346
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ืœืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืื•ืชื” ืชื‘ื•ืื” ื”ืขื•ืžื“ืช ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืงื ื™ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืชืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืืชื ื ืงืžื ื‘ื”ื ืืœื ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื:"
347
+ ],
348
+ [
349
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฉื‘.</b> ื”ืžื•ื›ืจ ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื”:",
350
+ "<b>ืืœื ืขื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื•ืื•ืชื• ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื™ื ื›ื” ืœื• ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืฉื ื” ืฉืื›ืœื”, ื•ื”ืžื•ืชืจ ื™ืฉืœื ืœื•:",
351
+ "<b>ืืฉืจ ืžื›ืจ ืœื•.</b> ื‘ื’ื•ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ืžืžื›ืจื• ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ืขื•ื“ืฃ ืœืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ืžื›ืจ ืœื•:",
352
+ "<b>ืœืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื‘ืชื•ื›ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืฆื ืขืชื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืฉื“ื” ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”. ื•ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœืงื•ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื•ื›ืจ ื•ืœื ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื’ืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื’ืื•ืœื” ื’ืื•ืœื” ืžืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™, ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื”:ื›ืดื•) ื•ืžืฆื ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•, ื•ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื’ืื•ืœื” ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื•, ืžื” ืœื”ืœืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ. ื•ื”ืชื ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืœื”ืงืœ, ื“ืชื ื™ื, ื ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืžื ื” ื•ื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ื•ืขืžื“ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื, ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื” ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืžืื•ืชื• ืžื ื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื›ืš ืžื ื›ื” ืœื•, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื›ืกืฃ ืžืงื ืชื•. ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ื ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื ื•ื”ื›ืกื™ืฃ ื•ืขืžื“ ืขืœ ืžื ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื”, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื•, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื”:",
353
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืžื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืจื—ื•ืงื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื•, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืงืจื•ื‘. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžื›ื•ืจ ื‘ืจืข ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื™ืคื”. ื•ืœื ื™ืœื•ื” ืžืื—ืจื™ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ. ื•ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืฉื“ื” ืฉืžื›ืจ ืืœื ืื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ื•ืœื” ืื• ืœื ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ืฉื™ื’ื” ื™ื“ื• ื•ืžืฆื ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•. ื•ื”ืฉื™ื’ื” ื™ื“ื• ืžืขืฆืžื•, ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืœื•ื” ื•ื™ื’ืืœ. ื•ืžืฆื, ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื™ืžืฆื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฆื•ื™ ืœื• ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžื•ื›ืจ ื‘ืจื—ื•ืง ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืงืจื•ื‘, ื‘ืจืข ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ื™ืคื”, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฆื•ื™ ืœื• ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ. ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•, [ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœื”] ื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืืœ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœื—ืฆืื™ื:",
354
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ืจืช, ืื• ืœืœื•ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืืœื”, ื•ืื ืื™ื ื• ืžืกืคื™ืง ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื›ื•ืœื” ื™ื’ืืœ ื—ืฆื™ื” ื•ื›ืฉืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื™ื’ืืœ ื›ื•ืœื”:"
355
+ ],
356
+ [
357
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื’ืืœ ืžื™ื“.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื™ื ื• ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื:",
358
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืฉื›ืฉืžื—ื–ื™ืจ ืœื• ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ื›ืœื•ื ื ืžืฆื ืฉื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื‘ืฉื›ืจ ื”ืžืชื ืช ืžืขื•ืชื™ื•:",
359
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื ื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื’ืžื•ืจื”. ื“ืจื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืžืงืจื™ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืœื•ืื” ืฉื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ืื” ืœื™ื“ื™ ืจื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื›ืจ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœื ื” ื•ืชื—ืœื•ื˜ ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืช:",
360
+ "<b>ื™ื’ืืœ ื‘ื ื•.</b> ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ื” ืื ื™ืจืฆื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื—ืจ ืฉื ื”, ื ื—ืœื˜ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื“ ืžืœืืช ืœื• ืฉื ื” ืชืžื™ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ:",
361
+ "<b>ืžืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ ืœื•.</b> ืฉืื ืžื›ืจื” ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืœืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื•ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœืœื•ื™ ื‘ืื™ื™ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ื ื™ืกืŸ ื”ื•ื ื ื—ืœื˜, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœืžื›ืจ ืฉื ื™ ืืœื ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขื“ ืžืœืืช ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื–ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื•:",
362
+ "<b>ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช ืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ืขื“ ื™ืดื’ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ:",
363
+ "<b>ืฉื ื” ื•ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื” ืคืฉื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืฉื ืช ืœื‘ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ื™ื•ื. ื•ื™ืžื™ื ืฉื™ืชืจื™ื ืฉื ืช ื—ืžื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืช ืœื‘ื ื” ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจืŸ ืื ื• ืžืขื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืฉื ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
364
+ ],
365
+ [
366
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ื”ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื”.</b> ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ืชื•, ื™ื’ืืœ, ื•ืื ืœืื• ื—ืœื•ื˜ ืœื•:",
367
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื” ื ื˜ืžืŸ.</b> ืœื•ืงื—, ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืžืฆืื”ื• ืžื•ื›ืจ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืืช ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื™ื”ื ื ื—ืœื˜ ืœื•:",
368
+ "<b>ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื•ืœืฉ.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื ืžื˜ื™ืœ ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
369
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื“ืœืช.</b> ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืžื›ืจ. ื•ื ื›ื ืก. ื—ื•ืœืฉ, ื›ืžื• ื—ื•ืœืฉ ืขืœ ื’ื•ื™ื (ื™ืฉืขื™ื” ื™ืดื“):"
370
+ ],
371
+ [
372
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืคื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ื‘ืชื™ ืžืจื—ืฆืื•ืช ื•ืžื’ื“ืœื™ื ื•ื‘ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื•ืžืขืจื•ืช. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืฉืจ ื‘ืขื™ืจ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืขื™ืจ. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืฉืื ื™ ืžืจื‘ื” ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืคืจื˜ ืœืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื›ืœืœ ืœื‘ื™ืช:",
373
+ "<b>ืจืžืดื ืืฃ ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช.</b> ืœืื• ืฉื“ื•ืช ืžืžืฉ ืงืืžืจ ืจืดืž, ื“ื”ื ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ืฉื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœื‘ื™ืช. ืืœื ืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืžืฆื•ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื–ืจื™ืขื” ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ืžืงื•ื ืกืœืขื™ื, ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืžืฉื ืื‘ื ื™ื ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ. ื•ืžืฆื•ืœื”, ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืžืฉื ื—ื•ืœ ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืดืž:",
374
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ื—ืœื˜ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื”:",
375
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืžืชื•.</b> ื•ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
376
+ ],
377
+ [
378
+ "<b>ืฉื’ื’ื•ืชื™ื” ื—ื•ืžืชื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ืงื™ืคื•ื” ื—ื•ืžื” ืืœื ื”ืงื™ืคื•ื” ื‘ืชื™ื ื•ืชื›ื™ืคืช ื”ื‘ืชื™ื ื–ื• ืœื–ื• ื”ืŸ ื›ื—ื•ืžื”:",
379
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ื“ื—ื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืœื ืฉื’ื’ื•ืชื™ื” ื—ื•ืžืชื”:",
380
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืŸ.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื—ื•ืžื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื•, ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”. ื“ืœื•ื ื—ื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘, ืžืœื ื‘ื•ื™ืดื• ื•ืืœืดืฃ, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื• ื•ืžืฉืžืข ืœื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื•ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ื—ื•ืžื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื”:",
381
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืชื™ื, ืžืงืจื™ ืขื™ืจ:",
382
+ "<b>ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงืฆืจื”.</b> ืฉื ืขื™ืจ ืงื˜ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืฆืคื•ืจื™:",
383
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืงืจื ืฉื‘ื’ื•ืฉ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืงืคื•ืช ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืŸ. ื•ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื“ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ืงื™ื™ืดืœ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืดื“ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืชืจืชื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื•ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื• ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื”, ืืœื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืื—ืจืช ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืืดื™ ื•ื’ื ื”ื™ื ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืืจ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”:"
384
+ ],
385
+ [
386
+ "<b>ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืœืขื™ื™ืจื•ืช ื—ื•ืžื”:",
387
+ "<b>ื›ื— ื™ืคื”.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ:",
388
+ "<b>ื•ื ื’ืืœื™ื ืžื™ื“.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื”ื•ืชื• ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ื’ืื•ืœื” ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืžื™ื“ ื™ื’ืืœื ื• ืื ื™ืจืฆื” ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื‘ืชื™ื ืฉืœ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”:",
389
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื’ืจืขื•ืŸ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืฉืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืฉื”ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื•, ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช. ื“ื‘ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืฉื“ื” ื”ืืจืฅ ื™ื—ืฉื‘, ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื‘ื’ืจืขื•ืŸ ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช:",
390
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืชื™ื.</b> ืขื™ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื:"
391
+ ],
392
+ [
393
+ "<b>ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืจืฉ.</b> ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืžืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ืœื•ื™:",
394
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื•, ืชื ื™ ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื, ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื”:",
395
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™, ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื“ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืœื•ื™ ื•ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ื“ืชืจื™ ืงืจืื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™, ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื” ื˜) ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ื–ืชื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืชืœื” ืจื—ืžื ื, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืืฉืจ ื™ื’ืืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœืžืงืฆืช ืœื•ื™ื ื ืชืชื™ ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื”ื‘ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืžื–ืจืช ื•ืžืŸ ื”ื ืชื™ื ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ืœื•ื™, ื“ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื, ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื:",
396
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ื“ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ืืœื ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืœื•ื™ ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
397
+ "<b>ืžื’ืจืฉ.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืžื›ืœื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ื–ื•ืจืขื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื ื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœืขื™ืจ:",
398
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืฉื“ื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ืขืจื™ื”ื ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืžืื™ ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืื™ืœื™ืžื ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื›ืœืœ, ื”ื ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื, ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ืžื–ื“ื‘ืŸ, ืืœื ืžืื™ ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืœื ื™ืฉืชื ื”:",
399
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื—ืจื™ื‘ื•.</b> ืืช ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ื”ืืจืฅ:",
400
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื•ืœื ื›ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ืฉื) ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืš, ืื‘ืœ ืืœื• ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืกืžื•ืš ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
401
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื•ืืœื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืื ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื›ืจื• ืื™ื ืŸ ื ื—ืœื˜ื™ื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื” ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืื ืฉื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืจื•, ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืืœื ื’ื•ืืœื™ื ืžื™ื“ ืื ื™ืจืฆื•:"
402
+ ]
403
+ ]
404
+ ],
405
+ "sectionNames": [
406
+ "Chapter",
407
+ "Mishnah",
408
+ "Comment"
409
+ ]
410
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Arakhin/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,406 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Arakhin",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Arakhin",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืœืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืฉื ื” ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ืฉืขืจื•ืช, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื™ืš. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื•ืคืœื ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœืื™ืฉ. ื•ืžื•ืคืœื ืืงืจื™ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืื ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœื”ืคืœื•ืช ื•ืœืคืจืฉ ืœืฉื ืžื™ ื ื“ืจ ื•ืœืฉื ืžื™ ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืคืœื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–), ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืคืจืงื• ืงืจื•ื™ ืื™ืฉ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืงืื™ ื ืžื™ ืขืœ ื ืขืจื›ื™ื, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืžื ื•ื•ืœ ื•ืžื•ื›ื” ืฉื—ื™ืŸ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื. ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื ื“ืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื), ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉื ื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ื™ืฉื ื• ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืื™ื ื• ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืงืื™ ืขืœ ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื, ืžืฉื•ื ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื ื ืงื˜ ืœื™ื”. ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ืืฆื˜ืจื™ืš, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื™ื“ืจ ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืขืจืš:",
10
+ "<b>ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืื—ื“, ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืœื•ื ื™ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืฉื”ืขืจืš ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ:",
11
+ "<b>ื•ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื• ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ื–ื” ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™:",
12
+ "<b>ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ืœื™ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืฉื•ืง:",
13
+ "<b>ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื“ืžื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ื“ืžื™ ืขืœื™:",
14
+ "<b>ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื•ื™ื.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืืฆื˜ืจื™ื›ื ืœื™ื” ืœืืฉืžืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืื•ืชื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ื”ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื“ืื™ ืขื ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœื ืงืจื™ื ื ื‘ื™ื” ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืื™ืชื ื”ื• ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืชื ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื™ื ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ื:",
15
+ "<b>ื ืฉื™ื ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ืืฉื” ืžืฉืœืžืช ื›ืฉืชืชืืœืžืŸ ืื• ืชืชื’ืจืฉ, ื•ื”ืขื‘ื“ ื›ืฉื™ืฉืชื—ืจืจ:",
16
+ "<b>ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก ื ื•ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื™ื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื“ืžื™ื:",
17
+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืืช ืื—ืจื™ื, ืื ืืžืจื• ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืขืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืœื•ื ื™:",
18
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ืืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื. ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื ืงื‘ื” ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื“ืื™ ืื• ื ืงื‘ื” ื•ื“ืื™ืช:",
19
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ื• ืขืœื™. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉื•ื” ื“ืžื™ื ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ:",
20
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ, ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื‘ืคืจืฉื” ืืœื ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืžืขืœื”:"
21
+ ],
22
+ [
23
+ "<b>ื”ื ื›ืจื™ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืชืจื™ ืงืจืื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ื—ื“ ืจื™ื‘ื•ื™ ื•ื—ื“ ืžื™ืขื•ื˜. ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ืžื™ืขื˜ ืืช ื”ื ื›ืจื™ื. ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืคืœื™ื, ืจื™ื‘ื” ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื›ืจื™ ื‘ืžืฉืžืข. ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืกื‘ืจ, ื ื›ืจื™ ื ืขืจืš ื•ืœื ืžืขืจื™ืš, ืฉื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ืฉืจื™ื‘ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื ืขืจื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ ื ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืฉื“ื™ ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื ืœืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืจื™ื‘ื•ื™ื ืœื ืขืจืš:",
24
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื ื›ืจื™ ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืฉื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื ืขืจื›ื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื™ืชืŸ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื• ื”ืขืจืš ื”ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉื”. ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื ื›ืจื™ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื:"
25
+ ],
26
+ [
27
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื•ืกืก.</b> ืœื ื ื™ื“ืจ, ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืœืžื™ืชื” ื”ื•ื ืขื•ืžื“:",
28
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ื•ื”ืขืจื™ื›ื•, ื•ื”ืื™ ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื” ื”ื•ื:",
29
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื™ื”ืจื’.</b> ืฉื ื’ืžืจ ื“ื™ื ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืื‘ืœ ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื™ื”ืจื’ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ืœื ืฉื ื ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืœื ืฉื ื ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื ื›ืจื™ื, ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ื ืขืจืš:",
30
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื•ื:",
31
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืด๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ:ื›ืดื˜) ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืืฉืจ ื™ื—ืจื ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื ืœื ื™ืคื“ื”. ื•ืจืณ ื—ื ื™ื ื ื‘ืŸ ืขืงื‘ื™ื ื“ืืžืจ ื ืขืจืš, ืžื•ืงื™ ืœื”ืื™ ืงืจื ื“ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืืฉืจ ื™ื—ืจื ืœื“ืจืฉื ืื—ืจื™ืชื™:",
32
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ ื•ืžืขืจื™ืš ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ. ื›ื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ื‘ืื ื”ื–ื™ืง. ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ืื ื”ื–ื™ืง ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ื. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืžื–ื™ืง ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื”, ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืœืื• ื›ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื˜ืจ ื“ืžื™ื, ืืœื ื›ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื”, ื•ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื” ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ, ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ื›ืžืœื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื˜ืจ ื“ืžื™ื ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชืงื ื• ื“ืžืœื•ื” ืขืœ ืคื” ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื, ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื’ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืžืžื•ื ื• ื•ืžืฉืœืžื™ื ืžื” ืฉื”ื–ื™ืง:"
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืžืชื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“.</b> ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืžืžื•ื ื ื“ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื:ื›ืดื‘) ื›ืืฉืจ ื™ืฉื™ืช ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืืฉื”, ื•ืœื ื ืคืกื“ื™ื ื”ื• ืžื™ื ื™ื” ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื‘:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ืžืชื• ื’ื ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื’ื ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื”ื•ืœื“:",
36
+ "<b>ื™ืฉื‘ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžืฉื‘ืจ.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืžื•ืฉื‘ ื”ืืฉื” ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืฉื‘ืจ:",
37
+ "<b>ืžืžืชื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื ืขืงืจ ืœืฆืืช, ื’ื•ืคื ืื—ืจื™ื ื ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื›ื’ื•ืฃ ืืžื•:",
38
+ "<b>ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืจื”.</b> ืœืื• ืฉืขืจื” ืžืžืฉ ืงืืžืจ, ืืœื ืคืื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื” ืžืฉืขืจ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืงืฉื•ืจื” ืœืฉืขืจื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉืืžืจื” ืชื ื• ืื•ืชื” ืœื‘ืชื™ ืื• ืœืคืœื•ื ื™ืช, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื” ืชื ื• ื’ืœื™ื ื“ืขืชื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื” ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืคื” ืœืืชืกื•ืจื™, ื•ื›ื ื˜ื•ืœื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื ื“ืžื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืืกื•ืจ, ืฉื ื•ื™ื™ ื”ืžืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืื”:",
39
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ื”ืจื’ื” ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืขืจื”:"
40
+ ]
41
+ ],
42
+ [
43
+ [
44
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉื’ืช ืื™ื ื• ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื”) ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ืš ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืงืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืฉืืชื” ืžืขืจื™ืš ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืคื—ื•ืชื™ื ืžืฉืงืœ:",
45
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื™ื.</b> ื“ื–ื”ื• ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืขืจื›ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืคืจืฉื”:",
46
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืฉืขืจื›ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื‘ืขืจื›ื•, ื“ืขื ื™ ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืฉื’ืช ื™ื“ื•, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
47
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข.</b> ื ืชืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืกืœืข:",
48
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื“ื‘ื ืชื™ื ื” ืงืžื™ื™ืชื ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ืขืจื›ื• ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืขืจื›ื• ืขืœื™ื•:",
49
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื™ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืขื ื™ ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฆืžื•, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื:",
50
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ืื—ืช.</b> ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ืฉืงืœ:",
51
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื•.</b> ื“ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจื›ืš ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืงืœ, ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืืชื, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื˜ืคื™ ื™ื”ื™ื‘, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
52
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคืชื— ื‘ื˜ื•ืขื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื”.</b> ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ืชื ื ื ืžื™ ืœื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ:",
53
+ "<b>ืคืชื—.</b> ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช. ืฉื“ื™ืŸ ื ื“ื” ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ื”ื•ื, ืื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืจืืชื” ื”ื™ื•ื, ืžื•ื ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื. ืจืืชื” ืฉื ื™ื, ืžื•ื ื” ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ื”ื. ืจืืชื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืžื•ื ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื. [ื•ืืคื™ืœื•] ืจืืชื” ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ืคืกืงื” ืœืขืจื‘, ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช ื•ืžืฉืžืฉืช. ื•ืžื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื, ืฉืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืื• ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจืช ื™ื•ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช. ื•ืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ื”ื•ื™ื ื–ื‘ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ื•ืื ืžืฉื›ื• ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื• ืฉื ื”, ืื™ื ื” ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉื‘ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื. ื•ื›ืฉื™ืฉื‘ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืจืืชื”, ื”ื•ื™ื ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื•ืžื•ื ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืขื ื™ื ื” ื›ื›ืœ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉ. ื•ืื ืœื ืจืืชื” ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ืื™ื ื” ื–ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ืฉืชืจืื” ืื—ืจื™ื”ืŸ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืจื•ืื” ืกืžื•ืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื—ื™ืงื” ืจืื™ื™ืชื” ื”ื•ื™ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื”. ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืืคื™ืœื• ืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ืื™ื ื” ืžื•ื ื” ืืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘ ืืœื ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ื ื“ื•ืช ื–ื” ืœืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื•ืช ื”ื‘ื:",
54
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคืชื— ื‘ื˜ื•ืขื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื”.</b> ื˜ื•ืขื” [ืฉืจืืชื”] ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื•ืชื” ืขื•ืžื“ืช, ืื• ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘, ืื™ื ื” ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืคืชื— ื ื“ื•ืชื” ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื ืงื™ื™ื. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื˜ื•ืขื” ืฉืืžืจื” ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ื˜ืžื ืจืื™ืชื™ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืžื ื•ืช ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื, ืื ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืฉืžื•ืจ, ืืœื ื™ื•ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื, ืคืชื—ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ืฉืื ืœื ืชืจืื” ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืœื‘ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ื–ื”, ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœืคืชื— ื ื“ื•ืชื”. ื“ืื ื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืชื—ืœืช ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืฉืœืžื• ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ื”ืจื—ื™ืงื” ืจืื™ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื ืจืืชื” ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื•ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืชืืžืจ ืฉื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื, ืืขืคืดื› ื™ืฆืชื” ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘ ืœืกื•ืฃ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื‘ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ื–ื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืชืจืื” ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื ื™ืฆืื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกืคืง ืื ื™ื•ื ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื ืื• ื™ื•ื ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืžื ื™ื•ื ื–ื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืชื—ืœืช ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื”, ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืจืืชื” ื‘ื•, ืกื•ืฃ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื ื“ื” ืœื ื“ื” ื”ื•ื, ืื• ืฉืžื ื™ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ืฉื›ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ืฆืชื” ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื–ื•ื‘, ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืจืืชื” ื‘ื• ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื. ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืื ืชืจืื” ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ืฉืœื ื™ืฆืื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกืคืง. ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืชื”ื ื‘ืกืคื™ืงื” ื–ื•, ืžืงื•ืœืงืœืช ื”ื™ื, ืฉืœืขื•ืœื ื ื—ืžื™ืจ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืกืคืง. ืฉื›ืฉืชืจืื” ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ื ืืžืจ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ื. ื•ื›ืฉืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื, ื ืืžืจ ื™ืžื™ ื–ื•ื‘ ื”ืŸ ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื ืงื™ื™ื ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืชื—ืœืช ื ื“ื” ื”ื™ื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืชืจืื” ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื ืชืžื ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื”ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœืช ื•ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”:",
55
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื‘ื•ืข ืื—ื“.</b> ืœื”ืกื’ืจ. ื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ ืื“ื ืฉื ื‘ืจืจื™ื ืœืฉื‘ื•ืข ืื—ื“ ืื ืœื˜ื”ืจ ืื ืœื—ืœื•ื˜:",
56
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช.</b> ื ื’ืขื™ ื‘ืชื™ื. ื“ืชื ื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ืขืžื“ ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื• ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืฉื ื™ ืฉื—ื•ืœืฅ ื•ืงื•ืฆื” ื•ื˜ื— ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ืฉื‘ื•ืข ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื“:ืžืดื—) ื•ื‘ื ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื ื‘ื ื™ื‘ื ื›ื•ืณ: "
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืžืขื•ื‘ืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ื•ื ืœืฉื ื”. ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืคื™ ืžืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ:",
60
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืจืื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื•ืœื ื ืจืื” ืœื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืขื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื. ืฉื—ื“ืฉื” ืฉืœ ืœื‘ื ื” ื›ืดื˜ ื™ื•ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืขื”, ื•ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื”ืจื™ ืœืฉื ื™ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื ืดื˜ ื™ืžื™ื, ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื—ื“ ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื”, ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืœืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื. ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื” ื”ื•ื ื—ืกืจ, ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืœื ืื• ืžืขื•ื‘ืจ. ื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื—ื“ืฉื™ ื”ืฉื ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืœื ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ืกืจ, ืืœื ืžืคื ื™ ื™ืชื™ืจื•ืช ื”ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืขื” ื•ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืœืงื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ, ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืคืขืžื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืžื—ื“ืฉื™ ื”ืฉื ื” ืžืœืื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ืกืจื™ื, ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื—ืกืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžืœืื™ื:",
61
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืœื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ:",
62
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื”.</b> ื•ื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืชื• ืœื. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื—ืœ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืœ ืขืฆืจืช ื‘ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื ืืคื•ืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘, ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ืชื ื•ืคืชืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™. ื•ื›ืฉื—ืœ ืขืฆืจืช ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื•ืข, ื ืืคื•ืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ืดื˜ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ:",
63
+ "<b>ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื ืื›ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืชืฉืขื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ื ืืคื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืื—ืจืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชื•. ื—ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ืื•ืคื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ืžืกื“ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ. ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืœืืคื™ื™ืชื•:",
64
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื™ืชืจ ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ืื™ื ื• ื ืžื•ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ื”ื•ื. ื“ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืกืคืง ื™ื•ื ืกืคืง ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ืื ื™ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื ืžืฆื ืฉื‘ืช ื™ื•ื ืชืฉื™ืขื™, ื•ืžื™ืœื” ืฉืœื ื‘ื–ืžื ื” ืื™ื ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ืืช ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ื•ืื ื—ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ืื—ืจ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื‘ืช, ืื™ื ื• ื ืžื•ืœ ืขื“ ื™ื•ื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœืœื™ื“ืชื•:"
65
+ ],
66
+ [
67
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ืชืงื™ืขื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ (ืกื•ื›ื” ื“ืฃ ื ืดื’) ื”ืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”, ืœืื• ื“ื•ืงื, ื“ื–ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืชืงื™ืขื•ืช ื›ืฉื—ืœ ืขืจื‘ ืคืกื— ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืฉื›ื™ื— ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™ ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื™ื”:",
68
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉื ื™ ื ื‘ืœื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื ื™ ืœื•ื™ื:",
69
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืฉื”.</b> ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื:",
70
+ "<b>ื—ืœื™ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ื–ืžืจ ืฉืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง. ืฆืœืžื™ืœื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื–ืžืืจืดื™:",
71
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื” ืฉื”ื—ืœื™ืœ ืžื›ื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžื›ื” ื ื•ืคืœ ื‘ื—ืœื™ืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉื•ื™ ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื•ืžื›ื” ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขื• ืขืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื ืขื™ื ื”ืงื•ืœ:",
72
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื—.</b> ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืคืจืง ืชืžื™ื“ ื ืฉื—ื˜ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ื“ืฃ ืกืดื“):",
73
+ "<b>ืื‘ื•ื‘.</b> ื”ืงื ื” ื”ื“ืง ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžื•ื›ื— ื“ื—ืœื™ืœ ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ืงืจื•ื™ ืื‘ื•ื‘:",
74
+ "<b>ืฉืงื•ืœื• ืขืจื‘ ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉืœ ืงื ื”, ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœ ื ื—ื•ืฉืช.</b> ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื—ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื›ื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ืื‘ืœ ื—ืœื™ืœ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื•ืื‘ื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืœื ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœื ืืช ื™ื•ืดื˜, ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ:",
75
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืœื™ืง ืืœื ื‘ืื‘ื•ื‘ ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืกื™ื™ื ื”ื ืขื™ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืœื™ืœื™ื ืžืืจื™ืš ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ืžื• ื”ืื—ืจื™ื, ืฉื–ื”ื•, ื—ื™ืœื•ืง ื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืื™ืœื•, ื™ืกื™ื™ืžื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื›ืื—ื“. ื•ื—ื™ืœื•ืง, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืกื™ื•ื ื”ืฉืžืขืช ืงื•ืœ ื”ื ืขื™ืžื”. ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืงืจื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ืจ ื–ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืžืฉื•ืจืจื™ื ื‘ืคื” ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื™ืžื™ื, ื•ื”ื—ืœื™ืœื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžื—ืœืœื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžื”ืœืœื™ื ื™ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ ื•ื›ื ื•ืจื•ืช. ื•ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื”ืณ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื” ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืžื•ืจ, ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืณ ื•ืžื”ืœืœ ืžืื“ ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืœื:"
76
+ ],
77
+ [
78
+ "<b>ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืžื›ื™ื ื‘ื—ืœื™ืœ. ื“ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื—ืกื™ื ื•ืœื ืœืžืขืฉืจื•ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ืื ื”ื™ื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื:",
79
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคื’ืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืฆืคืจื™ื.</b> ืฉื ืžืฉืคื—ื•ืช ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื•ืช:",
80
+ "<b>ื•ืžืืžืื•ื.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื:",
81
+ "<b>ืžืฉื™ืื™ืŸ ืœื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืฉืื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืฉืžืฉืคื—ื•ืช ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ื™ื•. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ ื“ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื—ืกื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ ืœืื• ื“ืžื™ื•ื—ืกื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื ื”ื ื™ื—ื•ื ืœื ื’ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
82
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก ืื•ืžืจ ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก ืกื‘ืจ ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืžืขืฉืจื•ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื•. ื•ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื’ื ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื–ืžืจ, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื‘ืคื” ื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจ ื‘ืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืืœื ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืœื•ื™ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—) ื•ืฉืจืช ื‘ืฉื ื”ืณ ืืœื”ื™ื•, ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืฉื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื”ืณ, ื”ื•ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื–ื” ื”ืฉื™ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืฉืฉื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื”ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื“ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืงื•ืจ ืžืžื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืคืกื— ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืงื—ื• ืžื‘ืขืฉื•ืจ ื•ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื• ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ, ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžื•ืขื“ื• ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืชืžื™ื“ื™ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื›ืดื—:ื‘ืณ) ืชืฉืžืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื™ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•, ืžืžื•ืขื“ื• ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืคืกื— (ืฉื ื˜ืณ) ืืช ื”ืคืกื— ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•. ื”ืœื›ืš, ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื—ื™ื ื•ืš ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืžื‘ืงืจื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื, ื•ื‘ื™ื•ื ื—ื™ื ื•ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืœืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ืฉืฉื” ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื”ืœื™ืœื” ืžื‘ืงืจื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื ืš ืœื™ืชื ื”ื• ืื›ืชื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื”ืฉื ื™ื, ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืืœื• ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ื ืชื™ื ืชืŸ:",
86
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืœืฉื‘ืช ื•ืœืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื”.</b> ืกื™ืžื ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื ืงื˜, ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ ืžืงืœืขื™ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ื‘ื”ื“ื™ ื”ื“ื“ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงื“ื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืงืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื™ื•ื ืœื™ืœืš ื•ืœื‘ืงืฉ ื˜ืœื” ื•ืœื‘ืงืจ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ื ืœืงื™ื—ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”:",
87
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืื ืจืฆื• ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื˜ืœืื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื, ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื™ืจืฆื•:",
88
+ "<b>ืžืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ื›ืฉืชื•ืงืขื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉืชื™ื:",
89
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ืขื“ ืžืื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื. ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื-ื‘ ื”ืณ) ื•ืขืžื”ื ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืžืื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืžื—ืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช:",
90
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฆืœืฆืœ ืœื‘ื“.</b> ืฆืœืฆืœ ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ืฉื ื ื˜ืดื–) ื•ืืกืฃ ื‘ืžืฆืœืชื™ื ืœื”ืฉืžื™ืข. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืžืฆืœืชื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ื, ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืจื—ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืชื›ืช ืฉืžื›ื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•, ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื—ื“ื ืขื‘ื™ื“ืชื ืขื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืžื•ืขื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื—ื‘ืจื•, ื•ื—ื“ ื’ื‘ืจื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื”ื•:"
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœื•ื™ื.</b> ืชืฉืขื” ืœืชืฉืขื” ื›ื ื•ืจื•ืช, ื•ืฉื ื™ื ืœืฉืชื™ ื ื‘ืœื™ื, ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืฆืœืฆืœ:",
94
+ "<b>ื“ื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืืฆื˜ื‘ื ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”:",
95
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืงื˜ืŸ ื ื›ื ืก.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืงื˜ืŸ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืฉื•ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื›ื‘ื“ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื•ืœื”ื’ื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช:",
96
+ "<b>ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืื– ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื•ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืœืฉื•ืจืจ ืขืžื”ื:",
97
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื•.</b> ืื•ืชื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื ื‘ืœ ื•ื›ื ื•ืจ, ืืœื ื‘ืคื”:",
98
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืชื‘ืœ.</b> ืœื™ืชืŸ ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืขื™ืžืช ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื•ืœ ื”ืงื˜ื ื™ื ื“ืง ื•ืฆืœื•ืœ ื•ืžืชื‘ืœ ืืช ืงื•ืœ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื:",
99
+ "<b>ืœื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืœื•ื™ื ื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
100
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ื”ืืฆื˜ื‘ื ื”ืžื•ื›ื ืช ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ. ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื:",
101
+ "<b>ื•ืฆื•ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ืงืจืื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ื ืืช ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื‘ืกื ื•ืœื”ื ืขื™ื ืงื•ืœื ื›ืžื•ืชื:"
102
+ ]
103
+ ],
104
+ [
105
+ [
106
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ื•ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืžืคืจืฉ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ:",
107
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ื ืื” ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื•ื” ืžืื” ืžื ื” ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืงืœ. ื•ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ืฉื”ืžืขืจื™ืš ืืช ื”ื›ืขื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืืœื ื—ืžืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื. ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ืื ื”ื ืขืจืš ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื:"
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื•ืœืช ื”ืžื—ื•ื–.</b> ืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืช ื”ืขื™ืจ. ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืฉื‘ื—ืช ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืžืคื ื™ ืžื“ืจืก ื”ืจื’ืœื™ื:",
111
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืช. ื›ืžื• ืžื—ื•ืœ ื”ื›ืจืš [ื›ืœืื™ื ืคืดื“]:",
112
+ "<b>ืžื—ื•ื–.</b> ืขื™ืจ. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืžื—ื•ื–, ืฉื ืžืงื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื:",
113
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจื“ืกื•ืช.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืจื‘ื” ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื ื˜ื•ืขื™ื:",
114
+ "<b>ืกื‘ืกื˜ื™.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื. ื•ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ืฉื ืžืขื•ืœื™ื ืžืื“:",
115
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ:",
116
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืื ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื. ื•ืื ืœืื•, ืžื’ืจืข ืžืฉื ื™ื ืฉืขื‘ืจื• ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื”. ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื, ืžืงื•ื ืจืื•ื™ ืœื–ืจื™ืขืช ื›ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืกืื” ืฉืœ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืขืช ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžืœืื” ืื™ืœื ื•ืช, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื•ื“ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื” ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ืŸ, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืคื•ื“ื” ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื‘ื™ืช ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ:",
117
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ืฉื•ื™ื•.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ืžื›ืกืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื›ืกืช ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื) ื•ื”ืจืžื•ืช ืžื›ืก:",
118
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื•ื—ืฉื‘, ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื•ื—ืฉื‘, ืžื” ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘, ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ื”ืžืงื ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืกืฃ:",
119
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื›ืกืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš, ื”ืงื™ืฉื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืžื” ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื—ื•ืžืฉ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ: "
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "<b>ื”ืžื™ืช ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ืฉื•ื•ื™ื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื:ืœืณ) ืื ื›ื•ืคืจ ื™ื•ืฉืช ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื ืชืŸ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื ืคืฉื•, ื“ืžื™ ื ื™ื–ืง:",
123
+ "<b>ื—ื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื”ืžื™ืชื•. ืžืฉืœื ื ื–ืง ืฉืœื:"
124
+ ],
125
+ [
126
+ "<b>ืคื’ื.</b> ืฉืžื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ื‘ืชื•ืœื” ืœืฉืคื—ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ืฉื™ืื” ืœืขื‘ื“ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืงื•ืจืช ืจื•ื— ื”ื™ืžื ื•:",
127
+ "<b>ืœืคื™ ื”ืžื‘ื™ื™ืฉ ื•ื”ืžืชื‘ื™ื™ืฉ.</b> ืื“ื ื ืงืœื” ืฉื‘ื™ื™ืฉ, ื‘ืฉืชื• ืžืจื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืžืชื‘ื™ื™ืฉ, ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืชื•:"
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ "<b>ื ืžืฆื ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืคื™ื• ื™ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืขืฉื”.</b> ืฉื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื ืžืฆืืชื™ ื‘ืชื•ืœื™ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืื”, ื•ื”ืื•ื ืก ื“ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืขืฉื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื:",
131
+ "<b>ื’ื–ืจ ื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืœื ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืœืืจืฅ:",
132
+ "<b>ื–ื” ืขืฉืจ ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืจื’ืœื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืขืœ ื–ื” ื ืชื—ืชื ื’ื–ืจ ื“ื™ืŸ:"
133
+ ]
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ [
137
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ.</b> ืชื•ืจืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื’ืช ื™ื“, ืฉืขื ื™ ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื›ืคื™ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ื•, ื‘ืชืจ ื ื•ื“ืจ ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชืจ ื ื™ื“ืจ, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ:",
138
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื“ืจ.</b> ื™ืœื“ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืจืš ื–ืงืŸ, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื–ืงืŸ, ื“ืœื ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืชืจ ืฉื ื™ื ื“ื ื•ื“ืจ. ื•ืชื ื ื“ืงืจื™ ืœืžืขืจื™ืš ื ื•ื“ืจ, ืœื™ืฉื ื ื“ืงืจื ื ืงื˜, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื™ืขืจื™ื›ื ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“ ื‘ื ื•ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ื ืžื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื“ืจ:",
139
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื™ื ื‘ื ืขืจืš.</b> ืงืฆื‘ ื”ืขืจืš ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื ืงื‘ื”, ื‘ืชืจ ื ืขืจืš ืื–ื™ืœ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชืจ ืžืขืจื™ืš, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ ื“ืื™ืฉ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจืš ืืฉื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืืฉื”:",
140
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขืจืš ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ืœืงืžืŸ, ืฉืื ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืจืš ืงื˜ืŸ, ื•ืงื•ื“ื ื ืชื™ื ืชื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื, ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื›ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš:"
141
+ ],
142
+ [
143
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืจ ืื ื™ ืืฃ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ.</b> ืื™ืœื• ืžืชืจืžื™ ืืฃ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช. ื“ื”ื ื“ืืžืจืช ื“ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ืŸ ื›ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ื“ืžื• ืื”ื“ื“ื™, ื“ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืขื ื™ ืฉื”ืขืจื™ืš ืขืฉื™ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขื ื™ ืœืคื™ ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืœื•ื, ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ ืœืžืฆื•ืจืข. ื•ื–ื” ืฉืืžืจ ืขืœ ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ืžื“ืช ืฉื ื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœ ืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืคื—ื•ืชื™ื ืื• ื™ืชืจื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืฉื’ ื™ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืืžืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืจืš ืฉืœื, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืžืฆื•ืจืข [ืขืฉื™ืจ] ื•ืฉืžืข ื”ืขื ื™ ื•ืืžืจ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ื–ื” ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ:",
144
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ืžืฉืœื ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ื ืชื™ื ื”, ืžืฉืœื ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ, ืืฉืจ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉื’ืช. ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ื ืžื™ ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉื’ืช ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื“ืจ:",
145
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื ื™ ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ืขืฉื™ืจ.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ืžืš ื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืš, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ืžื›ื•ืชื• ืžืชื—ืœืชื• ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืคื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
146
+ ],
147
+ [
148
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืื‘ื™ื• ืžืช.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื–ื” ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื• ื’ื•ืกืก ื•ื ื•ื˜ื” ืœืžื•ืช, ื•ืžืช ื•ื™ืจืฉ ืžืžื ื• ืจื‘ื•ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื•, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™, ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
149
+ "<b>ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ื‘ื™ื.</b> ืœื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืžืกื—ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื• ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื, ื“ืืดื› ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื. ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ืชื• ืžื•ืฉื›ืจืช ืœืื—ืจื™ื ื‘ืจื™ื‘ื•ื ืฉื›ืจ, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืืœื ืื•ืชื” ืกืคื™ื ื”. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื›ืจื” ืœืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืฉื›ื™ืจื•ืช ืžืฉืชืœืžืช ืืœื ื‘ืกื•ืคื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืขื ื™ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ืกืคื™ื ื” ืขืฆืžื” ืœืื• ืขืฉื™ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื“ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืžืขืจื™ืš ื—ืžืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื—ืžื•ืจื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ื˜ืœื• ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื›ืจ ืžื ื™ื— ืœื• ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจื• ื“ื”ื™ื ืคืจื ืกืชื•, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืžื ื™ื— ืœื• ืกืคื™ื ืชื•:"
150
+ ],
151
+ [
152
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“.</b> ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืจื›ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
153
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื–) ื›ืขืจื›ืš ื™ืงื•ื, ืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืœื ื›ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจืš:",
154
+ "<b>ื™ื•ื ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืงื˜ืŸ ืขืœื™, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืงื˜ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื‘ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื, ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื. ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขืจืš ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ. ื“ื”ื›ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ [ืฉื] ื•ืื ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ:",
155
+ "<b>ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืžืขืœื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืฉืฉืœืžื” ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื•ืื– ื”ื•ื ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ืฉืฉื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ืœื“:",
156
+ "<b>ื”ืŸ ืื ืขืฉื™ื ื•.</b> ื‘ืชืžื™ื”. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ืื ืขืฉื™ื ื• [ืฉื ืช] ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ื“ืขืจืš ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื™ืฉ ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข, ื•ืœื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ:",
157
+ "<b>ื›ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืžื ื” ืœื”ืงืœ.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื, ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื—ืžืฉ. ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื‘ืงืจืื™:",
158
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืœืขื•ืœื ืฉื ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื•ืฉื ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ืœืžื˜ื”, ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื ื” ื•ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืžืฉื ื” ื”ืื—ืจืช. ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื‘ื›ื•ืจ, ื ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ืžื‘ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืžืขืœื”, ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืื“ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื˜ืดื•-ื˜ืดื–) ื•ืคื“ื•ื™ื• ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืžืขืœื”, ืžื” ืœื”ืœืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื ืคื“ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืฉืฉื™ื ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“. ื•ืฉื ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื•ืฉื ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืฉื ื” ืฉื ื” ืžืฉื ืช ืฉืฉื™ื ื›ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืชืดืง ืœืขื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:"
159
+ ]
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ [
163
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™ ื›ื•ืณ, ืื ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื›ืกืฃ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื›ืกืฃ, ื•ืื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื–ื”ื‘, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืื ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื ืืžืจ ืกืชื ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™, ืคื˜ืจ ื ืคืฉื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื”ื•, ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื›ืžื•ืชื• ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ืฉืงืœ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื–ืคืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฆืœื™ื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืื ืฉื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืœืžื›ืจื ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ, ื•ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืื ืฉื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ืžืฉืงืœื™ ืขืœื™ ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื–ืคืช ืื• ื‘ืฆืœื™ื ื•ื ืคื˜ืจ:",
164
+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืจืžื˜ื™ื”.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื—ืกื•ืจื™ ืžื—ืกืจื ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ื•ืื ืื“ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื, ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืžื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื•, ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืจืžื˜ื™ื”, ืืฉื” ืฉืฉืžื” ื›ืš, ืฉืืžืจื” ืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืœื™ ื•ืขืœืชื” ืœื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื•ืฉืงืœื•ื” ื•ื ืชื ื” ืžืฉืงืœื” ื–ื”ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืืžื•ื“ื” ื‘ืขื•ืฉืจ:",
165
+ "<b>ืžืฉืงืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืขืœื™.</b> ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืงืœ ื™ื“ื•, ื“ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืžื›ื‘ื™ื“ ื•ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืžื™ืงืœ:",
166
+ "<b>ื•ืžื›ื ื™ืกื” ืขื“ ืžืจืคืงื•.</b> ืงื•ื“ืดื• ื‘ืœืขืดื–. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื”ืœืš ืื—ืจ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ื™ื“ ืœื–ืจื•ืข ืขื“ ื”ืžืจืคืง. ื•ื›ืฉืžื›ื ื™ืก ื”ื™ื“ ืœืชื•ืš ื—ื‘ื™ืช ืžืœืื” ืžื™ื ื™ืฉืคื›ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืคื™ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื™ื“ ืฉื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื‘ืชื•ื›ื” ืขื“ ื”ืžืจืคืง, ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื›ื ื™ืก ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืžื•ืจ, ืฉืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ ื›ืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืื“ื, ื•ื™ื”ื ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืจ ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืงืœ ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื’ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืœืžืฉืงืœ ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืชื•ื›ื” ืขื“ ืฉืชื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืชืชืžืœื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ื›ื ื ืคื— ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื™ื“ื•, ื•ืฉื•ืงืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ื”ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืžืฉืงืœ ื™ื“ื•:",
167
+ "<b>ื”ื™ืืš ืืคืฉืจ ืœื›ื•ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ืฉืžื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื—ื‘ื™ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ื’ื™ื“ื™ื ื•ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืžืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื“, ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืžืฉืงืœ ืžื›ื•ื•ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
168
+ ],
169
+ [
170
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืœื ื™ื“.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื›ืžื” ื™ืคื” ื›ืฉื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื• ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื” ื›ืฉืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืฉืœื™ืžื•ืช. ืฉืžื™ ืฉื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื•, ื›ืฉื‘ืื™ื ืœืฉื•ืžื• ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื‘ื–ื•ืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืจื•ืื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžื–ื•ืœื–ืœ, ื•ื–ื” ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื™ื“ื™ ืขืœื™ ื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืงื˜ืขื” ื™ื“ื•. ืœื›ืš ืžืคืจืฉ, ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืœื ื™ื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืžื›ืจื• ืจื‘ื• ื›ื•ืœื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื™ื“ื•, ืฉื™ื“ื• ืื—ืช ืžื•ื›ืชื‘ืช ืœืจื‘ื• ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืžื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ื›ืฉืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื›ืจ ื›ื•ืœื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืžืžื ื• ืœืขืฆืžื• ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื›ืžื” ืฉื•ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืืก ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืจื‘ื• ื™ื“ื• ืื—ืช ืฉืœื ืžื›ืจื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ื ื• ืžื–ื•ืœื–ืœ, ื•ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
171
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื—ื•ืžืจ ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ืžื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ื ืขืจืš ื™ื“ื™ ื•ืจื’ืœื™ ืขืœื™, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื•:",
172
+ "<b>ืขืจื›ื™ ืขืœื™ ื•ืžืช ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจืš ืืœื ืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืขืžื•ื“ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื“ืžื™ ืขืœื™ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉื•ืžื•ื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืจื™ ืœื ื‘ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ื›ืš ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืช, ืืขืดืค ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ืื•ืžื“ื ื ื•ืœื ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื:",
173
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื“ืขืจืš ื ืคืฉื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘:",
174
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ.</b> ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ืฉืืจ ืื™ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื”ื:"
175
+ ],
176
+ [
177
+ "<b>ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™.</b> ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืขืจืš ืจืืฉื™ ื•ืขืจืš ื›ื‘ื“ื™, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื•:",
178
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื‘ืณ) ื ื“ืจ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื ืคืฉื•ืช, ื”ืงื™ืฉ ื ื“ืจ ืœืขืจืš, ืžื” ืขืจืš ืืžืจ ืขืจืš ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืจืš ื›ื•ืœื•, ืืฃ ื ื“ืจ ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื™ ืขืœื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ื•ืœื•:",
179
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ.</b> ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืฉืžื” ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื”ื, ืฉืื ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืื•ืชื• ืื‘ืจ ืขืœื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืœื‘ื™ ืขืœื™, ืื• ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื‘ื“ื™ ืขืœื™, ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื•ืœื•:"
180
+ ],
181
+ [
182
+ "<b>ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื•ื”ื ื™ื“ืจ ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช, ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ. ื•ืกื™ืคื ืืฆื˜ืจื™ื›ื ืœื™ื”. ื“ืžื™ื• ืฉืœ ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืขืœื™, ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ื™ืชื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื. ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขืžื“ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืžืช ื”ื ื•ื“ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืฉื•ืžื• ื”ื ื™ื“ืจ, ืœื ืืฉืชืขื‘ื•ื“ ื ื›ืกื™ื”, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ืื•ืžื“ื ื ื’ื™ืœื•ื™ ืžื™ืœืชื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื, ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื™ื“ืจ ืงื™ื™ื ืืžื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื”:"
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื–ื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
186
+ "<b>ื•ื ืคืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื—ื–ื™ืง ื‘ื• ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
187
+ "<b>ืžืช ื”ืฉื•ืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืฉืœื.</b> ื•ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ืœืžืชื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืื“ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
188
+ ],
189
+ [
190
+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ื™ืชื ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื:",
191
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื›ืคืจื” ืืชื• ืœื ืžืฉื”ื™ ืœื”ื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืื• ืœื›ืคืจื” ืืชื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžืขื›ื‘ืชื• ืžืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ, ืฉื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื•ืชืจ ื”ื ื–ื™ืจ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื, ื–ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืคืฉืข ื•ืžืฉื”ื™ ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•:",
192
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื•ืœื” ืžื›ืคืจืช ืขืœ ืขืฉื” ื•ืขืœ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืื• ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื” ื›ืคืจื” ื•ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•ื™ื™, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืขื›ื‘ืช ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ืœื ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•ื™ื™ื”:",
193
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™.</b> ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™:",
194
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืืชื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื’ื˜ื™ ื ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื“ื™ื ื• ืฉื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื’ืจืฉ, ื•ืœื ืจืฆื” ืœื’ืจืฉ, ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืจื•ืฆื” ืื ื™, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื”ื’ื˜ ื•ื”ื•ื ื›ืฉืจ:"
195
+ ]
196
+ ],
197
+ [
198
+ [
199
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืœืžื›ืจืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื•ืช ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ืฉืžื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื•ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ืจืฆื•ืคื™ื ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื›ืœ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืงื— ื™ื‘ื ื•ื™ืงื—. ื•ืื™ ื‘ืขื•, ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ื›ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ ื˜ืคื™. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื›ื™ ื—ืฉื‘ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืฉื‘ืฉืฉื™ื ื™ื•ื ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ื”ื›ืจื–ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”ื• ืืœื ืชืžื ื™ ืกืจื™ ื™ื•ืžื™, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืฉื›ื ืžืœืชื ื˜ื•ื‘ื ื™ื“ืขื™ ื•ืฉืžืขื™:",
200
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื•ื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื”:",
201
+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘.</b> ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื•ืฆืืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื. ื“ืื™ ืื™ื›ื ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ืŸ ืืžืจ ืœื”ื• ืœืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื™ืฆื™ืืชืŸ ืจืื• ืœื™ ืฉื“ื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืื ื”ื™ื ื™ืคื”, ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ืžืข ื”ื”ื›ืจื–ื” ื ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืฉื•ืืœืŸ. ื•ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ืŸ, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ืฉื“ื” ืคืœื•ื ื™ืช ืฉื›ืš ื•ื›ืš ืกื™ืžื ื™ื”, ื•ื›ืš ื•ื›ืš ืžืฆืจื™ื”, ื›ืš ื”ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืชื‘ื•ืื” ื•ื›ืš ืฉืžืื•ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื” ืœื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื™ืงื— ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”. ื•ืื ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ืื•ืžืจื™ื, ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœื•ืงื— ื“ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ืœื™ืงื— ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœืืฉื” ื“ื ืกื‘ื ืคื•ืจืชื ืคื•ืจืชื, ื•ืื™ื›ื ื“ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื˜ืคื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ื•ื˜ืœ ื–ื•ื–ื™ื ื—ืกืจื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืจื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืกื•ื—ืจื™ื ืœื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื‘ื›ืš. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืœืžื›ืจืŸ, ื•ื”ื›ื ืชื ืŸ ืฉื•ื ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื. ื”ื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื“ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื, ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื ื›ืจื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื• ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืขืœ ื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื” ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืจื•ื•ื—ื ืœื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ื›ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”, ื“ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืœื ื’ื‘ืชื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ื™ืฉ ืœื” ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื, ื’ื‘ืชื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช. ื•ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื“ื” ืื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžื™ืชืชื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœืคืœื•ื ื™ ืืฆืœื• ืžื ื”, ืื• ืฉื ื“ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื–ื” ื•ืžืช ื‘ื ื“ื•ื™ื•, ืื• ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื–ืžืŸ ืคืจื™ืขืช ื”ื—ื•ื‘ ื›ืฉืžืช, ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืื™ื ื™ืฉ ื“ืคืจืข ื‘ื’ื• ื–ืžื ื™ื”. ื•ื›ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื ื–ืงืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืœืœื•, ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื ืืคื•ื˜ืจื•ืคื•ืก ื•ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื›ืจื–ื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืงืจืงืขื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ ื“ื™ืชืžื™ ืžืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘, ื”ืจื™ ื‘ืขืœ ื—ื•ื‘ ื ืฉื‘ืข ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืจื–ื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื›ืจื™ื–ื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืฉื˜ืจื•ืช ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ:",
202
+ "<b>ื™ื“ื™ืจื ื” ื”ื ืื”.</b> ืขืœ ื“ืขืช ืจื‘ื™ื ื ื“ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื”ืชืจื”, ืฉืœื ื™ื—ื–ื™ืจื ื” ืœืขื•ืœื. ื“ืฉืžื ื‘ืขืจืžื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
203
+ "<b>ืงื ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืขืจืžื”:",
204
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ื ื• ืฆืจื™ืš.</b> ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื”ื›ื ืื ืื“ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืื™ ืœื, ื“ื‘ืฉื›ื™ื‘ ืžืจืข ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ื‘ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ื—ื•ื˜ื ื•ืœื ืœื•. ื•ื‘ื‘ืจื™ื ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื›ื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื‘ืฉืืœื”, ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื•ืžืจ ืœื• ืœื—ื›ื ืœื ืœื“ืขืช ื›ืŸ ื ื“ืจืชื™ ื•ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื›ื ืžืชื™ืจ ื ื“ืจื•, ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื ื—ื›ื ืฉื™ืชื™ืจื ื• ืœื›ืš ืขื•ืฉื” ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ื–ื•. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืกื‘ืจ ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืœื ืœื“ืขืช ื›ืŸ ื ื“ืจืชื™ ื•ื˜ืขื™ืชื™, ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืœื•, ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื“ื•ืจ ื”ื ืื”, ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืงื ื•ื ื™ื ืขื‘ื™ื“, ื”ื•ื” ืžืชืฉื™ืœ ืขืœ ื ื“ืจื™ื” ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื’ืจืฉื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข:",
205
+ "<b>ื”ืขืจื‘ ืœืืฉื” ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืขืจื‘ ืœืคืจื•ืข ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”. ืœื ื™ืคืจืข ื”ืขืจื‘ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื“ื™ืจื ื” ื”ื‘ืขืœ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืฉืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจ ืื•ืชื”. ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื“ืขืชื• ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื”ื—ื–ื™ืจื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชื’ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื” ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ื‘ื ื‘ืชืจื: "
206
+ ],
207
+ [
208
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ืช ืืฉื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื“ืžื• ื’ื™ืจื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืœื™ื›ื ืงื ื•ื ื™ื:",
209
+ "<b>ืืœื ื”ืคื•ื“ื” ืคื•ื“ื”.</b> ื‘ืขืœื” ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื–ื•ืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืข ืœืืฉื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ืชื”, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ืŸ ืฉืœื•. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜, ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉืžื ื™ืืžืจื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ:",
210
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื• ืžืื”.</b> ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ื—ื•ื‘ื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื•, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืื™ ืœืื• ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ื” ืื•ื–ืคื™ื” ืืœื ื”ื™ืžื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ืžื ื™ื” ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ืื•ื–ืคื™ื”, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•. ื•ืขื“ ื›ืžื”, ืขื“ ืคืœื’ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื ื›ืกื™ื ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ ื”ื—ื•ื‘, ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืื• ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ืื•ื–ืคื™ื”, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืขืฉื•ื™ ืœืงื ื•ืช ืงืจืงืข ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืžืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื”:"
211
+ ],
212
+ [
213
+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ืชื™ื”ื ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ:",
214
+ "<b>ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืกื•ืช ื•ืžื˜ื” ืกื ื“ืœื™ื ื•ืชืคื™ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฉื™ื™ืจื™ื ืœื• ืžืขื•ืช ืœืงื ื•ืชืŸ ืื ืื™ืŸ ืœื•. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ืžืš ื”ื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืœืงืจื ื”ื›ื™, ื•ืื ืžืš, ืชืขืฉื” ืฉื™ืฉืืจ ื”ื•ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ื”ื•ื™ื” ื•ื—ื™ื•ืช, ืžืขืจื›ืš, ืžื“ืžื™ ื”ืขืจืš. ื•ืžืฉืžืข ื”ื•ื ื™ืฉ ืœื• ื”ื•ื™ื” ื•ื—ื™ื•ืช ืžื“ืžื™ ื”ืขืจืš, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืืฉืชื• ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื ื™ื•:",
215
+ "<b>ืžื›ืœ ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื›ืœ ืื•ืžื ื•ืช ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื:",
216
+ "<b>ืžืขืฆื“ื™ื.</b> ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืจืดื ื‘ืœืขืดื–. ืฉืžื—ืœื™ืงื™ื ื‘ื” ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื•ื—:",
217
+ "<b>ืžื’ื™ืจื”.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืกื›ื™ืŸ ืืจื•ืš ืžืœื ืคื’ื™ืžื•ืช. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืงืจื, ืžืฉื•ืจ, ืกื™ื’ืดื ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
218
+ "<b>ืฆืžื“ื•.</b> ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจ. ืฉืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ืื•ืžื ืชื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืฆืžื“ ื‘ืงืจ ื•ื—ืžื•ืจ ื ื›ืกื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื›ืœื™ ืื•ืžื ื•ืช:"
219
+ ],
220
+ [
221
+ "<b>ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื•ืขื˜.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืขืฆื“ื™ื ื•ืžื’ืจื” ืื—ืช:",
222
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืฉื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
223
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ืขื˜.</b> ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœื•, ื•ืœื ื–ื‘ื ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™. ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ืกื’ื™ ืœื™ื” ื‘ื”ื›ื™, ื”ืฉืชื ื ืžื™ ืชืกื’ื™ ืœื™ื”. ื“ืžื”ื• ื“ืชื™ืžื ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื•ื• ืื™ื ืฉื™ ืžื•ืฉืœื™ ืœื™ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืœืื•ืฉื•ืœื™ ืœืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื”ืฉืชื ืฉื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืœืงื— ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืœื ืžืฉื›ื— ืžืืŸ ื“ืžื•ืฉื™ืœ ืœื™ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื–ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™ ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ:"
224
+ ],
225
+ [
226
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืœื• ื ื›ืกื™ื ืฉืœื•:",
227
+ "<b>ืฉืฆื‘ืขืŸ ืœืฉืžืŸ.</b> ืœืฉื ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื•:",
228
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ืกื ื“ืœื™ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ืขืœื• ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื‘ื—ื–ืงืชืŸ ืžืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ื”:",
229
+ "<b>ืืขืดืค ืฉืืžืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื ืžื›ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืชืŸ ืœืฉื‘ื—.</b> ื›ืกื•ืช ื™ืคื” ืฉืœื”ืŸ ืžืฉื‘ื—ื ื•ืžืขืœื” ืืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื’ื‘ื™ ื ื›ืกื™ ื™ืชื•ืžื™ื ืฉืื ืชืœืงื— ืœืขื‘ื“ ื›ืกื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื“ื™ื ืจ ื”ื•ื ืžืฉื‘ื™ื— ืžื ื” ืขืœ ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืฉื•ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื•:",
230
+ "<b>ืœืื˜ืœื™ืก.</b> ืœื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื•ืง:",
231
+ "<b>ืœื›ืจืš.</b> ืฉื“ืจืš ืกื•ื—ืจื™ื ืœื‘ื•ื ืฉื ื•ืงื•ื ื™ื ื”ืžืจื’ืœื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ืงืจ:",
232
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืžืงื•ืžื•.</b> ื‘ืžืจื’ืœื™ืช:",
233
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืขืชื•.</b> ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ืขืจื›ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืฉื”ื”. ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ, ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืชื ื”ืงื“ืฉื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื“, ืฉืœื ื™ืฉื”ื” ืื•ืชืŸ. ื•ื˜ืขืžื, ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื“ื–ื™ืžื ื™ืŸ ื“ืืชื• ืœืืฉื”ื•ื™ื™ื ื”ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ื•ืืชื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ืคืกื™ื“ื, ื•ืžื”ืื™ ื˜ืขืžื ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืชื›ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
234
+ ]
235
+ ],
236
+ [
237
+ [
238
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”:",
239
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืคื”ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ื. ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืฉื ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื”, ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืข ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื•ื’ื•ืณ. ื•ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช ืขื“ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื•ื’ื•ืณ ื•ื ื’ืจืข ืžืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ืš ื”ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื‘ืฉื ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื ืขื“ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืกืœืขื™ื, ื ืžืฆื ืกืœืข ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืกืœืข ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื–ื” ื”ืกืœืข ื”ื™ื•ืชืจ ื—ืœืงื•ื”ื• ืœืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ. ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื”, ืœืžืดื˜ ืฉื ื™ื ืžืดื˜ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืžืดื˜ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืฉ ื›ืืŸ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ืฉืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื”, ืื•ืชื• ื”ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืงืœื‘ื•ืŸ ืœืคืจื•ื˜ืจื•ื˜, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื”ื”ื›ืจืข ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืฉืงืœ ื•ืฉืงืœ ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื•. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืข ืฉื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื ื•ืชืŸ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื ืœื™ืงื— ืกืœืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœื—ื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืชืฉืขื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงืœื‘ื•ืŸ ืœืคืจื•ื˜ืจื•ื˜. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ื’ื™ืจื•ืข, ื•ืื ื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื, ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช ื•ื ื’ืจืข, ื•ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืขืฆื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ืื“ื ื—ืก ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื• ื•ืœื [ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ] ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืคืกื™ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืœืขื™ื:",
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+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืœืื• ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืกืžื•ืš ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงืืžืจ, ืืœื ื”ืื™ ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ืจ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืฉื ื” ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ื‘ื ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืืžืฆืข ืฉื ื”, ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื—ืฆื™ ืกืœืข ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืื ื™ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืกืœืข ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื”, ื“ื›ืžื” ื“ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœื” ื›ื•ืœื” ืฉืชื ืœื ืžื’ืจืขื ืœื” ื›ืœืœ ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ื” ืืœื ื’ืื•ืœืช ืฉื ื” ืฉืœื™ืžื”. ื•ืžื” ื˜ืขื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ื‘ื ืœื’ืื•ืœ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืฉื” ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืฉื ื” ืฉืฉื™ืช, ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉืฉื” ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืกืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื ื•ืชืจื•ืช, ืฉื ื™ื ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื ื•ืชืจ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืฉื ื™ื, ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื ื•ืชืจ ืฉื ื”, ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื”ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื•, ืœื’ืจื•ืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืงืœ ื•ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœื:",
241
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื—ืฉื‘ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื ืจื™ื•ื— ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื ืฉื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืื•ืชื” ื™ืฆื™ืืช ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ื” ืฉื™ืฆืื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืงื“ืฉื” ื‘ืคืœื’ื ื“ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื“ืื™ ื—ืฉื‘ืช ืœื”ื”ื•ื ื™ืฆื™ืื” ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื ืžื™ืคืจืงื ื‘ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืืœื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื•ืื™ ืืžืจืช ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆืื•, ื”ื•ื” ื”ื›ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื™ื“ื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื“ืœื ืฉืงื™ืœ ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคื•ื ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ื”ื›ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ื™ืฆื™ืื” ื’ืžื•ืจื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืœื ืžื™ืคืจืงื ื‘ื’ื™ืจื•ืข ืืœื ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื:",
242
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื™ื” ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืงื“ืฉื•ืช:",
243
+ "<b>ื–ืจืข ื—ื•ืžืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื–ืจื•ืข ื‘ื• ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื–ื•ืจืขื™ื ื‘ืžืคื•ืœืช ื™ื“ ื•ื‘ื–ืจื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ื•ื ื™ืช, ืœื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ืจืข ืžืงื•ื‘ืฅ ื‘๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืชืจ ื•ืœื ืžืคื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžืคื•ืจื“ ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
244
+ "<b>ื ืงืขื™ื ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื–ืจื™ืขื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื—ื–ื• ืœืžื™ื“ื™, ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื ืžื“ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื” ืžืชื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคื™ ื ืคืฉื™ื™ื”ื•, ื•ื ืคื“ื™ืŸ ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ:",
245
+ "<b>ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ ื ืžื“ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืœืื™ื ืžื™ื ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื• ืœื–ืจื™ืขื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ืขืฉืจื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืกืœืขื™ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืงืจืงืข ื”ืŸ ื ืงืจืื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžืŸ:",
246
+ "<b>ืืœื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื›ื•ืœื• ื›ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืกืฃ, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื›ื•ืœื• ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืื—ื“: "
247
+ ],
248
+ [
249
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ื›ืœ ื”ืื“ื.</b> ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ืืœืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ื” ืืœื ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
250
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ื’ืื•ืœ ื™ื’ืืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื•ื’ื•ืณ:"
251
+ ],
252
+ [
253
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืžื™ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™. ื”ื•ื” ืคืจื™ืง ืœื” ืื™ื ืฉ ืื—ืจื™ื ื ื“ื”ื•ื” ื ืคืงื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื”ืณ:",
254
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ื‘ื ื• ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœืื‘ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื•ืœื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“. ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื•ืœื ืœื‘ืŸ: ",
255
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ืื—ื“ ืžืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื•</b> ืฉืœ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ, ื•ื‘ื ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ื’ืืœื” ืžื™ื“ ืงืจื•ื‘ื•, ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืœื”ืชื—ืœืง ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
256
+ "<b>ื’ืืœื” ื›ื”ืŸ.</b> ืžื™ื“ ื’ื–ื‘ืจ:",
257
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืืžืจ</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื ื’ืืœื” ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื™ ื•ืœื—ื‘ืจื™ ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื’ืืœืชื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื›ื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืžื ื™: "
258
+ ],
259
+ [
260
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ื’ืืœื”.</b> ืœื ื’ืืœื•ื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืœื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื•ืœื ืื—ืจ:",
261
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื”.</b> ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืฉืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืคื•ื’ืข ื‘ื• ื”ืŸ ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœืชื•ื›ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื ื—ืœื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื:",
262
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืืช ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื“ื’ืžืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ื›ื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืช (ืฉื) ื•ืื™ืฉ ื›ื™ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื‘ื™ืชื• ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืžื” ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื ื“ืžื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ืชื ื•ื”ืขืจื™ื›ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื“ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ืืœื ื ืคื“ื” ื‘ื“ืžื™ื, ืืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืœื ืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื ื“ืžื™ื. ื”ืœื›ืš ื›ื™ ืคืจื™ืง ืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื”ื•ื• ื“ืžื™ื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื›ื™ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ื™ ืžื˜ื™ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ืคืงื ื‘ื—ื ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื•ืื ืœื ื ื’ืืœื” ื™ื”ื‘ื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื“ืžื™ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœื™ื ื•ืฉืงืœื™ ืœื”:",
263
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ื’ืžืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื’:ื›ืณ) ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ืณ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ืžื” ื”ืชื ื‘ื—ื ื ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ื—ื ื. ื•ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ื™ืœืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืžืชื ื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ืœื ื ื™ืœืฃ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื“ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ื™ืœืฃ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืชื•, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืœื ื ื™ืœืฃ ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช ืฉื”ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:",
264
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืจื˜ื•ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืขื–ื•ื‘ื”. ื›ืžื• [ื”ื•ืฉืข ื™ืณ] ืื ืขืœ ื‘ื ื™ื ืจื•ื˜ืฉื”:",
265
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื ื” ืื—ืจ.</b> ื•ื›ืฉืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื™ื›ื ืกื• ื‘ื” ื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฆืืชื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืฉืชืฆื ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืื“ื ื”ืงื•ื ื” ืงืจืงืข ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื‘ื”ื”ื•ื ืงืืžืจ ืงืจื ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฆืืชื• ืžื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื ืžืฉืžืข, ื“ืื›ืชื™ ืœื ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืคืงืข ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:"
266
+ ],
267
+ [
268
+ "<b>ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืฉื“ื” ืžืื‘ื™ื•, ืžืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื ืคืœื” ืœื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื ื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”, ืคื•ื“ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ ื›ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”, ื•ืื ืœื ื’ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
269
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืื ื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”, ืคื•ื“ื” ืฉื“ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื” ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”, ื•ืื ืœื ื’ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ื—ื•ื–ืจืช ืœื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ. ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœื•, ื“ืขืชื™ื“ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ืœืื‘ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืžื›ื™ืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉืืจ ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื” ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ื’ื•ืืœื” ืžื™ื“ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื” ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืœืืฉืจ ืœื• ืื—ื•ื–ืช ื”ืืจืฅ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื•ื–ื” ื™ื•ืจืฉ ืืช ื›ื— ืื‘ื™ื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
270
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืžืงื ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื•ื’ืืœื” ืื—ืจ, ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•, ื•ืงืจืงืข ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื• ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
271
+ "<b>ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื•ื™ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื”, ืื™ื ื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช:",
272
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื•ืืœื™ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื“ื” ืœืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–) ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ืื• ืœื•ื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืงืจืงืข ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืžืื‘ื•ืชื™ื• ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื•ืœื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื’ื•ืืœื” ืœืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื”) ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื:"
273
+ ]
274
+ ],
275
+ [
276
+ [
277
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื‘ืœ. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’:",
278
+ "<b>ืคืชื— ืืชื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื›ืžื” ืืชื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืจื™ื•ื— ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœื• ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ. ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื“ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื•ืืœื• ื‘ื›ืžื” ืชืคื“ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื“ืžื™ื” ืงืฆื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืงืœ. ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืœื• ืฉื‘ื˜ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื•ื’ื“ ื“ื‘ื˜ืœื• ื™ื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืงืจืืชื ื“ืจื•ืจ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœื›ืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื”, ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืœื ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื’ืœื• ืžืชื•ื›ื”, ืฉืื– ื”ื™ื ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื‘ืฉื•ื•ื™ื”:",
279
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ ืฉื•ื™ื™ื” ื•ืจื‘ื™ืข ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ื—ืžืฉื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื ืคืชื— ืืชื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื”ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ, ื›ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžืฆื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ื‘ืื“ื•ืŸ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื–) ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ, ืืœืžื ืžืฆื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ืงื•ื“ืžืช ืœืžื›ื™ืจื”. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืคื“ื™ื•ื ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืืจ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ื“ืจื•ืฆื” ืื“ื ื‘ืงื‘ ืฉืœื•:",
280
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืจืขืชื”.</b> ืฉื”ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืฉื‘ื” ื™ืชื™ืจื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ื—:",
281
+ "<b>ืื™ืกืจ.</b> ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช:",
282
+ "<b>ืœื ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืืœื ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืฉื”, ืฉืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืื™ืกืจ, ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื”. ื•ืืžืจ ืœื• ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื™ืขืชืš, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืš ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื”. ื•ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™, ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืกื‘ืจ, ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉื• ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื:"
283
+ ],
284
+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืžื ื›ืกื™ื• ืขื“ ืขืฉืจ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื—ื–ืจื• ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื—ื–ืจื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื›ืื—ื“, ืžืฉืœืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื”. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ืืžืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข, ื•ื—ื–ืจื• ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื›ืื—ื“, ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉืจ, ื•ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ืžื ื›ืกื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืžื ื›ืกื™ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื—ื–ืจื• ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ื›ืื—ื“ ื•ื ืžื›ืจ ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉืœืฉ, ืžืžืฉื›ื ื™ื ื‘ื ื›ืกื™ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืกืœืขื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื–ื” ืœืขื•ืœื:"
286
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœื™ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืืžืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
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+ "<b>ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ. ื“ืœื”ืื™ ืœื ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืืžืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืขืœื” ื”ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืขื ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ืื™ ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™ืš ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ื ืžืฆื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžืคืกื™ื“. ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ ื™ืชื ื• ืื•ืชื• ืกืœืข ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื–ื” ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ืขืฉืจื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื•ื—ืžืฉ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื•, ืื‘ืœ ืขืœ ืกืœืข ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื–ื” ืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื—ื•ืžืฉ:",
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+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืฉืœืฉื™ื.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš ืืžืื™ ื›ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื‘ืฉืœืžื ืขื“ ื”ืฉืชื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ื• ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ืŸ ืœืžื™ืชื‘ื ืœื”ื ืš, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงืจืŸ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื“ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืขื• ืœืžื™ืชื‘ ืงืจื ื ื›ืžื” ื“ืฉื™ื™ืžื•ื” ืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื ื“ื™ื“ื”ื•. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื, ืœื™ืชื ื• ืœื”ืื™ืš, ื“ื”ื ืงืจืŸ ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืœื™ืžืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื”ืจื™ ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื™ื ื• ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืžื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ืžืชืจืฅ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ืžื˜ื™ ื—ื•ืฉื‘ื ื ื“ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืœื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ืื™ ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™, ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื™ื“ื ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื™ื™ื”ื•. ื•ื”ื ื“ืœื ืชื ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื“ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืง ืชื ื ื•ืœื ื—ืฉ ืœืžื™ืชื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
291
+ "<b>ืื ืจืฆื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืœื™ืชืŸ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ื›ืฉืคืชื—ื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ืช ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ, ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ื, ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ื•ืขืœื•ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ื”ื ื—ืžืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ:",
292
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ื™ื”ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื”ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ืžืคืกื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื“ื™ื ืจ ืžืžืื™ ื“ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื™ื™ื”ื•:",
293
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืœืื•.</b> ืฉืœื ืคืชื—ื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืœื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื, ื•ื–ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
294
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื–ื” ื”ื’ื™ืขืชืš.</b> ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืš, ื•ืœื ืžื”ื“ืจื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ืขืœื™ื. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื™ื ื• ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืžื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืืœื ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืคืชื—ื• ื”ื ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ืขืœื•ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืœื ืฉืžื• ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื–ื” ื”ืื—ืจ, ืื‘ืœ ืื ืฉืžื•ื”ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื‘ืขืœื•ื™ื• ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืŸ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืœื ืื™ื™ืจื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ: "
295
+ ],
296
+ [
297
+ "<b>ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืžืฆืื ื•.</b> ืžืงืฆืช ืฆืื ื•. ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื—ืจื ื•ื ื•ืชื ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ:",
298
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื ืืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ืฉืœื ืฉื™ื™ืจ ืœืขืฆืžื• ื›ืœื•ื:",
299
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืจืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื—) ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื• ืžืื“ื ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•. ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื•, ืืœื• ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื›ืœ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ. ืžืื“ื, ืืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ื•ืฉืคื—ื•ืชื™ื• ื›ื ืขื ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœืŸ. ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•, ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื”, ืืœื ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืœื ื™ื—ืจื™ื ืืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื, ืžื•ื—ืจืžื™ื:",
300
+ "<b>ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื—ืก ืขืœ ื ื›ืกื™ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื–ื‘ื–ื ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜:"
301
+ ],
302
+ [
303
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžื—ืจื™ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•.</b> ื•ื‘ืชื• ื ื”ื™ ื“ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ืจื” ื‘ืงื˜ื ื•ืชื”, ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ืจื” ื‘ื ืขืจื•ืชื”:",
304
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉืœื”ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื™ืดื“) ื›ืœ ื—ืจื ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืš ื™ื”ื™ื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื”ื•ื™, ืžื” ื”ื ืื” ื‘ื›ืš ืื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืจื™ื, ืื™ื”ื• ื’ื•ืคื™ื” ื–ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ื” ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ืจ:",
305
+ "<b>ื ืจืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื ืจืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืœืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ, ื“ืžื•ื“ื” ืœื• ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ืกื•ื‘ืจ ื›ืžื•ืชื• ื‘ืงืจืงืขื•ืช, ื•ืœื ื“ื™ื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ื. ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืกื‘ืจ, ื”ื•ืงืฉื• ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืœืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื—) ืžื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ืœื• ืžืื“ื ื•ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืžืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ืชื•, ืžื” ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืื—ื•ื–ืช ืขื•ืœื ื”ื™ื ืœื”ื, ืืฃ ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ื. ื•ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ื”ืงื™ืฉื. ื•ืžื“ื ื—ื™ืช ืจื‘ื™ ืœืคืจื•ืฉื™ ืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืžื•ื“ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ื‘ืžื” ื ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื•, ืฉืดืž ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
306
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื—ืจืžื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ื—ืจืžื™ื ืฉื”ื—ืจื™ืžื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืœืชืชื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
309
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื•ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ. ืื‘ืœ ื—ืจืžื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ื“ืื“ืขืชื ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืื—ืจืžื™ื ื”ื•, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืœื ืžืขื•ืช:",
310
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืกืชื ื—ืจืžื™ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืžื—ืจื™ื ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ื ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžื—ืจื™ื ืงืจืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”, ื ื•ืชื ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ื™ืช, ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜, ื•ืœื ื™ืคื—ื•ืช ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื ืื• ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœื–ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืœื‘ื“ ืื• ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืคืจืกื•ืžื™ ืžืœืชื:",
311
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ, ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื›ื•ืณ:"
312
+ ],
313
+ [
314
+ "<b>ืื ื ื“ืจ.</b> ืื ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื ื“ืจื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื—ืจื™ืžื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื”, ื ืžืฆืืช ืฉืœื• ื”ื™ื ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื ื“ืจื•, ื“ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื” ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ:",
315
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื.</b> ื“ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ืื ืžืชื”, ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœ ื‘ื” ื—ืจื, ื“ืœืื• ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื”ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื›ื“ื™ ื˜ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื” ื™ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ืฉื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื—ืจื™ืžื•, ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืื ื™ืžืฆื ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื–ื•ืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•, ื•ื›ืื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื™ืชืŸ ื–ื”, ืฉื–ื• ื”ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื”, ื•ืžืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉื” ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ืžืขืชื” ืื™ื ื• ืžืื‘ื“ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืคืกื™ื“ ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•:",
316
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ื ื• ืจืฉืื™.</b> ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื ื•ืฉื” ืจืฉื™ื:",
317
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื’ื•ืคื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื—ืจื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื• ืืœื ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ืืœื ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ ืื• ืœื‘ืŸ ืื—ื•ืชื•, ื•ืื•ืชื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื“ื™ื”ื™ื‘, ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื–ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื”ื—ืจื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื ืงื˜ ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ืื• ื‘ืŸ ืื—ื•ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืœื• ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื• ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื™ืชืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ืœื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื• ืื• ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ืจ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื—ื–ื™ ืœื™ื” ืžื™ื—ื–ื™ ื›ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืžืกื™ื™ืข ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื’ืจื ื•ืช ืœื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืœื–ืจื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชื ื• ืœื• ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื‘ืฉื›ืจื•, ื•ืืฉืชื›ื— ื“ืœื ืฉืงื™ืœ ืœื™ื” ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ืืœื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืฉื›ืจ:",
318
+ "<b>ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื˜) ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืืฉืจ ื™ื•ืœื“ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ:",
319
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื—ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืืœ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ.</b> (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื›ืดื•) ืืš ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืืฉืจ ื™ื‘ื•ื›ืจ ืœื”ืณ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืื™ืฉ ืื•ืชื•:",
320
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™.</b> ืœื”ืขืœื•ืชื• ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืืชื• ื›ืžื” ืื“ื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืœื”ืขืœื•ืชื• ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ืœืงื•ื ื•:",
321
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉื [ื–ื‘ื—] ืื—ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื•. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ื ืคืงื ืœื”ื• ื”ืš ื“ืจืฉื ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื›ืœ ื—ืจื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืืœ ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ ืœื”ื• ืœืœืื•, ืฉืื ืžืชืคื™ืกื• ืœืฉื ื–ื‘ื— ืื—ืจ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืœืื•, ื•ืชืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžื‘ืขื™ ืœื”ื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืžืฆื•ื” ืœื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืœื‘ื›ื•ืจื”, ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืžืืœื™ื• ื”ื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื•ืจืณ ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืš ื“ืจืฉื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
322
+ ]
323
+ ],
324
+ [
325
+ [
326
+ "<b>ื”ืžื•ื›ืจ ืืช ืฉื“ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ืช ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืขืฆืžื” ืื™ื ื• ืจืฉืื™ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ, ื•ืื ืžื›ืจ, ื”ืžื›ืจ ื‘ื˜ืœ ื•ืžื—ื–ื™ืจ ื”ื“ืžื™ื:",
327
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื’ืื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชืจืฆื” ืœื•ืงื—, ืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืœื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื”) ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ืชืงื ื”, ืฉืชื”ื ืงื ื•ื™ื” ืœื• ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื. ื•ืื ืžื”ื“ืจ ืœื” ืžืงืžื™ ื”ื›ื™, ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื”. ื•ืžื•ื›ืจ ื ืžื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื” ืื ื’ื•ืืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืš. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชื” ืคื•ื“ื” ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ื• ืฉืœ ืœื•ืงื— ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ ืžื” ืฉืžื›ืจื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืืช ืฉื ื™ ืžืžื›ืจื•, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ ื›ืžื” ืฉื ื™ื ืžืฉืžื›ืจื” ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ื•ืžื—ืœืง ื”ื“ืžื™ื ืœืคื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืžื›ืจื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืฉืžื›ืจ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืฉื ื” ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ืžื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืชื ืžื›ื™ืจื” ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, ืฉื”ืชื” ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื—ืžืฉ ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ืžื•ื›ืจ ืœื’ืืœื”, ืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ืœื•ืงื— ื—ืฆื™ ืžื ื”:",
328
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืžืžื ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื. ื“ื”ื ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘, ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื”ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืชื‘ื•ืื” ืชืฉื”ื ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื—. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืชื‘ื•ืื”, ื•ื ืจื” ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื—ืจืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืื” ืฉื“ื” ื ื™ืจ ื•ืœื ื–ืจืขื”, ืื• ื”ื•ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฉื”ื ื™ื—ื” ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื™ืจ ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”, ืื™ื”ื• ื“ืืคืกื™ื“ ืื ืคืฉื™ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื:",
329
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ืœืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืื•ืชื” ืชื‘ื•ืื” ื”ืขื•ืžื“ืช ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืงื ื™ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืชืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืืชื ื ืงืžื ื‘ื”ื ืืœื ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื:"
330
+ ],
331
+ [
332
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฉื‘.</b> ื”ืžื•ื›ืจ ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื’ืืœื”:",
333
+ "<b>ืืœื ืขื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื•ืื•ืชื• ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื™ื ื›ื” ืœื• ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื•ืฉื ื” ืฉืื›ืœื”, ื•ื”ืžื•ืชืจ ื™ืฉืœื ืœื•:",
334
+ "<b>ืืฉืจ ืžื›ืจ ืœื•.</b> ื‘ื’ื•ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ืžืžื›ืจื• ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ืขื•ื“ืฃ ืœืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ืžื›ืจ ืœื•:",
335
+ "<b>ืœืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื‘ืชื•ื›ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืฆื ืขืชื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืฉื“ื” ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœืคื“ื•ืชื”. ื•ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœืงื•ืœื ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื•ื›ืจ ื•ืœื ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื’ืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื’ืื•ืœื” ื’ืื•ืœื” ืžืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™, ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื”:ื›ืดื•) ื•ืžืฆื ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•, ื•ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื’ืื•ืœื” ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื•, ืžื” ืœื”ืœืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ. ื•ื”ืชื ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืœื”ืงืœ, ื“ืชื ื™ื, ื ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืžื ื” ื•ื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ื•ืขืžื“ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื, ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื” ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืžืื•ืชื• ืžื ื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื›ืš ืžื ื›ื” ืœื•, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื›ืกืฃ ืžืงื ืชื•. ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ื ืžื›ืจ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื ื•ื”ื›ืกื™ืฃ ื•ืขืžื“ ืขืœ ืžื ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ืžื ื”, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื•, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื”:",
336
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืžื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืจื—ื•ืงื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื•, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืงืจื•ื‘. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžื›ื•ืจ ื‘ืจืข ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ ืฉื“ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื™ืคื”. ื•ืœื ื™ืœื•ื” ืžืื—ืจื™ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœ. ื•ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืฉื“ื” ืฉืžื›ืจ ืืœื ืื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ื•ืœื” ืื• ืœื ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื”ืฉื™ื’ื” ื™ื“ื• ื•ืžืฆื ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•. ื•ื”ืฉื™ื’ื” ื™ื“ื• ืžืขืฆืžื•, ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืœื•ื” ื•ื™ื’ืืœ. ื•ืžืฆื, ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื™ืžืฆื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฆื•ื™ ืœื• ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžื•ื›ืจ ื‘ืจื—ื•ืง ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืงืจื•ื‘, ื‘ืจืข ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ื™ืคื”, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฆื•ื™ ืœื• ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ. ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœืชื•, [ื›ื“ื™ ื’ืื•ืœื”] ื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืืœ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœื—ืฆืื™ื:",
337
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉื“ื”ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ืจืช, ืื• ืœืœื•ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืืœื”, ื•ืื ืื™ื ื• ืžืกืคื™ืง ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื›ื•ืœื” ื™ื’ืืœ ื—ืฆื™ื” ื•ื›ืฉืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื™ื’ืืœ ื›ื•ืœื”:"
338
+ ],
339
+ [
340
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื’ืืœ ืžื™ื“.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื™ื ื• ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืื—ื•ื–ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื:",
341
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืฉื›ืฉืžื—ื–ื™ืจ ืœื• ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ื›ืœื•ื ื ืžืฆื ืฉื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื‘ืฉื›ืจ ื”ืžืชื ืช ืžืขื•ืชื™ื•:",
342
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื ื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื’ืžื•ืจื”. ื“ืจื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืžืงืจื™ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืœื•ืื” ืฉื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ืื” ืœื™ื“ื™ ืจื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื›ืจ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœื ื” ื•ืชื—ืœื•ื˜ ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืช:",
343
+ "<b>ื™ื’ืืœ ื‘ื ื•.</b> ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ื” ืื ื™ืจืฆื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื—ืจ ืฉื ื”, ื ื—ืœื˜ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื’ืืœ ืขื•ื“, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืื ืœื ื™ื’ืืœ ืขื“ ืžืœืืช ืœื• ืฉื ื” ืชืžื™ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ:",
344
+ "<b>ืžืฉืขื” ืฉืžื›ืจ ืœื•.</b> ืฉืื ืžื›ืจื” ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืœืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื•ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืœืœื•ื™ ื‘ืื™ื™ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ื ื™ืกืŸ ื”ื•ื ื ื—ืœื˜, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœืžื›ืจ ืฉื ื™ ืืœื ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขื“ ืžืœืืช ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื–ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœื•:",
345
+ "<b>ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช ืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ืขื“ ื™ืดื’ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ:",
346
+ "<b>ืฉื ื” ื•ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื” ืคืฉื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืฉื ืช ืœื‘ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ื™ื•ื. ื•ื™ืžื™ื ืฉื™ืชืจื™ื ืฉื ืช ื—ืžื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืช ืœื‘ื ื” ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจืŸ ืื ื• ืžืขื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืฉื ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
347
+ ],
348
+ [
349
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ื”ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื”.</b> ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื ืชื•, ื™ื’ืืœ, ื•ืื ืœืื• ื—ืœื•ื˜ ืœื•:",
350
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื” ื ื˜ืžืŸ.</b> ืœื•ืงื—, ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืžืฆืื”ื• ืžื•ื›ืจ ืœื™ืชืŸ ืืช ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื™ื”ื ื ื—ืœื˜ ืœื•:",
351
+ "<b>ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื•ืœืฉ.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื ืžื˜ื™ืœ ืžืขื•ืชื™ื• ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
352
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื“ืœืช.</b> ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืžื›ืจ. ื•ื ื›ื ืก. ื—ื•ืœืฉ, ื›ืžื• ื—ื•ืœืฉ ืขืœ ื’ื•ื™ื (ื™ืฉืขื™ื” ื™ืดื“):"
353
+ ],
354
+ [
355
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืคื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ื‘ืชื™ ืžืจื—ืฆืื•ืช ื•ืžื’ื“ืœื™ื ื•ื‘ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื•ืžืขืจื•ืช. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืฉืจ ื‘ืขื™ืจ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืขื™ืจ. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืฉืื ื™ ืžืจื‘ื” ืืช ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืคืจื˜ ืœืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื›ืœืœ ืœื‘ื™ืช:",
356
+ "<b>ืจืžืดื ืืฃ ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช.</b> ืœืื• ืฉื“ื•ืช ืžืžืฉ ืงืืžืจ ืจืดืž, ื“ื”ื ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘, ื•ืฉื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœื‘ื™ืช. ืืœื ืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ืกืœืขื™ื ื•ืžืฆื•ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื–ืจื™ืขื” ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ืžืงื•ื ืกืœืขื™ื, ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืžืฉื ืื‘ื ื™ื ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ. ื•ืžืฆื•ืœื”, ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืžืฉื ื—ื•ืœ ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืดืž:",
357
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ื—ืœื˜ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื”:",
358
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืžืชื•.</b> ื•ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
359
+ ],
360
+ [
361
+ "<b>ืฉื’ื’ื•ืชื™ื” ื—ื•ืžืชื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ืงื™ืคื•ื” ื—ื•ืžื” ืืœื ื”ืงื™ืคื•ื” ื‘ืชื™ื ื•ืชื›ื™ืคืช ื”ื‘ืชื™ื ื–ื• ืœื–ื• ื”ืŸ ื›ื—ื•ืžื”:",
362
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื” ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”.</b> ื“ื—ื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืœื ืฉื’ื’ื•ืชื™ื” ื—ื•ืžืชื”:",
363
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืŸ.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื—ื•ืžื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื•, ื ื™ื“ื•ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”. ื“ืœื•ื ื—ื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘, ืžืœื ื‘ื•ื™ืดื• ื•ืืœืดืฃ, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื• ื•ืžืฉืžืข ืœื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื•ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ื—ื•ืžื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื”:",
364
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืชื™ื, ืžืงืจื™ ืขื™ืจ:",
365
+ "<b>ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงืฆืจื”.</b> ืฉื ืขื™ืจ ืงื˜ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืฆืคื•ืจื™:",
366
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืงืจื ืฉื‘ื’ื•ืฉ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืงืคื•ืช ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืŸ. ื•ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื“ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ืงื™ื™ืดืœ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืดื“ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืชืจืชื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื•ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื• ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื”, ืืœื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืื—ืจืช ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืืดื™ ื•ื’ื ื”ื™ื ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื—ืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืืจ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”:"
367
+ ],
368
+ [
369
+ "<b>ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืœืขื™ื™ืจื•ืช ื—ื•ืžื”:",
370
+ "<b>ื›ื— ื™ืคื”.</b> ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ:",
371
+ "<b>ื•ื ื’ืืœื™ื ืžื™ื“.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื”ื•ืชื• ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ื’ืื•ืœื” ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืžื™ื“ ื™ื’ืืœื ื• ืื ื™ืจืฆื” ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื‘ืชื™ื ืฉืœ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื”:",
372
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื’ืจืขื•ืŸ ื›ืกืฃ.</b> ืฉืžื ื›ื” ืœื• ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืฉื”ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื•, ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช. ื“ื‘ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืฉื“ื” ื”ืืจืฅ ื™ื—ืฉื‘, ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื‘ื’ืจืขื•ืŸ ื›ืกืฃ ื›ืฉื“ื•ืช:",
373
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื™ ื‘ืชื™ื.</b> ืขื™ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ืงืคืช ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื™ืžื•ืช ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื‘ืชื™ ื”ื—ืฆืจื™ื:"
374
+ ],
375
+ [
376
+ "<b>ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืจืฉ.</b> ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืžืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ืœื•ื™:",
377
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื•, ืชื ื™ ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื, ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื—ืœื˜ืช ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื”:",
378
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™, ืืœื ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื“ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ื›ืœื•ื™, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืœื•ื™ ื•ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ื“ืชืจื™ ืงืจืื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™, ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื” ื˜) ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื”ื™ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื—ื•ื–ืชื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืชืœื” ืจื—ืžื ื, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืืฉืจ ื™ื’ืืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœืžืงืฆืช ืœื•ื™ื ื ืชืชื™ ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื’ืื•ืœ ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื”ื‘ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืžื–ืจืช ื•ืžืŸ ื”ื ืชื™ื ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืจืฉ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ืืžื• ืœื•ื™, ื“ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื, ืฉืื™ื ื• ื’ื•ืืœ ืœืขื•ืœื:",
379
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ื“ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ืืœื ื‘ืขืจื™ ื”ืœื•ื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืœื•ื™ ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
380
+ "<b>ืžื’ืจืฉ.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืžื›ืœื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ื–ื•ืจืขื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื ื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœืขื™ืจ:",
381
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ืฉื“ื” ืžื’ืจืฉ ืขืจื™ื”ื ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืžืื™ ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืื™ืœื™ืžื ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื›ืœืœ, ื”ื ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืขื•ืœื ืชื”ื™ื” ืœืœื•ื™ื, ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ืžื–ื“ื‘ืŸ, ืืœื ืžืื™ ืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ, ืœื ื™ืฉืชื ื”:",
382
+ "<b>ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื—ืจื™ื‘ื•.</b> ืืช ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ื”ืืจืฅ:",
383
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ื•ืœื ื›ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืžื›ื•ืจ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื™ื•ื‘ืœ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ืฉื) ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืš, ืื‘ืœ ืืœื• ืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืกืžื•ืš ืœื™ื•ื‘ืœ:",
384
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื•ืืœื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื.</b> ืื ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืžื›ืจื• ืื™ื ืŸ ื ื—ืœื˜ื™ื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื” ื›ื‘ืชื™ ืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืื ืฉื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืจื•, ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ืœื•ืงื— ืฉืชื™ ืฉื ื™ื ืืœื ื’ื•ืืœื™ื ืžื™ื“ ืื ื™ืจืฆื•:"
385
+ ]
386
+ ]
387
+ ],
388
+ "versions": [
389
+ [
390
+ "On Your Way",
391
+ "http://mobile.tora.ws/"
392
+ ]
393
+ ],
394
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ",
395
+ "categories": [
396
+ "Mishnah",
397
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
398
+ "Bartenura",
399
+ "Seder Kodashim"
400
+ ],
401
+ "sectionNames": [
402
+ "Chapter",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
405
+ ]
406
+ }
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
3
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Chullin",
4
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org",
5
+ "versionTitle": "Sefaria Community Translation",
6
+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ืชืจื’ื•ื ืงื”ื™ืœืช ืกืคืจื™ื",
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+ "actualLanguage": "en",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "isBaseText": false,
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+ "isSource": false,
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+ "direction": "ltr",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
25
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
29
+ "He slaughters the meat against his will: That if he accepts a Dinar from the buyer, he gives him a Dinar's worth of meat.",
30
+ ".."
31
+ ]
32
+ ],
33
+ [],
34
+ [
35
+ [
36
+ "",
37
+ "",
38
+ "",
39
+ "And the Halacha is not like R. Yehuda."
40
+ ]
41
+ ]
42
+ ],
43
+ "sectionNames": [
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+ "Chapter",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
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+ ]
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+ }
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1
+ {
2
+ "language": "he",
3
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Keritot",
4
+ "versionSource": "http://mobile.tora.ws/",
5
+ "versionTitle": "On Your Way",
6
+ "status": "locked",
7
+ "priority": 1.0,
8
+ "license": "Public Domain",
9
+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื•ื‘ืœื›ืชืš ื‘ื“ืจืš",
10
+ "actualLanguage": "he",
11
+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
12
+ "isBaseText": true,
13
+ "isSource": true,
14
+ "isPrimary": true,
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+ "direction": "rtl",
16
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช",
17
+ "categories": [
18
+ "Mishnah",
19
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
20
+ "Bartenura",
21
+ "Seder Kodashim"
22
+ ],
23
+ "text": [
24
+ [
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช.</b> ืœืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื”:",
27
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ืชื”.</b> ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื” ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื•, ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•, ื›ื•ืœื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื–ื”:",
28
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ื“ืฃ.</b> ืžื‘ืจืš ืืช ื”ืฉื:",
29
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”.</b> ื›ื“ืจืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื”. ืื• ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ืžืงื˜ืจ ื•ื”ืžื ืกืš ื•ื”ืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื‘ื›ืš:",
30
+ "<b>ื‘ืขืœ ืื•ื‘.</b> ื•ื™ื“ืขื•ื ื™ ื‘ื›ืœืœ. ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœืื• ืื—ื“ ื ืืžืจื•, ื•ืชื ื ื ืงื˜ ืื•ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืžืงืจื:",
31
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžื—ืœืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื‘ืื—ืช ืžืื‘ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื—ืกืจ ืื—ืช ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:",
32
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืจ.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ:",
33
+ "<b>ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื—ืฉื‘ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
34
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ื”ืขืœืŸ. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื–:ื“ืณ) ื•ืืœ ืคืชื— ืื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ืœื ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ื“ื ื™ื—ืฉื‘ ืœืื™ืฉ ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ื ืฉืคืš ื•ื ื›ืจืช:",
35
+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืœื”.</b> ื ืžื™ ื‘ื›ืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืืฉืจ ื™ืขืœื” ืขื•ืœื” ืื• ื–ื‘ื— ื•ืืœ ืคืชื— ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื•. ื•ืื ืฉื—ื˜ ื•ื”ืขืœื” ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช:",
36
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคื˜ื ืืช ืฉืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ ืกืžืžื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืžื“ืช ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉืขืฉืื• ืžืฉื” ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ืขืฉื ื• ืœืกื•ืš ื‘ื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžืคื˜ืžื• ืœื”ืชืœืžื“ ืื• ืœืžืกืจื• ืœืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘:",
37
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคื˜ื ืืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืกืžืžื ื™ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืื ืœืงื— ืžื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืคื™ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื”ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ืขื™ืจื‘ื ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขืจื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ืขืฉื ื• ืœื”ืจื™ื— ื‘ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืขืฉืื” ืœื”ืชืœืžื“ ืื• ืœืžืกืจื” ืœืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
38
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืกืš ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื” ืฉืขืฉื” ืžืฉื”, ืฉืœื ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื•ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืŸ ืืœื ืขืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืžืฉื” ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ืžืžื ื• ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ืžืœืš ื‘ืŸ ืžืœืš ืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืžื—ืœื•ืงืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืฉื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื” ืžืคื ื™ ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ืื“ื•ื ื™ื”ื•, ื•ื™ื•ืืฉ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ืขืชืœื™ื”ื•, ื•ื™ื”ื•ืื—ื– ืžืคื ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื™ืงื™ื ืื—ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžื ื•. ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆืงื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ืขืœ ืจืืฉื• ื•ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ืช ืขื™ื ื™ื• ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืดื™ ื™ื•ื ื™ืช. ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื ื–ืจ:",
39
+ "<b>ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื”ืžื™ืœื” ื‘ืžืฆื•ืช ืขืฉื”.</b> ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืจืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื”ื ืš ืœื ืชืขืฉื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืืœื ืขืœ ืœืื•. ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื™ืดื’) ื•ืขืฉื” ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ืณ ืืฉืจ ืœื ืชื™ืขืฉื™ื ื”: "
40
+ ],
41
+ [
42
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืฉื’ื’ื” ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืืฉืชื•, ื•ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืฉืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ืœื” ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ื— ื•ืงื™ื˜ื•ืจ ื•ื ื™ืกื•ืš ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืœื ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื”, ื•ื”ืžื—ืœืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื” ืฉื™ื•ื“ืข ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืœื ืฉื ืขืœื ืžืžื ื• ื–ื” ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืฉืขื•ืฉื”. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื“ืขื•ืงืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื’ื•ืฃ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืœื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื”ื•ื ื–ื” ืืœื ืื ื•ืก ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
43
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื•ืžืŸ, ืื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื™ื–ื” ืžื”ืŸ ืื›ืœ. ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ืžื˜ื”, ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืขืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื:",
44
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ืงืจื•ื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฉืชื•ืœื” ื•ืžื’ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ืจื™ื, ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ืคืจ, ืฉืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื‘ื™ืจื•ืจ ืฉื—ื˜ื, ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื‘ื•ืขื”:",
45
+ "<b>ื”ืžื˜ืžื ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื•.</b> ืฉื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ืžื, ืื• ืื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”:",
46
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื–ื“ื•ื ื• ื›ืจืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื‘ื•ืขื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
47
+ "<b>ืืฃ ื”ืžื’ื“ืฃ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื“ืจื—ืžื ื ืืžืจ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื”, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžื’ื“ืฃ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
48
+ ],
49
+ [
50
+ "<b>ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืืžืจื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื›ืื“ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
51
+ "<b>ืกื ื“ืœ.</b> ื•ืœื“ ื”ื•ื, ืืœื ืฉื ืคื—ืชื” ืฆื•ืจืชื•. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืกื ื“ืœ, ืฉื ืื•ื™ ื•ื“ืœ. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™. ื•ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื‘ืฉืจ ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื›ืฆื•ืจื•ืช ืกื ื“ืœ ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื” ืœื‘ื•ื ืขื ื•ืœื“:",
52
+ "<b>ืฉืœื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื•ืœื“:",
53
+ "<b>ืฉืคื™ืจ ืžืจื•ืงื.</b> ืขื•ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืœื“ ืžืจื•ืงื ื‘ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืชื•ื›ื• ืฆื•ืจืช ืื‘ืจื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืฉืคื•ืคืจืช ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืงืจื•ื™ ืฉืคื™ืจ:",
54
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื”.</b> ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื”ืืฉื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ื‘ื” ืขื‘ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ื”ืฉื•ื•ืช ื‘ืื™ืฉ ื•ื‘ืืฉื”, ืื‘ืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื“ื‘ื ืฉื™ื ืื™ืชื ื•ื‘ืื ืฉื™ื ืœื™ืชื ืื™ืžืจ ืœื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืคื—ื”, ืœื”ื›ื™ ืชื ื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื”:"
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืžื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”.</b> ืื ืฆื•ืจืช ืื“ื ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ืื ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจื”. ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ืขืœ ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื” ื•ืื•ืžืจืช, ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื™ืœื“ืชื™, ืชื”ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื™, ื•ืื ืœืื•, ืชื”ื ืขื•ืœืช ื ื“ื‘ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ืœืืชื ื•ื™ื™, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื•ืžื™ื™ืชื ื‘ืกืคืง. ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื• ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื, ื•ืžืœื™ืงืชื” ื›ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื‘ืขืœืžื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืืœื ื“ืžื” ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืื›ื™ืœื”:",
58
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื•.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื‘ื•ื:",
59
+ "<b>ืื—ืช ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื:",
60
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืช ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืกื ื“ืœ ืื• ืฉืœื™ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืื™ื–ื• ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ:",
61
+ "<b>ืื™ืžืชื™.</b> ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ:",
62
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ืœื›ื•.</b> ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืงื ื™ื”ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื›ื• ืœื“ืจื›ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช, ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื•ืžืชื ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืื ื™ ื”ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœื™ [ื•ื—ืœืงืš ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™]. ื•ืื ืืช ื”ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืš [ื•ื—ืœืงื™ ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš], ื•ืื•ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืงืจื‘ ื•ื ืื›ืœ. ื“ื“ื•ืงื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื ืื™ืŸ ืชื ืื™ ืžื•ืขื™ืœ ื‘ื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’) ืื• ื”ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื ื“ื›ื™ ืงื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื ืฉื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื•ื, ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื•ืžืชื ื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
63
+ ],
64
+ [
65
+ "<b>ื’ื ื™ื ื™ื.</b> ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื. ื•ืื ื™ ืฉืžืขืชื™ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืชื•ืœืขื™ื:",
66
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืœืช ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ื“ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขื‘ืจื• ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื•ื ืœื”ืจื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื•ื™ ืžื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื:",
67
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื‘) ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ืชืœื“, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื”ื™ื, ืืœื ืจื™ื‘ื” ืœื” ืœื™ื“ื” ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืžืื™ ื”ื™ื, ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ. ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ืฉื) ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ืชื–ืจื™ืข ื•ื™ืœื“ื”, ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“ ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืžื–ืจืขืช:"
68
+ ],
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืœืช ืœืื•ืจ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื ืงื‘ื”, ื•ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืžื—ืจ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ืคืจืชื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”:",
71
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืžืื™ ืคื•ื˜ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืžืœื™ื“ื” ืฉื ื™ื”. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื”ื•ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ืฆืชื” ืฉืขื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืœื™ืœื” ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื–ืณ:ืœืดื—) ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฆื•ื•ืชื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืžื™:",
72
+ "<b>ืžืื™ ืฉื ื ืื•ืจ ืœืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื ืคืœ ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื” ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื”ืคื™ืœื”:",
73
+ "<b>ืื ืฉื•ื” ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืชื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉื‘ืฉืงื™ืขืช ื”ื—ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื›ืœื• ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ืฉืœื” ื•ืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื˜ืžืื”:",
74
+ "<b>ื”ื“ืžื™ื ืื™ื ื ืžื•ื›ื™ื—ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ื“ื ืฉืืชื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื ืฉื•ื” ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืื™ื ื• ืจืื™ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืœืช ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืžื” ื˜ืžื ืžืคื ื™ ื”ืœื™ื“ื”, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื ื—ืฉื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื‘ื ืขื ื”ื•ืœื“ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื“ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืœืœ:"
75
+ ],
76
+ [
77
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืกืคืง ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ืชื” ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ืชื”, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ. ื•ืกืคืง ืœื™ื“ื” ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”. ื•ืื ื™ืฉ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื•ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ืื• ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื•ืช ืฉืœ ืœื™ื“ื”:",
78
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง:",
79
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืœื˜ื”ืจื” ื‘ื, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื›ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”, ืฉืื ื ื˜ืžืืช ื”ืืฉื” ื›ืžื” ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืœื›ื•ืœื, ืืฃ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื–ื” ื›ืŸ:",
80
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืœื ื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ื” ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ืืŸ, ืฉืืฃ ื”ืื—ืช ื‘ืงื•ืฉื™ ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืกืคืง ืžืœื™ืงืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืœื ืฉืื ืœื ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืชืงื ื” ืœื™ื˜ื”ืจ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
81
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืœื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ืื• ื—ืžืฉ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื:",
82
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื“ืชื ื™ื, ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืชื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ ืžืœืืช ื•ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื–ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช:",
83
+ "<b>ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ. ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืจื‘ืข ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ:",
84
+ "<b>ื‘ื“ื™ื ื™ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ื‘ืฉื ื™ [ื“ื™ื ืจื™] ื–ื”ื•ื‘ื™ื, ื“ื™ื ืจ ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื›ืœ ืงืŸ:",
85
+ "<b>ื”ืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ืฉื‘ื•ืขื” ื”ื™ื:",
86
+ "<b>ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื™ืžื“ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ืงืœ ื‘ืฉืœ ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ืœื™ืžื“ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ืขืช ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืณ ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ. ืฉืืœืžืœื ื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžืฆืื•, ื•ื™ืžื ืขื• ื”ืขื ื™ื•ืช ืžืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื•ื™ืื›ืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ:",
87
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื‘ืขืชื™ื.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืจื‘ืขื™ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื›ืกืฃ. ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ ื“ื™ื ืจื™ ื›ืกืฃ:"
88
+ ]
89
+ ],
90
+ [
91
+ [
92
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”.</b> ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื›ืคืจื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื ืืœื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
93
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืข.</b> ื•ื”ื ื“ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืขืช ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืขื™ืงืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื”, ืฉื–ื‘ ืžื˜ืžื ื‘ืจืื™ื•ืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืจืื” ืฉืœืฉ ืจืื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ื˜ืžื ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืชืจืื” ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ื• ืœืชืจืชื™, ืื‘ืœ ืžืฆื•ืจืข ื•ืžืฆื•ืจืขืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื‘ื›ื’ืจื™ืก:",
94
+ "<b>ื’ืจ ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคืจื”.</b> ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ื’ืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืœ ื•ื˜ื‘ืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื›ื‘ื• ืืœื ืžืœื‘ื•ื ื‘ืงื”ืœ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”:",
95
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื–ืจืง ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื“ื.</b> ืื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ืื ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ื™ื, ืขื“ ืฉื™ืชืžืฆื” ื“ืžื• ืขืœ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
96
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืœื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืœืชื’ืœื—ืชื•.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื ื–ื™ืจ ืžืชื™ืจ ืœื• ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืœืชื’ืœื—ืช ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื, ืฉืืขืดืค ืฉืฉืœืžื• ื™ืžื™ ื ื–ืจื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ืชื’ืœื—ืช ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ื•ืชืดืง ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื“ืœื ืชื ื™ ืืœื ื”ื ืš ื“ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื:"
97
+ ],
98
+ [
99
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื›ืคืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœ ื”ืืฉื [ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ] ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื ืกืœื— ืœื• ืžื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’:",
100
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืฉื ื˜ืžื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื›ื™ ื™ืžื•ืช ืžืช ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืคืชืข ืคืชืื•ื, ืคืชืข, ื–ื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉื ืœืดืดื”) ื•ืื ื‘ืคืชืข ื‘ืœื ืื™ื‘ื”. ืคืชืื•ื, ื–ื” ืžื–ื™ื“, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืžืฉืœื™ ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื‘) ืคืชืื™ื ืขื‘ืจื• ื•ื ืขื ืฉื•, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื–ื™ื“, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ื ืฉ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื™ื“:",
101
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื ืืžืจ ื•ื ืขืœื ื•ื›ืืŸ ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื•ื ืขืœื:",
102
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืคืงื“ื•ืŸ.</b> ืืฉื ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืคืงื“ื•ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื• ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืชื—ื˜ื ืชื—ื˜ื ืœื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืžืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช:"
103
+ ],
104
+ [
105
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื›ืคืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœ ื”ืืฉื ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืœืฉืชื•ืง, ืžืื™ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื—ื˜ืื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ืื—ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืฉืคื—ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืคื—ื”, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืฉืคื—ื”:",
106
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ืœื ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืืจื™ื›ืชื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชื’ืœื—ืชื•. ื•ืกื‘ืจ ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ื“ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื) ื•ืงื“ืฉ ืืช ืจืืฉื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชื’ืœื—ืชื• ืงืืžืจ, ืฉื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื˜ื”ืจื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื, ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื›ื™ ื ื˜ืžื ืชืจื™ ื–ื™ืžื ื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ื•ื• ืœื”ื• ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื“ื˜ื”ืจื”, ื•ืœื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื ืžื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื“, ื“ืœื ืืชื ื–ื” ืœืฉืขื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื˜ื”ืจื” ืืชื—ืœื” ืœื” ืžื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™, ืฉืขื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืžื™ื•ื ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื™:",
107
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื ื ืœืืฉืชื• ืขืดื™ ืื ืฉื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื”ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืงื ืื•ืช ืชื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ืœืงื ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
108
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฆื•ืจืข ืฉื ืชื ื’ืข ื ื’ืขื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื’ืข ื•ื ืชืจืคื ื ืชื ื’ืข ื•ื ืชืจืคื ืคืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื›ื•ืœื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™,, ื“) ื–ืืช ืชื”ื™ื” ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืชื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืฆื•ืจืข ืคืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
109
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื™ื ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ื•ื ืชื ื’ืข.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ืœื ืขืœื• ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ืœื”ืงื‘ืข ื‘ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช. ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช [ื”ื‘ืืช] ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืฉื™ืจ. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื“ืœื•ืช ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื•. ื“ื‘ืชืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืืฉืจ ืœื ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ื›ืฉืœื ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื˜ื”ืจืชื• ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ, ื•ื”ืื™ ื˜ื”ืจืชื• ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืคืจืชื•:",
110
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉืžื•.</b> ื“ื‘ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ืืฉืžื• ืžืฉืžืข, ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื“ืžื• ืขืœ ื‘ื”ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื• ื•ืžื›ืฉื™ืจื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
111
+ ],
112
+ [
113
+ "<b>ื”ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืงืื–ื™ืœ ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื ืงื‘ื”, ืฉื˜ื‘ืœื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ื•ืขื™ื™ื ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžืฉื” ื•ื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื™ืจื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืœืœื™ื“ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืฉืœ ื–ื•. ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ื ืงื‘ื”, ื“ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื”ื›ื™, ื“ืื™ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื“ื–ื›ืจ, ื”ืื™ ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื•ืœื“ ื ื•ืฆืจ ืขื“ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื•ื:",
114
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคืœืช ืชืื•ืžื™ื.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ื–ื›ืจื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ืฉืœืฉื”, ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืื—ื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื ืฉืชื”ื” ื•ื™ืฆื ืชื•ืš ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ื“ืฉื ื™. ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื–ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ ืžืœืืช ื•ืฉืœ ืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื ืžื™ ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ืืช:",
115
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉื ื™.</b> ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืคืœื™ื’ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืืชืื•ืžื™ื, ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ื•ืœื“ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ. ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช, ื“ืœื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืœืืช ืœืฉื ื™, ื“ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื”ื•ื™ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืœื™ื“ื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืื‘ืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื ืขื‘ืจื• ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ. ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืื•ืžื™ื ื ืžื™ ืคืœื™ื’ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจืŸ ื›ืื—ืช, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื—ื“ื ืœื™ื“ื” ืืจื™ื›ืชื ื”ื™ื ื•ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืžืœืืช ื ืžื™ ืœืฉื ื™, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ืืœื ืื ื ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ื•ืขืœ ืžืœืืช ื“ืฉื ื™ ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ื“ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™. ื•ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื“ ืฉื ื™ ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™, ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืชื•ืš ื–ืžื ื• ืฉืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ื•ืœื“, ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื•ื“ื” ื“ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืื™ืช ืœื” [ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืคืœืช ื–ื›ืจ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื“ื“ื ื˜ื•ื”ืจ], ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืคืœืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื‘ื•ืขื™ื ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ื“ื“ื ื˜ื•ื”ืจ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:",
116
+ "<b>ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“.</b> ืขื•ืœื” ืœืขืฉื™ืจ, ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืขื ื™. ืฉืื ื”ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจ ืžื‘ื™ื ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”, ื•ืื ืขื ื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” ืกื•ืœืช:",
117
+ "<b>ืฉืžื™ืขืช ื”ืงื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืฉืžืขื” ืงื•ืœ ืืœื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™, ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ื™ืงืจื ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช:",
118
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช.</b> ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช, ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื“ืขื•ืฃ ืชื—ืช ื›ื‘ืฉ. ื•ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ืœื“ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื, ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืชื—ืช ืฉื ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื, ื•ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
119
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืื ืžื–ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ, ื›ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืื™ืฉ ืื• ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ื™ืขืฉื• ืžื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืื“ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื—ืณ), ื”ืฉื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืืฉื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืœื›ืœ ืขื•ื ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ืื ืฉื•ื’ื’ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ื‘ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช ื‘ืžื–ื™ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ื›ืจืชื• ื”ื ืคืฉื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืฉื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื–ื“ื•ื ื• ื›ืจืช ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช:",
120
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืœื ื”ืฉื•ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื˜) ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื”, ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืœืงื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื™ืœ ืืฉื. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจืช, ื‘ืงืจื™ืื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืœื•ืงื” ืื ืœื ืชืฉืžื•ืจ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื•ื”ืคืœื” ื”ืณ ื•ื’ื•ืณ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจ, ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืจื™ื ื•ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืœื•ืงื” ื›ืžื” ืžื›ื•ืช ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืงื‘ืœ:",
121
+ "<b>ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื”.</b> ื”ืžื›ื ื™ืก ืขื˜ืจื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“:",
122
+ "<b>ื›ื’ื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ืืชื•.</b> ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืฉืœื ื›ื“ืจื›ื” ื›ืžื• ื›ื“ืจื›ื”, ื“ืžืฉื›ื‘ื™ ืืฉื” ื›ืชื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืขืœ ื’ืžืจ ื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื“ืจื›ื”, ื“ืฉื›ื‘ืช ื–ืจืข ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”, ืฉืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื”ื–ืจื™ืข:",
123
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื™ืื”.</b> ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคื™ืจืงื™ืŸ [ื“ืฃ ื˜ืณ] ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
124
+ "<b>ืฉืขืฉื” ื‘ื” ืืช ื”ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’.</b> ืื ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžื–ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื• ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื”ื™ื ืžื–ื™ื“ื”, ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืœืงื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ื™ื“, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื”, ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืืฉืžื•. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื”, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ: "
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "<b>ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ืžืื•ืจืกืช ืœืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืขื‘ื“ ื›ื ืขื ื™, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”. ื•ืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื”ื™ื• ื”ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื”, ื•ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื ื”ืจื’ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืงืฆืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ืขื‘ื“ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืณ) ืœื ื™ื•ืžืชื• ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ื•ืคืฉื”, ื”ื ื—ื•ืคืฉื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื:",
128
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืคื“ื•ื™ื” ืงืฆืช ื•ืื™ื ื” ืคื“ื•ื™ื” ืœื’ืžืจื™:",
129
+ "<b>ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื“ืื™ืช.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืคื—ื” ื’ืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื”, ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื:",
130
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช.</b> ืฉื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื™ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื ื•, ื•ื–ื• ื•ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื” ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื, ืืœื ื“ืืžืจ ืœื™ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ ืื ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื›ื•ื•ืชืš ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ ื“ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ืžื™ื”ื• ื”ื›ื ืฉืื ื™, ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ื•ืคืฉื”, ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื” ืœืžื” ืœื™. ืฉืžืข ืžื™ื ื” ืœื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:"
131
+ ],
132
+ [
133
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช.</b> ืื ื”ืื—ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื”ืื™ืฉ ืื• ื”ืืฉื”, ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ืงื˜ืŸ, ื”ืงื˜ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ, ื“ืื ื”ืื—ื“ ืงื˜ืŸ, ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ืžื™ ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื ืืชืงื•ืฉ ืœื”ื“ื“ื™, ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืืฉืžื•, ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืœื•ืงื” ื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
134
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืขืจ ื•ืื—ื“ ื™ืฉืŸ ื™ืฉืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ืขืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ืขืจ ื ืžื™ ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืชืงื•ืฉ ืœื”ื“ื“ื™ ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ:",
135
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ื”ื›ืจืช.</b> ื•ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื”, ืื ื”ื•ื ืžื–ื™ื“ ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ืช, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื. ื•ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื”ื™ื ืžื–ื™ื“ื”, ื”ื™ื ืœื•ืงื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืืฉื:"
136
+ ]
137
+ ],
138
+ [
139
+ [
140
+ "<b>ืืžืจื• ืœื•.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืชืง ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ื—ื™ืฉื•:",
141
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืขืœ ืคื™ื•:",
142
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ื—ืœื‘.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื›ื—ื™ืฉื ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืจื™ ืœื™ ืฉืœื ืื›ืœืชื™, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ื”ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’,) ืื• ื”ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื•ืœื ืฉื™ื•ื“ื™ืขื•ื”ื• ืื—ืจื™ื:",
143
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืžืื™ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
144
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื‘ื™ืื•ื”ื• ืฉื ื™ื ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืขื™ื“ื• ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื”ืจื’ ืืช ื”ื ืคืฉ:",
145
+ "<b>ืื ื™ืจืฆื” ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื”ื™ื™ืชื™.</b> ืื ื”ื™ื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืฉืงืจ ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื”ื™ื™ืชื™, ื•ืžื–ื™ื“ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืงืจื‘ืŸ:"
146
+ ],
147
+ [
148
+ "<b>ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืœื‘.</b> ืฉื ื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ ื—ืœื‘:",
149
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ:",
150
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืžืชืžื—ื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืชื‘ืฉื™ืœ ืื—ื“, ืืœื ื”ื ืžืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ, ืืคืดื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืชืžื—ื•ื™ืŸ ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ: "
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ื™ืฉื”ื” ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ.</b> ืœืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ:",
154
+ "<b>ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ืชืคืจื“ื• ืœืคื™ืจื•ืจื™ืŸ [ื“ืงื™ืŸ] ื›ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืื—ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื–ื• ืื—ืจ ื–ื•, ื•ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืžืฉืขืจื™ื ืŸ ืื ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ื•ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืขื” ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืื—ืจ, ืื ืฉื”ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื–ื• ืœื–ื•, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ืžืื›ื™ืœื” ืืœื ืฉืฉื”ื” ื‘ืœืขื™ืกืชืŸ ื•ื‘ืœื™ืขืชืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื•ื ื›ื•ืœื•, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
155
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉื”ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืœืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืื—ืจ, ืืœื ืฉืฉื”ื” ื‘ืœืขื™ืกืช ืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืื›ื™ืœื” ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ืœื™ืขืชืŸ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก, ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
156
+ "<b>ืคืจืก.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื›ืจ ืฉืœ ืขื™ืจื•ื‘, ืžืฉืœืฉ ื›ื›ืจื•ืช ืœืงื‘, ืฉื›ืœ ื›ื›ืจ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื, ื ืžืฆื ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื›ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื. ื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉืœืฉ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื:",
157
+ "<b>ืื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื•ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื ื‘ื™ืฆื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื”, ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื˜ืžืื™ื ื›ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื ืคืกืœื” ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ. ื•ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืื ืฉื”ื” ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก ืฉืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื, ืื• ื‘ืฉืชื™ื™ืช ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื˜ืžืื™ืŸ, ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ืื ืฉื”ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื–ื”, ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื ื™ืกืช ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืฉืื ืฉื”ื” ื‘ืฉืชื™ื™ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื›ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
158
+ "<b>ืื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืฉืชื” ื›ืœ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื›ืจ ืืœ ืชืฉืช, ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉื›ืจื•ืชื•. ื•ืื ืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ืชื”ื• ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช, ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื“ืจืš ืฉื›ืจื•ืชื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืฉื•ืชื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืžืžืฉ, ืื‘ืœ ืฉืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ืžื•ื“ื” ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ืฉืชื” ื›ื•ืœื• ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช: "
159
+ ],
160
+ [
161
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื’ืจื™ื“ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื’ืจื™ื“ื ืฉืื™ื ื• ืœื ื›ื•ืœืœ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื, ืื“ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ื”ื™ื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื ืขืฉื” ื˜ืžื, ืžื’ื• ื“ื ืืกืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืืชืกืจ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื›ื•ืœืœ, ืฉื”ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื”ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ื›ื•ืœืœ ื•ืื•ืกืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืื“ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืœื ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืืกื•ืจื ืื—ืคืฆื, ืืœื ืื’ื‘ืจื ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืื—ืจื™ื ื™ ื•ื’ืจื™ืจ ื•ื›ื™ื™ืœ ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืื™ ื‘ืืกื•ืจื™ื”. ื ืขืฉื” ื–ื” ื”ื—ืœื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืืกื•ืจ ื•ืœื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉืจื™, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืขืฉื” ื ื•ืชืจ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืขืœ ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืขืฆืžื” ืœื™ืืกืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื’ื‘ื•ื”. ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืืกืจื” ืœื’ื‘ื•ื”, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืฉื ื ื•ืชืจ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ, ืืขืดื’ ื“ื‘ืœืื• ื”ื›ื™ ื”ื™ืชื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜. ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื‘ืจื ืœืืกืจื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื• ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ื’ื•ืจืจ ื•ื›ื•ืœืœ ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืื™ ื—ืœื‘ ืฉืœ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื” ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื:",
162
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’. ื•ืืฃ ื–ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืขืœ ื—ืคืฆื, ื“ืงื•ื“ื ื“ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘ ื–ื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื” ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ืืงื“ืฉื”, ื ืืกืจื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืฉื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขืœ ื”ื—ืœื‘ ืœืืกืจื• ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื• ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ืžืฉื•ื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
163
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืฉื‘ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื‘ืคื™ื•.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ื›ืœื•:",
164
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื’ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ื•ืฆืื”. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ื•ืฆืื”, ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื”ืดื›, ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืื™ื ื›ืื—ื“, ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื•ื ืœืฉื‘ืช ืงื“ืฉ ื ืžื™ ืœื™ื•ื”ืดื›. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืœืฉื‘ืช ื›ืš ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืœื™ื•ื”ืดื›. ื•ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืช ืื—ืช:",
165
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืชื ื ืœื ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ื‘ืื•ืช ืžืคื ื™ ืื›ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื•ืฆืื” ื”ื•ื:"
166
+ ],
167
+ [
168
+ "<b>ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืžืืžื•, ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช ืœื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื•ืžืช, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืžื™ืชืชื• ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ื‘ื ื–ื” ืื‘ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ื ื“ืชื”, ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื›ืื—ืช. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืžื–ืจืช ื•ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื‘ื•ื ื‘ืงื”ืœ, ื›ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืื ื”ื™ื• ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืžืžื–ืจื™ื ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื™ืฉื ืื•ืชื” ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœ ืื‘ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื•ื›ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช, ืœืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืื—ื™ืŸ, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื ืืฉืช ืื— ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืืจ ื”ืื—ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื”ืŸ, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืฉื ืืฉืช ืื— ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•. ืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ ืื‘ื™ื”, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืืจ ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื ืžื™ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”. ื”ื•ื™ื” ืœื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืขืœืžื, ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”. ืคื™ืจืกื” ื ื“ื”, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื, ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ืขืœื”. ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื ืžื™ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”:",
169
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื•ื›ืœืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืฉืื” ื‘ื ื•:",
170
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื•ื™ ืืช ื‘ืช ื—ืชื ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ืื‘:",
171
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืžืช ื‘ื ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”:",
172
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•:",
173
+ "<b>ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืงืŸ ืื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื•ื ืฉืื”, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ื–ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืฃ ืขืœ ืืฉืช ื”ืื‘.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื‘ืจื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ืืœืžื ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื™ื” ืœืื‘ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื— ื•ืื™ืŸ (ืœื”)[ืœื•] ืื™ืฉื•ืช ื‘ื”, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืคืœื” ืœืคื ื™ื• ืœื™ื‘ื•ื ืžืื—ื™ื•, ืฉืžืช ื‘ืœื ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื™ื‘ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื ืฉืื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืงืŸ ื“ืชื ืŸ, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืฉื ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœืช ื‘ื ื• ื“ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื•ืช ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื›ืœืชื• ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื‘ืจื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—. ืœืื• ืคืจื›ื ื”ื™ื, ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœืื•ืงืžื™ ื“ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื• ืžืืžื• ื”ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื›ืœืชื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ ื”ื™ื, ืืœื ืืฉืช ื—ื•ืจื’ื• ื•ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื•. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื•ืžืื™ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื›ืฉืขื‘ืจ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ื“ืงื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื‘. ื”ื ืžืœืชื ื‘ืขื• ืœื” ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ื•ืชื™ืจืฆื•, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื‘ืจื ืœืกื‘ื ื•ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ื”ื•ื ื‘ืจื ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื‘, ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื ืžื™ ื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”:",
174
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื‘ืชื•:",
175
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื•. ื•ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืชื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื‘ื™ื• ืื ืก ืื• ืคืชื” ืืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืฉื ื”ื•ื ืื ื•ืกืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืื• ืžืคื•ืชืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื•, ื”ืจื™ ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•. ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืื‘ื™ ืืฉืชื• ืขืœ ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ืช ื”ื™ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•: "
176
+ ],
177
+ [
178
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ื›ืœืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื”ืื‘ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ื ืฉื ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื–ืืช ื”ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืืžื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœืชื•. ืžืช ื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืื• ื’ื™ืจืฉื” ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ื•, ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•. ืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ืื• ื’ื™ืจืฉื” ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืขืœืžื ื•ื”ื™ื ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ืคื™ืจืกื” ื ื“ื”. ื•ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ื“ื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
179
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ื ืขืœ ื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ืช ืœืื” ื‘ืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ืฉืžื” ืกืจื—, ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืกืจื—, ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื” ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืจื— ืืฉืชื• ื•ืœืื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœื‘ืŸ. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื” ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืกืจื— ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ืœืชื•, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืœืื—ื™ื•, ื•ืื—ืดื›, ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ื•ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืกืจื— ื‘ืขื•ื“ื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
180
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•.</b> ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื ืขืœ ื–ืงื ืชื• ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ, ืื ืœืื” ืืžื•, ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ืฉืžื” ื“ื™ื ื”, ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืืช ื“ื™ื ื” ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื” ืืžื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื™ื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื“ื™ื ื” ืืฉืชื• ื•ืœืื” ืื ื—ืžื™ื• ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ. ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ืœืชื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
181
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืื” ื•ืจื—ืœ, ื•ื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฉืจ, ื•ืฉื ื‘ืช ืืฉืจ ืกืจื—, ื•ื‘ื ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืง ื•ื ืฉื ืืช ืจื—ืœ ื•ื™ื•ื›ื‘ื“ ื‘ืช ืœืื” ื•ืกืจื— ื‘ืช ืืฉืจ, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืฉืœืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืขืœ ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•. ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืื ืจื—ืœ ืืฉืชื•. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืื ืœืื” ื—ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื™ื•, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืืžื• ืฉืœ ืืฉืจ ื—ืžื™ื•:",
182
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื ืื—ื“ ื”ื.</b> ื‘ื—ื“ ืงืจื ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื•ื‘ื—ื“ ืœืื•. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ืœื•ืง ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื”:"
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "<b>ื‘ืื˜ืœื™ืก.</b> ืฉื•ืง ืฉืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืฉืจ:",
186
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืืžืื•ื.</b> ืฉื ื”ืขื™ืจ:",
187
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื•. ื•ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื ื•ืชื™ื• ืืœื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื ื”ื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื•:",
188
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ื•ืžื” ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื• ื ื“ื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืฉื ืื—ื“, ืœื ื“ื” ืœื ืชืงืจื‘, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช. ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ืŸ, ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช. ื•ื”ืื™ ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ ืคืจื™ื›ื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืžื” ืœื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื. ืืœื ื˜ืขืžื, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืณ:ื™ืดื–) ืขืจื•ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื’ืœื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ื•ืงืจื ื™ืชื™ืจื ื”ื•ื, ื“ื‘ืจื™ืฉื™ื” ื“ืงืจื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื™ืงื— ืืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ืจืื” ืืช ืขืจื•ืชื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ืœืžื” ืœื™ ืœืžื”ื“ืจ ืชื• ืขืจื•ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื’ืœื”, ืืœื ืœืœืžื“ ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช:"
189
+ ],
190
+ [
191
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”.</b> ืชืœื•ืฉ ืจื•ื‘ื• ื•ืžืขื•ืจื” ื‘ืžืงืฆืชื•:",
192
+ "<b>ืžื”ื•.</b> ืฉื™ื˜ืžื ืžืฉื•ื ืื‘ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ืชืœืฉ ืœื’ืžืจื™. ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื”ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ืจื•ื˜ื‘, ื“ืื‘ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื™ ืžื˜ืžื ื›ื ื‘ื™ืœื”. ื•ืื‘ืจ ื”ื ืชืœืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืžื˜ืžื ื›ืžืช:",
193
+ "<b>ื‘ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ื‘ืื“ื.</b> ืฉืžืขื•ืจื” ืงืฆืช, ื˜ื”ื•ืจ:",
194
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ื™ ืฉื—ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื‘ืจื™ื”ืŸ ื ื•ืคืœื™ืŸ:",
195
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื•ืชื›ื”.</b> ืœื ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ื”ืจื”, ืฉืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื˜ื”ื•ืจ. ืืœื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ืžืื•ืก ื‘ืจื’ืœ ื‘ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ:",
196
+ "<b>ืฉืžื ื™ื— ื‘ื• ื›ืฉืขืจื”.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ืชื›ื• ืœื’ืžืจื™, ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ืžื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืชื›ื• ืฉื ื•ื’ืข ื‘ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืคืจื™ืฉื”:",
197
+ "<b>ื•ืชื•ื—ื‘ื•.</b> ืœืื‘ืจ:",
198
+ "<b>ื‘ืกื™ืจื”.</b> ื‘ืงื•ืฅ ื”ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ืœืงืจืงืข:",
199
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื•ื.</b> ื”ื—ื•ืœื”:",
200
+ "<b>ื ืžืฉืš.</b> ื•ื ืชืœืฉ ื”ืื‘ืจ ืžืืœื™ื•. ื•ื”ื—ื•ืœื” ืื™ื ื• ื˜ืžื ืœืคื™ ืฉืžื•ืฉืš ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ื›ื— ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื•ื”ืื‘ืจ ื ืชืœืฉ ืžืžื ื• ื‘ื›ื— ื•ืœื™ื›ื ื ื’ื™ืขื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืคืจื™ืฉื”:",
201
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ื•ืžื” ืื“ื ืฉืžืงื‘ืœ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื, ื”ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืงื‘ืœืช ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ืžืžื ื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจ:"
202
+ ],
203
+ [
204
+ "<b>ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื–ื”. ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ืื ืื›ืœืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ:",
205
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ืžื” ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื—ื“ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื“ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ:",
206
+ "<b>ืœื ื›ืš ืฉืืœืŸ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื.</b> ื“ืื ื‘ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ืฉืืœืŸ ืžื” ืจืื™ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• ืžืื•ื›ืœ, ื”ื ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืคืจืš ืžื” ืœืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื ื”ื ื”. ืืœื ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืœื ืฉืืœ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืืœื ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ืžื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• ืจืื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืื•ื›ืœ:",
207
+ "<b>ืื ื”ืœื›ื”.</b> ืฉื›ืš ืงื‘ืœืช ืžืจื‘ืš ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื. ื ืงื‘ืœื ื” ืžืžืš:",
208
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืœื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืืชื” ืœื•ืžื“ ืื•ืชื” ืžืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ ืžืžืขื™ืœื”. ื™ืฉ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื”:",
209
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืžืื›ื™ืœ ื›ืื•ื›ืœ.</b> ืฉืื ื ืชืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื‘ืจื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื•, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžืขืœ, ื•ืœื ืžื™ ืฉื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื•:",
210
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžื”ื ื” ื›ื ื”ื ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื™ื“ื™ ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ืื›ื™ืœื”:",
211
+ "<b>ืฆื™ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืžืขื™ืœื” ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืขื•ื“ ื—ื•ืžืจื ืื—ืจืช ื™ืฉ ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉืื ื ื”ื ื” ื”ื™ื•ื ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคืช ืœืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื›ื“ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืชืžืขื•ืœ ืžืขืœ, ืจื™ื‘ื”:",
212
+ "<b>ืชืืžืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื ื•ืชืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื• ื“ื ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ื”ื—ื•ืžืจื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ืœื ืืชื‘ืจื™ืจื ืžืœืชื ืื™ ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืœื”ืื™ืš ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืื• ืœื ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื ื™ื”. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ืžื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื•ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ืŸ ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:"
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ "<b>ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืŸ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืฉืœ ืื‘ ืื—ื“:",
216
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื–ื• ืขืฉื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš ืžืื™ ืงืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ืงื˜ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืืžืื™ ื ืงื˜ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื•ืœื ืื‘ื•ืช. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืชืจืชื™ ื‘ืขื ืžื™ื ื™ื”, ื—ื“ื ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ื™ื•ื“ืข ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืฉืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืžืœืื›ื” ื–ื• ืžื•ืชืจืช ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงื ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื”, ื”ืื™ ื“ืขื‘ื“ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ืžื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื, ืืขืดื’ ื“ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ื”ื•ื, ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžืœืื›ื” ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืœืื›ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื–ืจืข ื•ืงืฆืจ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ื‘ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ืื• ืœืื• ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจ ืคืขืžื™ื ื“ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ืช, ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื”ื›ื ื™ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื™ื ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืœื—ืœืง; ื“ื“ื•ืงื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื’ื’ืช ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืœื™ื“ืข ืฉืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ืœื™ื›ื ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืœืžื•ื“. ื•ืขื•ื“ ืงืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื”, ืื ืขืฉื” ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืžืื‘ ืื—ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื—ืช, ืื• ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช:",
217
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืคืฉื˜ ืœื™ื” ืืชืจื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื‘ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ื”ื ืš ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื›ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืชื•ืœื“ื” ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื”, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืื‘ ืื—ื“ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื” ืื‘ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
218
+ "<b>ื•ืžื” ื ื“ื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืชื ื™ ื ื“ื•ืช, ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื“ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
219
+ "<b>ืชื•ืฆืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื“ืื™ื›ื ืื‘ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื ื“ื” ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ื—ื™ื•ื‘ื ืืœื ื‘ื™ืื”:",
220
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื“ื” ืžื•ื–ื”ืจืช ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ื›ืจืชื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืงืจื‘ ืขืžื:",
221
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืงื˜ื ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ืงื˜ื ื•ืช ื ื“ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืงื˜ื ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžื•ื–ื”ืจืช:",
222
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ื•ื›ื™ื—.</b> ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื™ืื”:",
223
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืžื” ื›ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ืœื ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื™ื ื™ื” ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืœื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื›ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:"
224
+ ]
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ [
228
+ "<b>ืกืคืง ืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืœื ืื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืื›ืœ ืืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ, ื›ื“ืชื ื™ ื‘ืกื™ืคื. ื•ืคืจื•ืฉื™ ืงืžืคืจืฉ, ืกืคืง ืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืœื ืื›ืœ ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ื™ืฉ ื›ืืŸ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ื• ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืื—ืช, ืกืคืง ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื•ืื›ืœื”, ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ืœื ืื™ืงื‘ืข ืื™ืกื•ืจื:",
229
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ืœื‘, ืกืคืง ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช. ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื›ืœื• ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืœื‘, ื•ืกืคืง ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืกืคืง ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
230
+ "<b>ืื›ืœ ืืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ.</b> ื•ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉื”ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘, ื•ื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื™ื–ื• ืื›ืœ, ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืื›ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ืกืคืง ื•ื”ื–ื™ื“ ื•ืื›ืœื” ืžืกืคืง, ื”ื•ื™ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
231
+ "<b>ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื• ืืฉืชื•, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ืชืกืคืง ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื”, ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:"
232
+ ],
233
+ [
234
+ "<b>ื›ืš ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื›ืœ ืฉืชื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”ืŸ ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืกืคืง, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืื—ื“, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœื” ืœืื›ื™ืœื” ืฉืกืคืง ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ:",
235
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื.</b> ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ืกืคืง:",
236
+ "<b>ื›ืฉื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื™ื, ื›ืš ื‘ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ืกืคืง ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื™ ืืฉืžื•ืช ืชืœื•ื™ื™ืŸ:",
237
+ "<b>ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืคื ื™ื•.</b> ื•ืกื‘ืจ ื“ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ืชืจ:",
238
+ "<b>ืืฉืชื• ื ื“ื” ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืœื‘ื•ื ืขืœ ืืฉืชื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืืฉืชื• ื”ื™ืชื” ื ื“ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืกืคืง ืขืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื:",
239
+ "<b>ื•ืขืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช.</b> ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื:",
240
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืื ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืื ื ื•ืชืจ ืื›ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืœื:",
241
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืคื•ื˜ืจ.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’,) ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื. ื•ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ, ื”ืื™ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื” ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ ืœื™ื” ืคืจื˜ ืœืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ืžืœืื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืชื•ืš ืืช ื”ืชืœื•ืฉ ื•ื—ืชืš ืืช ื”ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ, ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืชื™ื›ื” ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ืžืœืื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื•ื ื“ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ืžืœืื›ืช ืžื—ืฉื‘ืช ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ื—ืœื‘ื™ื ื•ื‘ืขืจื™ื•ืช, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืื• ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืขืจื•ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ื”ื ื”:",
242
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื•.</b> ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืืžืจ ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืฉื™ื“ืข ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื ืœื ื ื—ืœืง ืขืœ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ืžื•ื“ื” ืœื• ื‘ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
243
+ "<b>ืฉืื ื™ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ืžืœืื›ื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
244
+ "<b>ืžืขื™ืŸ ืื™ื–ื• ืžืœืื›ื” ืขืฉื”.</b> ืื ื—ืจืฉ ืื• ื–ืจืข:",
245
+ "<b>ืคื•ื˜ืจื• ื”ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืฃ ืžืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ) ื›ื™ ืชื—ื˜ื ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข, ืคืจื˜ ืœื–ื” ืฉื™ื“ืข ืฉื—ื˜ื ืืœื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ื ืžืกื•ื™ื™ื. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืžื™ ืœื ืžื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืฉืืขืดืค ืฉื™ื“ืข ืฉื—ื˜ื ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืœื ื”ื•ื‘ืจืจ ืœื• ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืฉืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืืฉืชื• ื ื“ื” ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:"
246
+ ],
247
+ [
248
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ:",
249
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ื“ืข ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื:",
250
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืคืง ืงืฆืจ ืกืคืง ื˜ื—ืŸ:",
251
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืขื ื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื™ื“ื• ืขืœ ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืชืื ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ืฉื—ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ืื—ืดื› ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ื ื”ืคืš ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฉื—ื•ืจื•ืช:",
252
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ื ื•ืžืื•ื—ืจ:",
253
+ "<b>ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืคื•ื˜ืจ.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื˜ืช ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื ืœื–ื” ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ื›ืžืชืขืกืง ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
254
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืชืžื™ื”ื ื™ ืื ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื” ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข.</b> ืื ื›ืŸ ืœืžื” ื ืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”. ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืงื ืžืชืžื” ืขืœ ืชืžื™ื”ืชื• ืฉืœ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ, ืื ื›ืŸ ื“ืœื ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื” ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ืœืžื” ื ืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžืชืขืกืง, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ื›ืœืœ, ืื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ืœื‘ื“, ืฉืœื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžื—ืฉื‘ืชื• ื›ืœ ืขื™ืงืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉืคื™ืจืฉื” ืœืžืœืชื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
255
+ ]
256
+ ],
257
+ [
258
+ [
259
+ "<b>ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ื ื ื—ื™ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ื ืขื™ืงื•ืจ ืฉื ืขืงืจื• ื”ืกื™ืžื ื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ื ื”ืงื–ื” ืฉื”ื ืคืฉ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื•, ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื“ื ืฉื”ื ืคืฉ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื•, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงืœื— ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืืžืฆืขื™, ื™ืฆื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ืงื–ื”, ื•ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื›ืœื” ื”ื“ื ื•ื ืชืžืขื˜, ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืชืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืœื— ืžืจื—ื•ืง ืฉืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ:",
260
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ืื ืื›ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช:",
261
+ "<b>ื“ื ื”ืœื‘.</b> ื“ื ื”ื ื‘ืœืข ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ ื”ืœื‘, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืœืื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช. ืื‘ืœ ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ืœื‘, ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ื, ืฉื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื•ืืคืช ื‘ืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ืžื›ื ืกืช ื“ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ืœื‘, ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช:",
262
+ "<b>ื“ื ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ื“ื ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ ื”ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืฉื•ืจ ืื™ืœ ื•ืชื™ืฉ. ื•ืœื™ ื ืจืื”, ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช:",
263
+ "<b>ื•ื“ื ื”ืชืžืฆื™ืช.</b> ืฉืžืชืžืฆื” ื•ื ืกื—ื˜ ื•ืฉื•ืชืช ื›ืฉื™ื•ืฆื. ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื• (ื•ื™ืงืจื ืืณ):",
264
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืจืช ืืœื ื‘ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื–) ื›ื™ ื ืคืฉ ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื“ืžื• ื”ื•ื ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื• ื™ื›ืจืช. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ื“ื“ื ื”ื˜ื—ื•ืœ ื•ื”ืœื‘ ื•ื”ื›ืœื™ื•ืช ื•ื“ื ื”ืชืžืฆื™ืช ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื‘ืื–ื”ืจื” ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื ืœื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื•ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืจืช. ื•ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื, ืืกื•ืจ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื. ื•ื“ื ืฉืจืฆื™ื, ืื ืื›ืœื• ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื•ืงื” ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉืจืฅ, ื•ืœื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื“ื. ื•ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื˜ื”ื•ืจื™ื, ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื, ืงืฉืงืฉื™ื, ืฉื™ื•ื›ื™ื— ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื, ืžืคื ื™ ืžืจืื™ืช ื”ืขื™ืŸ. ื•ื“ื ื”ืื“ื, ืืกื•ืจ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื ื›ืฉืคื™ืจืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื•:"
265
+ ],
266
+ [
267
+ "<b>ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช.</b> ืกืคืง ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืกืคืง ืœื ื ื”ื ื”:",
268
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืคื•ื˜ืจื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืฆื•ืช, ื•ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืฆื•ืช, ื›ืœ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
269
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืช ืžืขื™ืœืชื•.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ:",
270
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ืืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉืื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ื ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™:",
271
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”.</b> ืงืจืŸ ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ ืฉื ืกืชืคืง ืœื• ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื• ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื•:",
272
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืื™ืœ ื”ื ืงื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื—) ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
273
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืกืคืง.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื•ืื ื‘ืกืคื™ืงื• ืขื•ืžื“ ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
274
+ "<b>ืฉืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื•ื“ืข ืžื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข.</b> ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื•ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง.</b> ื”ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ืกืคืง ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืกืคืง ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืžืชื ื”, ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ื™ื”ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืื ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื ืœื ื“ื‘ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื‘ืกืคืง ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ืฉืžื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ืžืœื™ืงืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื”:",
278
+ "<b>ืชืขืฉื ื” ื•ื“ืื™.</b> ื•ืชืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช:",
279
+ "<b>ืฉืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืžืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื“ืื™ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ื™ื•ืœื“ืช:"
280
+ ],
281
+ [
282
+ "<b>ื•ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืœื˜ืขืžื™ื”, ื“ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
283
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืœื–ื” ืื ืืชื” ืื›ืœืช ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื™ื”ื ืืฉื ื›ื•ืœื• ืขืœื™ืš:",
284
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืชื ืื™ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ืืœื ืื ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื, ืื™ ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:"
285
+ ],
286
+ [
287
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช.</b> ื•ืžืชื ื” ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ:",
288
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื”ื—ืœื‘. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื ื ืงืžื. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ, ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•: "
289
+ ],
290
+ [
291
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื›ื•ืณ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช, ื”ื›ื ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘:",
292
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™:",
293
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช. ื•ืžืชื ื”, ืื ืื ื™ ืื›ืœืชื™ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืืชื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ื‘ืืฉื ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื—ืœืงืš ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™. ื•ืื ืื ื™ ืื›ืœืชื™ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืืชื” ื—ืœื‘ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื—ืœืงืš ื‘ืืฉื ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™:",
294
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ืืœื ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื•ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื ื ืงืžื. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ื”ื•ื ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•:"
295
+ ],
296
+ [
297
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื›ื•ืณ ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื“ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ:",
298
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืืฃ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ื—ื˜ืืช (ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืฉืดื™ ืขื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช), ืžืฉื•ื ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:",
299
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืื›ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช. ืฉืื ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื, ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ืช:",
300
+ "<b>ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืžื•ืกืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
301
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ืžืชื ื™ืŸ:",
302
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ืชืดืง ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•:"
303
+ ],
304
+ [
305
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžื—ืžืช ืกืคืง ืฉืœ ื ื•ืชืจ, ืฉื”ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ื›ืจืช ื›ื—ืœื‘. ื•ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœื‘ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ:",
306
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ืฉืชื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื. ื“ืื™ ืœืื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืชื ื™ ื”ื›ื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ื›ื“ืชื ื™ ืœืขื™ืœ, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืจื•ื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื“ืœื ื—ื–ื™ ืœืžื™ื“ื™, ื•ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื‘ื ืขืœ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
307
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื.</b> ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืฉืื™ื ื” ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืฉืฉืชื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ื‘ืชื ืื™, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœ ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”:"
308
+ ]
309
+ ],
310
+ [
311
+ [
312
+ "<b>ื”ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ. ืขื ืฉืืจ ืฆืื ื• ื›ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื’ืžื•ืจื™ื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื” ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื™ื”:",
313
+ "<b>ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘.</b> ื“ืžืชื•ืš ืฉืœื‘ื• ื ื•ืงืคื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื•ืžืชื™ืจื ืžืกืคืง ื”ื—ื˜ื, ื’ืžืจ ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื™ื” ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ื™ืฆื˜ืจืš, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื•ืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื ื•ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื ื“ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
314
+ "<b>ื”ื“ื ื™ืฉืคืš.</b> ืœืืžื” ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ [ืฆืดืœ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”]:",
315
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ืงื‘ื•ืจื”, ื”ืื™ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื•ืœ ืฉื˜ืขื•ืŸ ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
316
+ "<b>ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื.</b> ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ื•ื“ืข ืœื•:",
317
+ "<b>ื™ืื›ืœ.</b> ื”ื‘ืฉืจ. ื“ืจื—ืžื ื ืืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ) ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื ื™ื“ืข ื•ื ืกืœื— ืœื•, ื‘ืฉืขืช ืกืœื™ื—ื” ืœื ืชื”ื ื™ื“ื™ืขื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื“ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืขืช ืกืœื™ื—ื” ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขื”, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื’ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื›ืคืจืช ืกืคื™ืงื•, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืฉืจ:",
318
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื“ื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ื™ื–ืจืง.</b> ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื›ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืฉืจืช ืžืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคืกื•ืœ ืœื™ืงืจื‘, ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ืœื™ื–ืจืง ื›ื–ืจื•ืง ื“ืžื™, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื›ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ื™ื“ื™ืขื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™: "
319
+ ],
320
+ [
321
+ "<b>ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืขื“ ืฉืœื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื, ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ, ื“ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื‘ื• ื ื•ืงืคื• ื’ืžืจ ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืกืคืง, ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืืžืจื• ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื ืฉื”ื•ื–ืžื• ื”ืขื“ื™ื, ืื™ ื ืžื™ ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืื›ืœ ื•ื ืžืฆื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืื’ืœืื™ ืžืœืชื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื”:",
322
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื“ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืจื”:",
323
+ "<b>ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžื™ ืฉืฉื ื” ืœืขื™ืœ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ ืœื ืฉื ื” ื”ื›ื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื, ืื™ื ื• ื ืฉืจืฃ ืืœื ื ืงื‘ืจ:",
324
+ "<b>ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ, ื›ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื”ื›ื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืฉืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื ื”ืจื’ ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ:",
325
+ "<b>ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฉืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื ืขืจืคื” ื ืžืฆื ื”ื”ื•ืจื’, ืชืฆื ื•ืชืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ ื›ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ื“ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ, ื•ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ื›ืฉื ื•ื“ืข ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืกืงืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”. ื•ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื›ืŸ ื›ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ, ื“ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืžืฉื ืกืงืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ื”ื”ื•ืจื’ ืžืฉื ืขืจืคื” ื”ืขื’ืœื” ืชืงื‘ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื”:",
326
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืคืจื” ืกืคื™ืงื”.</b> ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขืจื™ืคื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืกืคืง ื”ื™ื” ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ืœื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืชืงื‘ืจ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื’ืœื•ืช ื”ืขืจื•ืคื•ืช:"
327
+ ],
328
+ [
329
+ "<b>ืžืชื ื“ื‘ ืื“ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื›ืœ ืขืฆืžื• ืฉืœ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื. ื“ืื™ ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ ืžืชื™ื“ืข ืœื™ื” ืฉื—ื˜ื ืืžืื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืืœื ืฉืžืข ืžื™ื ื” ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื:",
330
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืื—ืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ื“ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ื”ื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ื—ืฉ ื‘ืกืคืง ืฉื•ื ื—ื˜ื ืฉืžื ืขืฉื” ืื• ืœืื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืฉืชื ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ื—ืฉ, ื“ื”ื ื›ื™ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›:",
331
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžืงืžื™ ื“ืžืชื™ื“ืข ืœื™ื”, ืœื”ื’ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ื•ื“ืข ืœื•, ืฉื”ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืกื” ืขืœ ื’ื•ืคื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ื ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื: "
332
+ ],
333
+ [
334
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–:ืœืณ) ืžื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ื›ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ ืชื˜ื”ืจื•, ื—ื˜ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื• ืืœื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืœื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ื, ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžื›ืคืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ื“ื™ื“ืข ื‘ื™ื” ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืงื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžื›ืคืจ:"
335
+ ],
336
+ [
337
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ืื ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
338
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืžื›ืฉื™ืจืชื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ื“ืžื—ื•ืกืจืช ื›ืคืจื” ื”ื™ื ืžืกืคืง, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืขื“ ืฉืชื‘ื™ื ื›ืคืจืชื”:",
339
+ "<b>ืžืฉื ืžืœืงื” ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ืœื“ื”:",
340
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืชืจืช ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื’ืžื•ืจื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืกืจ, ื“ืœื ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ืืœื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืžืœื™ืงื” ืœื. ืื‘ืœ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื’ื–ืจื• ื“ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืฉืžื ื™ืืžืจื• ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžืœื™ืงื” ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืืกื•ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื“ืฉืžื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื ื•ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”:"
341
+ ],
342
+ [
343
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืฉื›ืš ื”ื•ื ื“ื™ืŸ ืืฉื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช (ืฉื ื”ืณ) ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืงืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœืืฉื, ื•ืชืจื’ื•ื ืฉืงืœื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื. ื•ืืฉื ื’ื–ื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืœืžื“ื™ื ืžืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื”, ื ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื ืืžืจ ืœื”ืœืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš. ื•ืืฉื ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ื ืžื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ืœ, ื”ื•ื™ ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ืกืฃ ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืฉืœืฉื” ืืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืื™ืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ืžืฆื•ืจืข ื•ืืฉื ื ื–ื™ืจ ื“ื‘ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื›๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื‘ ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืืฉื, ืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
344
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืคืจืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ืคื” ืืœื ืกืœืข, ืื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ื, ื›ืฉืจ, ื“ื‘ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืงื ื”ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืœื ื‘ืกืœืข, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื™ืจืขื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืงื— ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ืืฉื ื•ืœืฉื ืืฉื, ื•ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืืฉื ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
345
+ "<b>ืœืงื— ื‘ื”ื ืฉื ื™ ืืœื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืœืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžืขืœ ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ื•ื™ืฆืื• ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
346
+ "<b>ื™ืคื” ืขืฉืจื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉืŸ, ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื:",
347
+ "<b>ื”ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•.</b> ืœืฉื ืื•ืชื• ืืฉื ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช:",
348
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœืžืขื™ืœืชื•.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ืœื ืฉื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืื•ืชื” ืœืืฉื, ืืœื ืฉื™ืชื ื ื• ืœื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉืŸ, ืฉื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื. ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืชื• ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
349
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืœืืฉื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืœืงื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืฉื ื™ ืื™ืœื™ื ืื—ื“ ืœืืฉื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืžืขืœ ื‘ืกืœืข:",
350
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœ ืืฉื ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•.</b> ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืฉืžื• ื ืœืงื— ืžืžืขื•ืช ืฉื ืคืจืฉื• ืœื•:",
351
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืžืขื™ืœืชื• ืœืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืกืœืข ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื”ื• ื ืžื™ ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืกืฃ:",
352
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืžื” ืกืœืข ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”.</b> ืงืจืŸ ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื• ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืœืข ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:"
353
+ ],
354
+ [
355
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื” ื‘ื ื• ืื—ืจื™ื•.</b> ืื ืฉื’ื’ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืฉื’ื’ืช ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืื‘ื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื›ื•ืคืจ ื‘ื” ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื•:"
356
+ ],
357
+ [
358
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืฉืขื™ืจื”.</b> ืื ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื™ืงื— ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืœื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ืงื— ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืขื™ืจื” ืื ื™ืจืฆื”:",
359
+ "<b>ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืœืฉืขื™ืจื”.</b> ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœืงื ื•ืช ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”:",
360
+ "<b>ื”ืขื ื™, ื™ื‘ื™ื</b> ื‘ื”ืŸ <b>ืขื•ืฃ</b>, ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื’ื‘ื™ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื”, ืžื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืžืžืงืฆืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืฉืื ื”ืขื ื™ ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืฃ ืžืžืงืฆืช ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืฃ ื ืžื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืื ื”ืขื ื™ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื™ื ืžืžืงืฆืช ื“ืžื™ ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื”, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืื ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืฃ, ืื• ืื ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”:",
361
+ "<b>ื•ื ืกืชืื‘ื”.</b> ื”ื•ืžืžื”:",
362
+ "<b>ืื ืจืฆื” ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืขื ื™:",
363
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืขื•ืฃ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื“ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืื•ืชื”, ืžื” ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื‘ื”ืžื” ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืœื ืขืฆื™ื ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ื•ืœื ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคื“ื™ื: "
364
+ ],
365
+ [
366
+ "<b>ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื ืœืขื–ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ื›ืชื ื”ืงื“ื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืœืขื–ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ) ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขื–ื™ื ืชืงื—ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื) ืื• ืœืฉื” ื‘ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืื• ื‘ืขื–ื™ื. ื™ื›ื•ืœ, ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื• ื›ื‘ืฉ ื•ืขื– ื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ื‘ืฉ ื“ื•ืงื.",
367
+ "<b>ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืื ื›ื‘ืฉ ื™ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื•.</b> ื•ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืฉืขื™ืจืช ืขื–ื™ื, ื›ืืŸ ื”ืงื“ื™ื ืขื– ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ืœืœืžื“ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉืงื•ืœื™ื ื•ืื™ ื–ื” ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื” ื™ื‘ื™ื:",
368
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ื“ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”:",
369
+ "<b>ืื ื–ื›ื” ื”ื‘ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจื‘.</b> ืฉืจื•ื‘ ื—ื›ืžืชื• ืœืžื“ ืžืžื ื•:",
370
+ "<b>ืงื•ื“ื ืืช ื”ืื‘.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืื‘ื™ื“ื” ื•ืœืคื“ื•ืช ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื™ ื•ืœื”ื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ืœืคืจื•ืง ืขืžื•. ื•ืื ืื‘ื™ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ ื—ื›ื ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืงื•ืœ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืจื‘ื•, ืื‘ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœืจื‘ื•, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื‘ื”ืง:"
371
+ ]
372
+ ]
373
+ ],
374
+ "sectionNames": [
375
+ "Chapter",
376
+ "Mishnah",
377
+ "Comment"
378
+ ]
379
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Keritot/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,375 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Keritot",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Keritot",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช.</b> ืœืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื”:",
10
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ืชื”.</b> ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื” ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื•, ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•, ื›ื•ืœื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื–ื”:",
11
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ื“ืฃ.</b> ืžื‘ืจืš ืืช ื”ืฉื:",
12
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”.</b> ื›ื“ืจืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื”. ืื• ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ืžืงื˜ืจ ื•ื”ืžื ืกืš ื•ื”ืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื‘ื›ืš:",
13
+ "<b>ื‘ืขืœ ืื•ื‘.</b> ื•ื™ื“ืขื•ื ื™ ื‘ื›ืœืœ. ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœืื• ืื—ื“ ื ืืžืจื•, ื•ืชื ื ื ืงื˜ ืื•ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืžืงืจื:",
14
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžื—ืœืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื‘ืื—ืช ืžืื‘ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื—ืกืจ ืื—ืช ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:",
15
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชืจ.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ:",
16
+ "<b>ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื—ืฉื‘ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
17
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ื”ืขืœืŸ. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื–:ื“ืณ) ื•ืืœ ืคืชื— ืื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ืœื ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ื“ื ื™ื—ืฉื‘ ืœืื™ืฉ ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ื ืฉืคืš ื•ื ื›ืจืช:",
18
+ "<b>ื•ืžืขืœื”.</b> ื ืžื™ ื‘ื›ืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืืฉืจ ื™ืขืœื” ืขื•ืœื” ืื• ื–ื‘ื— ื•ืืœ ืคืชื— ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื•. ื•ืื ืฉื—ื˜ ื•ื”ืขืœื” ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช:",
19
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคื˜ื ืืช ืฉืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ ืกืžืžื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืžื“ืช ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉืขืฉืื• ืžืฉื” ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ืขืฉื ื• ืœืกื•ืš ื‘ื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžืคื˜ืžื• ืœื”ืชืœืžื“ ืื• ืœืžืกืจื• ืœืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘:",
20
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคื˜ื ืืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ืกืžืžื ื™ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืื ืœืงื— ืžื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืคื™ ืžืฉืงืœื• ื”ืงืฆื•ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ืขื™ืจื‘ื ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขืจื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ืขืฉื ื• ืœื”ืจื™ื— ื‘ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืขืฉืื” ืœื”ืชืœืžื“ ืื• ืœืžืกืจื” ืœืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
21
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืกืš ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื” ืฉืขืฉื” ืžืฉื”, ืฉืœื ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื•ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืŸ ืืœื ืขืœ ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืžืฉื” ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ืžืžื ื• ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ืžืœืš ื‘ืŸ ืžืœืš ืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืžื—ืœื•ืงืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืฉื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื” ืžืคื ื™ ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ืื“ื•ื ื™ื”ื•, ื•ื™ื•ืืฉ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ืขืชืœื™ื”ื•, ื•ื™ื”ื•ืื—ื– ืžืคื ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื™ืงื™ื ืื—ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžื ื•. ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆืงื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ืขืœ ืจืืฉื• ื•ืžื•ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ืช ืขื™ื ื™ื• ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืดื™ ื™ื•ื ื™ืช. ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื ื–ืจ:",
22
+ "<b>ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื”ืžื™ืœื” ื‘ืžืฆื•ืช ืขืฉื”.</b> ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืจืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื”ื ืš ืœื ืชืขืฉื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืืœื ืขืœ ืœืื•. ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื™ืดื’) ื•ืขืฉื” ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ืณ ืืฉืจ ืœื ืชื™ืขืฉื™ื ื”: "
23
+ ],
24
+ [
25
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืฉื’ื’ื” ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืืฉืชื•, ื•ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืฉืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ืœื” ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ื— ื•ืงื™ื˜ื•ืจ ื•ื ื™ืกื•ืš ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืœื ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื”, ื•ื”ืžื—ืœืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื” ืฉื™ื•ื“ืข ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืœื ืฉื ืขืœื ืžืžื ื• ื–ื” ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืฉืขื•ืฉื”. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื“ืขื•ืงืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื’ื•ืฃ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื”, ืœื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื”ื•ื ื–ื” ืืœื ืื ื•ืก ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
26
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื•ืžืŸ, ืื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื™ื–ื” ืžื”ืŸ ืื›ืœ. ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ืžื˜ื”, ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืขืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื:",
27
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ืงืจื•ื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฉืชื•ืœื” ื•ืžื’ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ืจื™ื, ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ืคืจ, ืฉืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื‘ื™ืจื•ืจ ืฉื—ื˜ื, ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื‘ื•ืขื”:",
28
+ "<b>ื”ืžื˜ืžื ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื•.</b> ืฉื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ืžื, ืื• ืื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”:",
29
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœื•ื™ ื‘ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื–ื“ื•ื ื• ื›ืจืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื‘ื•ืขื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
30
+ "<b>ืืฃ ื”ืžื’ื“ืฃ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื“ืจื—ืžื ื ืืžืจ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื”, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžื’ื“ืฃ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
31
+ ],
32
+ [
33
+ "<b>ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืืžืจื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื›ืื“ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
34
+ "<b>ืกื ื“ืœ.</b> ื•ืœื“ ื”ื•ื, ืืœื ืฉื ืคื—ืชื” ืฆื•ืจืชื•. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืกื ื“ืœ, ืฉื ืื•ื™ ื•ื“ืœ. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™. ื•ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื‘ืฉืจ ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื›ืฆื•ืจื•ืช ืกื ื“ืœ ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื” ืœื‘ื•ื ืขื ื•ืœื“:",
35
+ "<b>ืฉืœื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื•ืœื“:",
36
+ "<b>ืฉืคื™ืจ ืžืจื•ืงื.</b> ืขื•ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืœื“ ืžืจื•ืงื ื‘ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืชื•ื›ื• ืฆื•ืจืช ืื‘ืจื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืฉืคื•ืคืจืช ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืงืจื•ื™ ืฉืคื™ืจ:",
37
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื”.</b> ื“ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื”ืืฉื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ื‘ื” ืขื‘ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ื”ืฉื•ื•ืช ื‘ืื™ืฉ ื•ื‘ืืฉื”, ืื‘ืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื“ื‘ื ืฉื™ื ืื™ืชื ื•ื‘ืื ืฉื™ื ืœื™ืชื ืื™ืžืจ ืœื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืคื—ื”, ืœื”ื›ื™ ืชื ื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืคื—ื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื”:"
38
+ ],
39
+ [
40
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืžื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”.</b> ืื ืฆื•ืจืช ืื“ื ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ืื ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจื”. ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ืขืœ ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื” ื•ืื•ืžืจืช, ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื™ืœื“ืชื™, ืชื”ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื™, ื•ืื ืœืื•, ืชื”ื ืขื•ืœืช ื ื“ื‘ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ืœืืชื ื•ื™ื™, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื•ืžื™ื™ืชื ื‘ืกืคืง. ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื• ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื, ื•ืžืœื™ืงืชื” ื›ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื‘ืขืœืžื. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืืœื ื“ืžื” ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืื›ื™ืœื”:",
41
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื•.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื‘ื•ื:",
42
+ "<b>ืื—ืช ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื:",
43
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืช ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืกื ื“ืœ ืื• ืฉืœื™ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืื™ื–ื• ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ:",
44
+ "<b>ืื™ืžืชื™.</b> ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ:",
45
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ืœื›ื•.</b> ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืงื ื™ื”ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื›ื• ืœื“ืจื›ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช, ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื•ืžืชื ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืื ื™ ื”ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœื™ [ื•ื—ืœืงืš ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™]. ื•ืื ืืช ื”ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืš [ื•ื—ืœืงื™ ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš], ื•ืื•ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืงืจื‘ ื•ื ืื›ืœ. ื“ื“ื•ืงื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื ืื™ืŸ ืชื ืื™ ืžื•ืขื™ืœ ื‘ื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’) ืื• ื”ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื ื“ื›ื™ ืงื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื ืฉื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื•ื, ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื•ืžืชื ื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
46
+ ],
47
+ [
48
+ "<b>ื’ื ื™ื ื™ื.</b> ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื. ื•ืื ื™ ืฉืžืขืชื™ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืชื•ืœืขื™ื:",
49
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืœืช ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ื“ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขื‘ืจื• ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื•ื ืœื”ืจื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื•ื™ ืžื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื:",
50
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื‘) ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ืชืœื“, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื”ื™ื, ืืœื ืจื™ื‘ื” ืœื” ืœื™ื“ื” ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืžืื™ ื”ื™ื, ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ. ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ืฉื) ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ืชื–ืจื™ืข ื•ื™ืœื“ื”, ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“ ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืžื–ืจืขืช:"
51
+ ],
52
+ [
53
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืœืช ืœืื•ืจ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื ืงื‘ื”, ื•ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืžื—ืจ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ืคืจืชื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”:",
54
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืžืื™ ืคื•ื˜ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืžืœื™ื“ื” ืฉื ื™ื”. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื”ื•ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ืฆืชื” ืฉืขื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืœื™ืœื” ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื–ืณ:ืœืดื—) ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฆื•ื•ืชื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืžื™:",
55
+ "<b>ืžืื™ ืฉื ื ืื•ืจ ืœืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื™ื•ื ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื ืคืœ ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื” ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื”ืคื™ืœื”:",
56
+ "<b>ืื ืฉื•ื” ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืชื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉื‘ืฉืงื™ืขืช ื”ื—ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื›ืœื• ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ืฉืœื” ื•ืื ืจืืชื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื˜ืžืื”:",
57
+ "<b>ื”ื“ืžื™ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื ื ืžื•ื›ื™ื—ื™ื.</b> ื•ื”ื“ื ืฉืืชื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื ืฉื•ื” ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืื™ื ื• ืจืื™ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืœืช ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืžื” ื˜ืžื ืžืคื ื™ ื”ืœื™ื“ื”, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื ื—ืฉื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื‘ื ืขื ื”ื•ืœื“ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื“ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืœืœ:"
58
+ ],
59
+ [
60
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื™ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืกืคืง ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื” ืฉืจืืชื” ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื ื“ืชื” ืื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื–ื™ื‘ืชื”, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ. ื•ืกืคืง ืœื™ื“ื” ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžื” ื”ืคื™ืœื”. ื•ืื ื™ืฉ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื•ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื™ื‘ื” ืื• ื—ืžืฉื” ืกืคื™ืงื•ืช ืฉืœ ืœื™ื“ื”:",
61
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง:",
62
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืœื˜ื”ืจื” ื‘ื, ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื›ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”, ืฉืื ื ื˜ืžืืช ื”ืืฉื” ื›ืžื” ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืœื›ื•ืœื, ืืฃ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื–ื” ื›ืŸ:",
63
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืœื ื”ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ื” ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ืืŸ, ืฉืืฃ ื”ืื—ืช ื‘ืงื•ืฉื™ ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืกืคืง ืžืœื™ืงืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืœื ืฉืื ืœื ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืชืงื ื” ืœื™ื˜ื”ืจ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
64
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืœื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ืื• ื—ืžืฉ ื–ื™ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœืช ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื:",
65
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื“ืชื ื™ื, ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืชื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ ืžืœืืช ื•ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื–ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช:",
66
+ "<b>ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ. ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืจื‘ืข ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ:",
67
+ "<b>ื‘ื“ื™ื ื™ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ื‘ืฉื ื™ [ื“ื™ื ืจื™] ื–ื”ื•ื‘ื™ื, ื“ื™ื ืจ ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื›ืœ ืงืŸ:",
68
+ "<b>ื”ืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ืฉื‘ื•ืขื” ื”ื™ื:",
69
+ "<b>ื ื›ื ืก ืœื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื™ืžื“ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ืงืœ ื‘ืฉืœ ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ืœื™ืžื“ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ืขืช ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืณ ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ. ืฉืืœืžืœื ื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžืฆืื•, ื•ื™ืžื ืขื• ื”ืขื ื™ื•ืช ืžืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื•ื™ืื›ืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ:",
70
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื‘ืขืชื™ื.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืจื‘ืขื™ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื›ืกืฃ. ื•ื“ื™ื ืจ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ ื“ื™ื ืจื™ ื›ืกืฃ:"
71
+ ]
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ [
75
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”.</b> ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื›ืคืจื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื ืืœื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
76
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืข.</b> ื•ื”ื ื“ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืขืช ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืขื™ืงืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื”, ืฉื–ื‘ ืžื˜ืžื ื‘ืจืื™ื•ืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืจืื” ืฉืœืฉ ืจืื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ื˜ืžื ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืชืจืื” ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ื• ืœืชืจืชื™, ืื‘ืœ ืžืฆื•ืจืข ื•ืžืฆื•ืจืขืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื‘ื›ื’ืจื™ืก:",
77
+ "<b>ื’ืจ ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคืจื”.</b> ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืกื‘ืจ, ื’ืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืœ ื•ื˜ื‘ืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื›ื‘ื• ืืœื ืžืœื‘ื•ื ื‘ืงื”ืœ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”:",
78
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื–ืจืง ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื“ื.</b> ืื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ืื ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ื™ื, ืขื“ ืฉื™ืชืžืฆื” ื“ืžื• ืขืœ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
79
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืœื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืœืชื’ืœื—ืชื•.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื ื–ื™ืจ ืžืชื™ืจ ืœื• ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืœืชื’ืœื—ืช ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื, ืฉืืขืดืค ืฉืฉืœืžื• ื™ืžื™ ื ื–ืจื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ืชื’ืœื—ืช ื•ืœื”ื˜ืžื ืœืžืชื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ื•ืชืดืง ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื“ืœื ืชื ื™ ืืœื ื”ื ืš ื“ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืœืืฉืชืจื•ื™ื™ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื:"
80
+ ],
81
+ [
82
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื›ืคืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœ ื”ืืฉื [ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ] ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ื•ื ืกืœื— ืœื• ืžื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’:",
83
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืฉื ื˜ืžื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื›ื™ ื™ืžื•ืช ืžืช ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืคืชืข ืคืชืื•ื, ืคืชืข, ื–ื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉื ืœืดืดื”) ื•ืื ื‘ืคืชืข ื‘ืœื ืื™ื‘ื”. ืคืชืื•ื, ื–ื” ืžื–ื™ื“, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืžืฉืœื™ ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื‘) ืคืชืื™ื ืขื‘ืจื• ื•ื ืขื ืฉื•, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื–ื™ื“, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ื ืฉ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื™ื“:",
84
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื“ื‘ื›ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืŸ ื ืืžืจ ื•ื ืขืœื ื•ื›ืืŸ ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื•ื ืขืœื:",
85
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืคืงื“ื•ืŸ.</b> ืืฉื ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืคืงื“ื•ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื• ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื“ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืชื—ื˜ื ืชื—ื˜ื ืœื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ืžืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช:"
86
+ ],
87
+ [
88
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื›ืคืจ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœ ื”ืืฉื ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืœืฉืชื•ืง, ืžืื™ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื—ื˜ืื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ืื—ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื ืขืœ ืฉืคื—ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืฉืคื—ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืคื—ื”, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืฉืคื—ื”:",
89
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื™ืจ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ืœื ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืืจื™ื›ืชื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชื’ืœื—ืชื•. ื•ืกื‘ืจ ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ื“ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื) ื•ืงื“ืฉ ืืช ืจืืฉื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืชื’ืœื—ืชื• ืงืืžืจ, ืฉื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื˜ื”ืจื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื, ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื›ื™ ื ื˜ืžื ืชืจื™ ื–ื™ืžื ื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ื•ื• ืœื”ื• ื˜ื•ืžืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื“ื˜ื”ืจื”, ื•ืœื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื ืžื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื“, ื“ืœื ืืชื ื–ื” ืœืฉืขื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ื ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื˜ื”ืจื” ืืชื—ืœื” ืœื” ืžื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™, ืฉืขื” ื”ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืžื™ื•ื ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื™:",
90
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื ื ืœืืฉืชื• ืขืดื™ ืื ืฉื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื”ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืงื ืื•ืช ืชื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ืœืงื ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
91
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฆื•ืจืข ืฉื ืชื ื’ืข ื ื’ืขื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื’ืข ื•ื ืชืจืคื ื ืชื ื’ืข ื•ื ืชืจืคื ืคืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื›ื•ืœื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™,, ื“) ื–ืืช ืชื”ื™ื” ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืชื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืฆื•ืจืข ืคืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
92
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื™ื ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ื•ื ืชื ื’ืข.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ืœื ืขืœื• ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ืœื”ืงื‘ืข ื‘ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช. ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช [ื”ื‘ืืช] ืฆืคื•ืจื™ื ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืฉื™ืจ. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ืขื ื™ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื“ืœื•ืช ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื•. ื“ื‘ืชืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื) ืืฉืจ ืœื ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ื›ืฉืœื ืชืฉื™ื’ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื˜ื”ืจืชื• ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ, ื•ื”ืื™ ื˜ื”ืจืชื• ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืคืจืชื•:",
93
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉืžื•.</b> ื“ื‘ื˜ื”ืจืชื•, ืืฉืžื• ืžืฉืžืข, ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื“ืžื• ืขืœ ื‘ื”ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื• ื•ืžื›ืฉื™ืจื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>ื”ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืงืื–ื™ืœ ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื ืงื‘ื”, ืฉื˜ื‘ืœื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ื•ืขื™ื™ื ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžืฉื” ื•ื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื™ืจื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืœืœื™ื“ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืฉืœ ื–ื•. ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ื ืงื‘ื”, ื“ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื”ื›ื™, ื“ืื™ ื”ืคื™ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื“ื–ื›ืจ, ื”ืื™ ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื•ืœื“ ื ื•ืฆืจ ืขื“ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื•ื:",
97
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคืœืช ืชืื•ืžื™ื.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ื–ื›ืจื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ืฉืœืฉื”, ื•ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืื—ื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื ืฉืชื”ื” ื•ื™ืฆื ืชื•ืš ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ื”ืจ ื“ืฉื ื™. ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื–ืณ) ื–ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ื“ื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ ืžืœืืช ื•ืฉืœ ืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื ืžื™ ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืืœื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“, ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ืืช:",
98
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉื ื™.</b> ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืคืœื™ื’ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืืชืื•ืžื™ื, ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ื•ืœื“ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ. ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช, ื“ืœื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืœืืช ืœืฉื ื™, ื“ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื”ื•ื™ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืœื™ื“ื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขืœ ื”๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื‘ื™ืขื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ืื‘ืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ืชื•ืš ืžืœืืช ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื ืขื‘ืจื• ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ. ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืื•ืžื™ื ื ืžื™ ืคืœื™ื’ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขื™ื‘ื•ืจืŸ ื›ืื—ืช, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื—ื“ื ืœื™ื“ื” ืืจื™ื›ืชื ื”ื™ื ื•ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืžืœืืช ื ืžื™ ืœืฉื ื™, ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ืืœื ืื ื ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืื—ืจ ืžืœืืช ื“ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ื•ืขืœ ืžืœืืช ื“ืฉื ื™ ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ื“ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™. ื•ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื“ ืฉื ื™ ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื“ืžื™, ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืชื•ืš ื–ืžื ื• ืฉืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ื•ืœื“, ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื•ื“ื” ื“ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืื™ืช ืœื” [ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืคืœืช ื–ื›ืจ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื“ื“ื ื˜ื•ื”ืจ], ื•ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืคืœืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื‘ื•ืขื™ื ื“ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื•ืฉืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ ื“ื“ื ื˜ื•ื”ืจ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:",
99
+ "<b>ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“.</b> ืขื•ืœื” ืœืขืฉื™ืจ, ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืขื ื™. ืฉืื ื”ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจ ืžื‘ื™ื ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”, ื•ืื ืขื ื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” ืกื•ืœืช:",
100
+ "<b>ืฉืžื™ืขืช ื”ืงื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืฉืžืขื” ืงื•ืœ ืืœื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’, ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืขืช ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™, ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ื™ืงืจื ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช:",
101
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื•ืœื“ืช.</b> ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช, ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื“ืขื•ืฃ ืชื—ืช ื›ื‘ืฉ. ื•ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ืœื“ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื, ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืชื—ืช ืฉื ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื, ื•ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
102
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืื ืžื–ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ, ื›ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืื™ืฉ ืื• ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ื™ืขืฉื• ืžื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืื“ื (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื—ืณ), ื”ืฉื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืืฉื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืœื›ืœ ืขื•ื ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ืื ืฉื•ื’ื’ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ื‘ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช ื‘ืžื–ื™ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ื›ืจืชื• ื”ื ืคืฉื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืฉื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื–ื“ื•ื ื• ื›ืจืช ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช:",
103
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืœื ื”ืฉื•ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื˜) ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื”, ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืœืงื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื™ืœ ืืฉื. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจืช, ื‘ืงืจื™ืื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืœื•ืงื” ืื ืœื ืชืฉืžื•ืจ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื•ื”ืคืœื” ื”ืณ ื•ื’ื•ืณ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจ, ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืจื™ื ื•ืื•ืžื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืœื•ืงื” ื›ืžื” ืžื›ื•ืช ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืงื‘ืœ:",
104
+ "<b>ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื”.</b> ื”ืžื›ื ื™ืก ืขื˜ืจื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“:",
105
+ "<b>ื›ื’ื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ืืชื•.</b> ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืฉืœื ื›ื“ืจื›ื” ื›ืžื• ื›ื“ืจื›ื”, ื“ืžืฉื›ื‘ื™ ืืฉื” ื›ืชื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืขืœ ื’ืžืจ ื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื“ืจื›ื”, ื“ืฉื›ื‘ืช ื–ืจืข ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”, ืฉืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื”ื–ืจื™ืข:",
106
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื™ืื”.</b> ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคื™ืจืงื™ืŸ [ื“ืฃ ื˜ืณ] ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
107
+ "<b>ืฉืขืฉื” ื‘ื” ืืช ื”ืžื–ื™ื“ ื›ืฉื•ื’ื’.</b> ืื ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžื–ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื• ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื”ื™ื ืžื–ื™ื“ื”, ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืœืงื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ื™ื“, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื”, ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืืฉืžื•. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื”, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ: "
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ืžืื•ืจืกืช ืœืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืขื‘ื“ ื›ื ืขื ื™, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”. ื•ืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื”ื™ื• ื”ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื”, ื•ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื ื”ืจื’ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืงืฆืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืฆื“ ืขื‘ื“ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืณ) ืœื ื™ื•ืžืชื• ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ื•ืคืฉื”, ื”ื ื—ื•ืคืฉื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื:",
111
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืคื“ื•ื™ื” ืงืฆืช ื•ืื™ื ื” ืคื“ื•ื™ื” ืœื’ืžืจื™:",
112
+ "<b>ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื“ืื™ืช.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืคื—ื” ื’ืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื”, ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื:",
113
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช.</b> ืฉื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื™ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื ื•, ื•ื–ื• ื•ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืณ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื” ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื, ืืœื ื“ืืžืจ ืœื™ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ ืื ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื›ื•ื•ืชืš ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ ื“ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื, ืžื™ื”ื• ื”ื›ื ืฉืื ื™, ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ื•ืคืฉื”, ื•ื”ืคื“ื” ืœื ื ืคื“ืชื” ืœืžื” ืœื™. ืฉืžืข ืžื™ื ื” ืœื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:"
114
+ ],
115
+ [
116
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขืจื™ื•ืช.</b> ืื ื”ืื—ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื”ืื™ืฉ ืื• ื”ืืฉื”, ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ืงื˜ืŸ, ื”ืงื˜ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ, ื“ืื ื”ืื—ื“ ืงื˜ืŸ, ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ืžื™ ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื ืืชืงื•ืฉ ืœื”ื“ื“ื™, ื‘ืงื•ืจืช ืชื”ื™ื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืืฉืžื•, ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืœื•ืงื” ื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
117
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืขืจ ื•ืื—ื“ ื™ืฉืŸ ื™ืฉืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ืขืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ืขืจ ื ืžื™ ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืชืงื•ืฉ ืœื”ื“ื“ื™ ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ:",
118
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ื”ื›ืจืช.</b> ื•ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื”, ืื ื”ื•ื ืžื–ื™ื“ ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ืช, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืืฉื” ืœื•ืงื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื. ื•ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื•ื”ื™ื ืžื–ื™ื“ื”, ื”ื™ื ืœื•ืงื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืืฉื:"
119
+ ]
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ [
123
+ "<b>ืืžืจื• ืœื•.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืชืง ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ื—ื™ืฉื•:",
124
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืขืœ ืคื™ื•:",
125
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ื—ืœื‘.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื›ื—ื™ืฉื ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืจื™ ืœื™ ืฉืœื ืื›ืœืชื™, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ื”ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’,) ืื• ื”ื•ื“ืข ืืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื•ืœื ืฉื™ื•ื“ื™ืขื•ื”ื• ืื—ืจื™ื:",
126
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืžืื™ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
127
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื‘ื™ืื•ื”ื• ืฉื ื™ื ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืขื™ื“ื• ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื”ืจื’ ืืช ื”ื ืคืฉ:",
128
+ "<b>ืื ื™ืจืฆื” ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื”ื™ื™ืชื™.</b> ืื ื”ื™ื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืฉืงืจ ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื”ื™ื™ืชื™, ื•ืžื–ื™ื“ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืงืจื‘ืŸ:"
129
+ ],
130
+ [
131
+ "<b>ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืœื‘.</b> ืฉื ื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ ื—ืœื‘:",
132
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ:",
133
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืžืชืžื—ื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืชื‘ืฉื™ืœ ืื—ื“, ืืœื ื”ื ืžืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ, ืืคืดื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืชืžื—ื•ื™ืŸ ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ: "
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ื™ืฉื”ื” ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ.</b> ืœืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ:",
137
+ "<b>ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ืชืคืจื“ื• ืœืคื™ืจื•ืจื™ืŸ [ื“ืงื™ืŸ] ื›ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืื—ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื–ื• ืื—ืจ ื–ื•, ื•ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืžืฉืขืจื™ื ืŸ ืื ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ื•ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืขื” ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืื—ืจ, ืื ืฉื”ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื–ื• ืœื–ื•, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ืžืื›ื™ืœื” ืืœื ืฉืฉื”ื” ื‘ืœืขื™ืกืชืŸ ื•ื‘ืœื™ืขืชืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื•ื ื›ื•ืœื•, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ:",
138
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉื”ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืœืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืื—ืจ, ืืœื ืฉืฉื”ื” ื‘ืœืขื™ืกืช ืฉื ื™ ื—ืฆืื™ ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืื›ื™ืœื” ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ืœื™ืขืชืŸ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก, ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
139
+ "<b>ืคืจืก.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื›ืจ ืฉืœ ืขื™ืจื•ื‘, ืžืฉืœืฉ ื›ื›ืจื•ืช ืœืงื‘, ืฉื›ืœ ื›ื›ืจ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื, ื ืžืฆื ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื›ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื. ื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉืœืฉ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื:",
140
+ "<b>ืื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื•ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื ื‘ื™ืฆื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื”, ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื˜ืžืื™ื ื›ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ. ื•ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืื ืฉื”ื” ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก ืฉืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื, ืื• ื‘ืฉืชื™ื™ืช ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื˜ืžืื™ืŸ, ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ืื ืฉื”ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื–ื”, ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ. ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ื ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื ื™ืกืช ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืฉืื ืฉื”ื” ื‘ืฉืชื™ื™ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคืจืก ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ื™ื•ืชืจ ืขืœ ื›ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
141
+ "<b>ืื ื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืฉืชื” ื›ืœ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืžืงื“ืฉ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื›ืจ ืืœ ืชืฉืช, ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉื›ืจื•ืชื•. ื•ืื ืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ืชื”ื• ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช, ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื“ืจืš ืฉื›ืจื•ืชื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืฉื•ืชื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืžืžืฉ, ืื‘ืœ ืฉืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ืžื•ื“ื” ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ืฉืชื” ื›ื•ืœื• ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช: "
142
+ ],
143
+ [
144
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื“ืื™ืŸ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื’ืจื™ื“ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื’ืจื™ื“ื ืฉืื™ื ื• ืœื ื›ื•ืœืœ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื, ืื“ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ื”ื™ื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื ืขืฉื” ื˜ืžื, ืžื’ื• ื“ื ืืกืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืืชืกืจ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื›ื•ืœืœ, ืฉื”ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื”ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ื›ื•ืœืœ ื•ืื•ืกืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืื“ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืœื ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืืกื•ืจื ืื—ืคืฆื, ืืœื ืื’ื‘ืจื ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืื—ืจื™ื ื™ ื•ื’ืจื™ืจ ื•ื›ื™ื™ืœ ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืื™ ื‘ืืกื•ืจื™ื”. ื ืขืฉื” ื–ื” ื”ื—ืœื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืืกื•ืจ ื•ืœื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉืจื™, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืขืฉื” ื ื•ืชืจ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืขืœ ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืขืฆืžื” ืœื™ืืกืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื’ื‘ื•ื”. ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืืกืจื” ืœื’ื‘ื•ื”, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืฉื ื ื•ืชืจ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ, ืืขืดื’ ื“ื‘ืœืื• ื”ื›ื™ ื”ื™ืชื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜. ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื‘ืจื ืœืืกืจื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื• ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ื’ื•ืจืจ ื•ื›ื•ืœืœ ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืื™ ื—ืœื‘ ืฉืœ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื” ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื:",
145
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉื•ื’ื’. ื•ืืฃ ื–ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืขืœ ื—ืคืฆื, ื“ืงื•ื“ื ื“ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘ ื–ื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื” ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ืืงื“ืฉื”, ื ืืกืจื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืฉื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขืœ ื”ื—ืœื‘ ืœืืกืจื• ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื• ื ืžื™ ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ืžืฉื•ื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
146
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉืฉื‘ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื‘ืคื™ื•.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ื›ืœื•:",
147
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื’ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ื•ืฆืื”. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ื•ืฆืื”, ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื™ื•ื”ืดื›, ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืื™ื ื›ืื—ื“, ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื•ื ืœืฉื‘ืช ืงื“ืฉ ื ืžื™ ืœื™ื•ื”ืดื›. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืœืฉื‘ืช ื›ืš ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืื” ืœื™ื•ื”ืดื›. ื•ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืช ืื—ืช:",
148
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืชื ื ืœื ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ื‘ืื•ืช ืžืคื ื™ ืื›ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื•ืฆืื” ื”ื•ื:"
149
+ ],
150
+ [
151
+ "<b>ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืžืืžื•, ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช ืœื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื•ืžืช, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืžื™ืชืชื• ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ื‘ื ื–ื” ืื‘ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ื ื“ืชื”, ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื‘ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื›ืื—ืช. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืžื–ืจืช ื•ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื‘ื•ื ื‘ืงื”ืœ, ื›ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื™ื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชื•ืคืกื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืื ื”ื™ื• ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืžืžื–ืจื™ื ืžื•ืชืจื™ื ืœื™ืฉื ืื•ืชื” ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœ ืื‘ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ, ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื•ื›ืฉื ื™ืฉืืช, ืœืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืื—ื™ืŸ, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืฉื ืืฉืช ืื— ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืืจ ื”ืื—ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื”ืŸ, ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืฉื ืืฉืช ืื— ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืื‘ื™ื” ืœื”ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•. ืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ ืื‘ื™ื”, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืืจ ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ืืชื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื ืžื™ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”. ื”ื•ื™ื” ืœื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืขืœืžื, ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”. ืคื™ืจืกื” ื ื“ื”, ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื, ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ืขืœื”. ืืชื•ืกืฃ ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื ืžื™ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”:",
152
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื•ื›ืœืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืฉืื” ื‘ื ื•:",
153
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื•ื™ ืืช ื‘ืช ื—ืชื ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ืื‘:",
154
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืžืช ื‘ื ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”:",
155
+ "<b>ื•ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•.</b> ืฉืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•:",
156
+ "<b>ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืงืŸ ืื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”, ื•ื ืฉืื”, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ื–ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืฃ ืขืœ ืืฉืช ื”ืื‘.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื‘ืจื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ืืœืžื ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื™ื” ืœืื‘ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื— ื•ืื™ืŸ (ืœื”)[ืœื•] ืื™ืฉื•ืช ื‘ื”, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืคืœื” ืœืคื ื™ื• ืœื™ื‘ื•ื ืžืื—ื™ื•, ืฉืžืช ื‘ืœื ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื™ื‘ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื ืฉืื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืงืŸ ื“ืชื ืŸ, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืฉื ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ื‘ื ื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœืช ื‘ื ื• ื“ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื•ืช ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื›ืœืชื• ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื‘ืจื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื—. ืœืื• ืคืจื›ื ื”ื™ื, ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœืื•ืงืžื™ ื“ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื• ืžืืžื• ื”ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื›ืœืชื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ ื”ื™ื, ืืœื ืืฉืช ื—ื•ืจื’ื• ื•ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื•. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื•ืžืื™ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื• ื›ืฉืขื‘ืจ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ื ืฉืื” ื“ืงื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ืช ืœื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื‘. ื”ื ืžืœืชื ื‘ืขื• ืœื” ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ื•ืชื™ืจืฆื•, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื‘ืจื ืœืกื‘ื ื•ืื—ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ืžื’ื• ื“ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื‘ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจื ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ื”ื•ื ื‘ืจื ืžืฉื•ื ืืฉืช ืื‘, ืืชื•ืกืฃ ื ืžื™ ื’ื‘ื™ ื“ื™ื“ื™ื”:",
157
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื‘ืชื•:",
158
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื‘ืช ื‘ืชื•. ื•ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืชื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื‘ื™ื• ืื ืก ืื• ืคืชื” ืืฉื” ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืฉื ื”ื•ื ืื ื•ืกืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืื• ืžืคื•ืชืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจืช ืœื•, ื”ืจื™ ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื•. ื•ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืื‘ื™ ืืฉืชื• ืขืœ ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ืช ื”ื™ื ื‘ืช ื‘ืช ืืฉืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•: "
159
+ ],
160
+ [
161
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ื›ืœืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•.</b> ื”ืื‘ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช, ื ืฉื ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื–ืืช ื”ื‘ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืืžื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœืชื•. ืžืช ื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืื• ื’ื™ืจืฉื” ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ื•, ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื•. ืžืช ืื—ื™ื• ืื• ื’ื™ืจืฉื” ื•ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืขืœืžื ื•ื”ื™ื ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ืคื™ืจืกื” ื ื“ื”. ื•ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ื“ื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
162
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ื ืขืœ ื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ืช ืœืื” ื‘ืชื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ืฉืžื” ืกืจื—, ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืกืจื—, ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื” ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืจื— ืืฉืชื• ื•ืœืื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœื‘ืŸ. ื ื™ืฉืืช ืœืื” ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืกืจื— ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ืœืชื•, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืœืื—ื™ื•, ื•ืื—ืดื›, ืœืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื•, ื•ื‘ื ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืกืจื— ื‘ืขื•ื“ื” ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
163
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•.</b> ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื ืขืœ ื–ืงื ืชื• ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ, ืื ืœืื” ืืžื•, ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืช ื•ืฉืžื” ื“ื™ื ื”, ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืืช ื“ื™ื ื” ื ืืกืจื” ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื” ืืžื• ืฉืœ ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื™ื• ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื—ื•ืช ืืฉืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื“ื™ื ื” ืืฉืชื• ื•ืœืื” ืื ื—ืžื™ื• ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ. ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ืœืชื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ื• ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืฉืช ืื—ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืืฉืช ืื™ืฉ ื•ื ื“ื”, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•:",
164
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืื” ื•ืจื—ืœ, ื•ื‘ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฉืจ, ื•ืฉื ื‘ืช ืืฉืจ ืกืจื—, ื•ื‘ื ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืง ื•ื ืฉื ืืช ืจื—ืœ ื•ื™ื•ื›ื‘ื“ ื‘ืช ืœืื” ื•ืกืจื— ื‘ืช ืืฉืจ, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื‘ื ื”ื ื•ืฉื ืฉืœืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืขืœ ืืฉืช ืœื‘ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื• ื•ืื ื—ืžื™ื•. ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืžื•ืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืจื—ืœ ืืฉืชื•. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื•ืชื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ืื ืœืื” ื—ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืื ื—ืžื™ื•, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืืžื• ืฉืœ ืืฉืจ ื—ืžื™ื•:",
165
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื ืื—ื“ ื”ื.</b> ื‘ื—ื“ ืงืจื ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™ ื•ื‘ื—ื“ ืœืื•. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ืœื•ืง ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื”:"
166
+ ],
167
+ [
168
+ "<b>ื‘ืื˜ืœื™ืก.</b> ืฉื•ืง ืฉืžื•ื›ืจื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืฉืจ:",
169
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืืžืื•ื.</b> ืฉื ื”ืขื™ืจ:",
170
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื•. ื•ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืจืื•ื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื ื•ืชื™ื• ืืœื• ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื ื”ื‘ืŸ ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื•:",
171
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ื•ืžื” ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื• ื ื“ื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืฉื ืื—ื“, ืœื ื“ื” ืœื ืชืงืจื‘, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช. ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ืŸ, ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช. ื•ื”ืื™ ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ ืคืจื™ื›ื ื”ื•ื, ื“ืžื” ืœื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื. ืืœื ื˜ืขืžื, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืณ:ื™ืดื–) ืขืจื•ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื’ืœื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ื•ืงืจื ื™ืชื™ืจื ื”ื•ื, ื“ื‘ืจื™ืฉื™ื” ื“ืงืจื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื™ืงื— ืืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื•ืจืื” ืืช ืขืจื•ืชื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ืœืžื” ืœื™ ืœืžื”ื“ืจ ืชื• ืขืจื•ืช ืื—ื•ืชื• ื’ืœื”, ืืœื ืœืœืžื“ ืขืœ ืื—ื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืื—ื•ืช ืืžื• ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช:"
172
+ ],
173
+ [
174
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”.</b> ืชืœื•ืฉ ืจื•ื‘ื• ื•ืžืขื•ืจื” ื‘ืžืงืฆืชื•:",
175
+ "<b>ืžื”ื•.</b> ืฉื™ื˜ืžื ืžืฉื•ื ืื‘ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ืชืœืฉ ืœื’ืžืจื™. ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื”ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ืจื•ื˜ื‘, ื“ืื‘ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื™ ืžื˜ืžื ื›ื ื‘ื™ืœื”. ื•ืื‘ืจ ื”ื ืชืœืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืžื˜ืžื ื›ืžืช:",
176
+ "<b>ื‘ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ื‘ืื“ื.</b> ืฉืžืขื•ืจื” ืงืฆืช, ื˜ื”ื•ืจ:",
177
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ื™ ืฉื—ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื‘ืจื™ื”ืŸ ื ื•ืคืœื™ืŸ:",
178
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื•ืชื›ื”.</b> ืœื ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ื”ืจื”, ืฉืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื˜ื”ื•ืจ. ืืœื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ืžืื•ืก ื‘ืจื’ืœ ื‘ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ:",
179
+ "<b>ืฉืžื ื™ื— ื‘ื• ื›ืฉืขืจื”.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ืชื›ื• ืœื’ืžืจื™, ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ืžื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืชื›ื• ืฉื ื•ื’ืข ื‘ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืคืจื™ืฉื”:",
180
+ "<b>ื•ืชื•ื—ื‘ื•.</b> ืœืื‘ืจ:",
181
+ "<b>ื‘ืกื™ืจื”.</b> ื‘ืงื•ืฅ ื”ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ืœืงืจืงืข:",
182
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื•ื.</b> ื”ื—ื•ืœื”:",
183
+ "<b>ื ืžืฉืš.</b> ื•ื ืชืœืฉ ื”ืื‘ืจ ืžืืœื™ื•. ื•ื”ื—ื•ืœื” ืื™ื ื• ื˜ืžื ืœืคื™ ืฉืžื•ืฉืš ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ื›ื— ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื•ื”ืื‘ืจ ื ืชืœืฉ ืžืžื ื• ื‘ื›ื— ื•ืœื™ื›ื ื ื’ื™ืขื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืคืจื™ืฉื”:",
184
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ื•ืžื” ืื“ื ืฉืžืงื‘ืœ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื, ื”ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืงื‘ืœืช ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืื‘ืจ ื”ืžื“ื•ืœื“ืœ ืžืžื ื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจ:"
185
+ ],
186
+ [
187
+ "<b>ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื—ืžืฉื” ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื–ื”. ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ืื ืื›ืœืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ:",
188
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ.</b> ืžื” ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื—ื“ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื, ื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื“ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื ืœื ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ:",
189
+ "<b>ืœื ื›ืš ืฉืืœืŸ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื.</b> ื“ืื ื‘ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ืฉืืœืŸ ืžื” ืจืื™ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• ืžืื•ื›ืœ, ื”ื ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืคืจืš ืžื” ืœืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื ื”ื ื”. ืืœื ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืœื ืฉืืœ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืืœื ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ืžื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• ืจืื™ื” ื ืžื™ ืžืื•ื›ืœ:",
190
+ "<b>ืื ื”ืœื›ื”.</b> ืฉื›ืš ืงื‘ืœืช ืžืจื‘ืš ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื. ื ืงื‘ืœื ื” ืžืžืš:",
191
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืœื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืืชื” ืœื•ืžื“ ืื•ืชื” ืžืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ ืžืžืขื™ืœื”. ื™ืฉ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื”:",
192
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืžืื›ื™ืœ ื›ืื•ื›ืœ.</b> ืฉืื ื ืชืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื‘ืจื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื•, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžืขืœ, ื•ืœื ืžื™ ืฉื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื•:",
193
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžื”ื ื” ื›ื ื”ื ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื™ื“ื™ ื“ืœืื• ื‘ืจ ืื›ื™ืœื”:",
194
+ "<b>ืฆื™ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืžืขื™ืœื” ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืขื•ื“ ื—ื•ืžืจื ืื—ืจืช ื™ืฉ ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉืื ื ื”ื ื” ื”ื™ื•ื ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคืช ืœืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื›ื“ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืชืžืขื•ืœ ืžืขืœ, ืจื™ื‘ื”:",
195
+ "<b>ืชืืžืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื ื•ืชืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื• ื“ื ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ื”ื—ื•ืžืจื•ืช ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ืœื ืืชื‘ืจื™ืจื ืžืœืชื ืื™ ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืœื”ืื™ืš ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืื• ืœื ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื ื™ื”. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ืžื—ืžืฉื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื•ืชืžื—ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ืŸ ืžื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:"
196
+ ],
197
+ [
198
+ "<b>ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืŸ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืฉืœ ืื‘ ืื—ื“:",
199
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื–ื• ืขืฉื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš ืžืื™ ืงืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื” ื“ื ืงื˜ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืืžืื™ ื ืงื˜ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื•ืœื ืื‘ื•ืช. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืชืจืชื™ ื‘ืขื ืžื™ื ื™ื”, ื—ื“ื ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื•ื™ื•ื“ืข ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืฉืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืžืœืื›ื” ื–ื• ืžื•ืชืจืช ื”ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงื ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื”, ื”ืื™ ื“ืขื‘ื“ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ืžื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื, ืืขืดื’ ื“ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ื”ื•ื, ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžืœืื›ื” ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืœืื›ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื–ืจืข ื•ืงืฆืจ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ื‘ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ืื• ืœืื• ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ื ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“ ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจ ืคืขืžื™ื ื“ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ืช, ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื”ื›ื ื™ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื™ื ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืœื—ืœืง; ื“ื“ื•ืงื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื’ื’ืช ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืœื™ื“ืข ืฉืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ืœื™ื›ื ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืœืžื•ื“. ื•ืขื•ื“ ืงืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ื”, ืื ืขืฉื” ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืžืื‘ ืื—ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื—ืช, ืื• ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื•ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช:",
200
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืคืฉื˜ ืœื™ื” ืืชืจื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื‘ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ื”ื ืš ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ื ืžื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื›ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืชื•ืœื“ื” ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื”, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืื‘ ืื—ื“ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื” ืื‘ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”:",
201
+ "<b>ื•ืžื” ื ื“ื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืชื ื™ ื ื“ื•ืช, ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื“ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
202
+ "<b>ืชื•ืฆืื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื”.</b> ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื“ืื™ื›ื ืื‘ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื•ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื ื“ื” ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ื—ื™ื•ื‘ื ืืœื ื‘ื™ืื”:",
203
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื“ื” ืžื•ื–ื”ืจืช ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ื›ืจืชื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืงืจื‘ ืขืžื:",
204
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืงื˜ื ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉ ืงื˜ื ื•ืช ื ื“ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืงื˜ื ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžื•ื–ื”ืจืช:",
205
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ื•ื›ื™ื—.</b> ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื™ืื”:",
206
+ "<b>ื‘ื”ืžื” ื›ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืœื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ืœื ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื™ื ื™ื” ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืœื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื›ื’ื•ืคื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ, ื•ืœื ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืชื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื›ืžืœืื›ื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:"
207
+ ]
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ [
211
+ "<b>ืกืคืง ืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืœื ืื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืื›ืœ ืืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ, ื›ื“ืชื ื™ ื‘ืกื™ืคื. ื•ืคืจื•ืฉื™ ืงืžืคืจืฉ, ืกืคืง ืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืœื ืื›ืœ ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ื™ืฉ ื›ืืŸ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ื• ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืื—ืช, ืกืคืง ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ืœื‘ ืกืคืง ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื•ืื›ืœื”, ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ืœื ืื™ืงื‘ืข ืื™ืกื•ืจื:",
212
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ืœื‘, ืกืคืง ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช. ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืื›ืœื• ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืœื‘, ื•ืกืคืง ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืกืคืง ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
213
+ "<b>ืื›ืœ ืืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ.</b> ื•ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”ื•ื, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉื”ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ื—ืœื‘, ื•ื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื™ื–ื• ืื›ืœ, ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืื›ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ืกืคืง ื•ื”ื–ื™ื“ ื•ืื›ืœื” ืžืกืคืง, ื”ื•ื™ ืžื–ื™ื“ ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
214
+ "<b>ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื• ืืฉืชื•, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ืชืกืคืง ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื”, ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:"
215
+ ],
216
+ [
217
+ "<b>ื›ืš ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืข ืฉืœื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื›ืœ ืฉืชื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ื”ืŸ ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืกืคืง, ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืื—ื“, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœื” ืœืื›ื™ืœื” ืฉืกืคืง ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ:",
218
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื.</b> ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ืกืคืง:",
219
+ "<b>ื›ืฉื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื™ื, ื›ืš ื‘ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ืกืคืง ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื™ ืืฉืžื•ืช ืชืœื•ื™ื™ืŸ:",
220
+ "<b>ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืคื ื™ื•.</b> ื•ืกื‘ืจ ื“ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ืžืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ืชืจ:",
221
+ "<b>ืืฉืชื• ื ื“ื” ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื‘ื ืขืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืœื‘ื•ื ืขืœ ืืฉืชื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืืฉืชื• ื”ื™ืชื” ื ื“ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืกืคืง ืขืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื:",
222
+ "<b>ื•ืขืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช.</b> ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื•ื:",
223
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืื ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืื ื ื•ืชืจ ืื›ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืœื:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืคื•ื˜ืจ.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื’,) ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื. ื•ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ, ื”ืื™ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื” ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ ืœื™ื” ืคืจื˜ ืœืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ืžืœืื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืชื•ืš ืืช ื”ืชืœื•ืฉ ื•ื—ืชืš ืืช ื”ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ, ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืชื™ื›ื” ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ืžืœืื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื•ื ื“ืคื˜ื•ืจ, ื“ืžืœืื›ืช ืžื—ืฉื‘ืช ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ื—ืœื‘ื™ื ื•ื‘ืขืจื™ื•ืช, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืื• ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืขืจื•ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ื”ื ื”:",
225
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื•.</b> ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืืžืจ ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืฉื™ื“ืข ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื ืœื ื ื—ืœืง ืขืœ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ืžื•ื“ื” ืœื• ื‘ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
226
+ "<b>ืฉืื ื™ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ืžืœืื›ื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
227
+ "<b>ืžืขื™ืŸ ืื™ื–ื• ืžืœืื›ื” ืขืฉื”.</b> ืื ื—ืจืฉ ืื• ื–ืจืข:",
228
+ "<b>ืคื•ื˜ืจื• ื”ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืฃ ืžืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ) ื›ื™ ืชื—ื˜ื ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข, ืคืจื˜ ืœื–ื” ืฉื™ื“ืข ืฉื—ื˜ื ืืœื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ื ืžืกื•ื™ื™ื. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืžื™ ืœื ืžื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืฉืืขืดืค ืฉื™ื“ืข ืฉื—ื˜ื ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืœื ื”ื•ื‘ืจืจ ืœื• ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืฉืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืืฉืชื• ื ื“ื” ื•ืื—ื•ืชื• ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:"
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ื ื“ื•ืช ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืฉื’ื’ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ:",
232
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ื“ืข ื‘ืžื” ื—ื˜ื:",
233
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืคืง ืงืฆืจ ืกืคืง ื˜ื—ืŸ:",
234
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืขื ื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื™ื“ื• ืขืœ ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืชืื ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ืฉื—ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ืื—ืดื› ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ื ื”ืคืš ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฉื—ื•ืจื•ืช:",
235
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื ืื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ื ื•ืžืื•ื—ืจ:",
236
+ "<b>ื•ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืคื•ื˜ืจ.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื˜ืช ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื ืœื–ื” ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ื›ืžืชืขืกืง ื•ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
237
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืชืžื™ื”ื ื™ ืื ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื” ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข.</b> ืื ื›ืŸ ืœืžื” ื ืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”. ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืงื ืžืชืžื” ืขืœ ืชืžื™ื”ืชื• ืฉืœ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ, ืื ื›ืŸ ื“ืœื ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื” ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ืœืžื” ื ืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื ื‘ื”. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ืคืจื˜ ืœืžืชืขืกืง, ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ื›ืœืœ, ืื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ื˜ ืชืื ื™ื ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืœื™ืงื˜ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ืœื‘ื“, ืฉืœื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžื—ืฉื‘ืชื• ื›ืœ ืขื™ืงืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉืคื™ืจืฉื” ืœืžืœืชื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
238
+ ]
239
+ ],
240
+ [
241
+ [
242
+ "<b>ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ื ื ื—ื™ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ื ืขื™ืงื•ืจ ืฉื ืขืงืจื• ื”ืกื™ืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ื ื”ืงื–ื” ืฉื”ื ืคืฉ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื•, ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื“ื ืฉื”ื ืคืฉ ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ื•, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงืœื— ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืืžืฆืขื™, ื™ืฆื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ืงื–ื”, ื•ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื›ืœื” ื”ื“ื ื•ื ืชืžืขื˜, ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืชืช ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืœื— ืžืจื—ื•ืง ืฉืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ:",
243
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ืื ืื›ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช:",
244
+ "<b>ื“ื ื”ืœื‘.</b> ื“ื ื”ื ื‘ืœืข ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ ื”ืœื‘, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืœืื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช. ืื‘ืœ ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ืœื‘, ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ื, ืฉื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื•ืืคืช ื‘ืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ืžื›ื ืกืช ื“ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ืœื‘, ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช:",
245
+ "<b>ื“ื ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ื“ื ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ ื”ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืฉื•ืจ ืื™ืœ ื•ืชื™ืฉ. ื•ืœื™ ื ืจืื”, ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช:",
246
+ "<b>ื•ื“ื ื”ืชืžืฆื™ืช.</b> ืฉืžืชืžืฆื” ื•ื ืกื—ื˜ ื•ืฉื•ืชืช ื›ืฉื™ื•ืฆื. ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื• (ื•ื™ืงืจื ืืณ):",
247
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืจืช.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืจืช ืืœื ื‘ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื™ืดื–) ื›ื™ ื ืคืฉ ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื“ืžื• ื”ื•ื ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื• ื™ื›ืจืช. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ื“ื“ื ื”ื˜ื—ื•ืœ ื•ื”ืœื‘ ื•ื”ื›ืœื™ื•ืช ื•ื“ื ื”ืชืžืฆื™ืช ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื‘ืื–ื”ืจื” ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื ืœื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื•ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืจืช. ื•ื“ื ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื, ืืกื•ืจ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื. ื•ื“ื ืฉืจืฆื™ื, ืื ืื›ืœื• ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื•ืงื” ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉืจืฅ, ื•ืœื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื“ื. ื•ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื ื•ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื˜ื”ื•ืจื™ื, ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื, ืงืฉืงืฉื™ื, ืฉื™ื•ื›ื™ื— ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื ื“ื’ื™ื, ืžืคื ื™ ืžืจืื™ืช ื”ืขื™ืŸ. ื•ื“ื ื”ืื“ื, ืืกื•ืจ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื ื›ืฉืคื™ืจืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ืื“ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื•:"
248
+ ],
249
+ [
250
+ "<b>ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช.</b> ืกืคืง ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืกืคืง ืœื ื ื”ื ื”:",
251
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืคื•ื˜ืจื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืฆื•ืช, ื•ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืฆื•ืช, ื›ืœ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื• ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
252
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืช ืžืขื™ืœืชื•.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ:",
253
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ืืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉืื ื”ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ื ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™:",
254
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”.</b> ืงืจืŸ ื”ืžืžื•ืŸ ืฉื ืกืชืคืง ืœื• ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื• ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื•:",
255
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืื™ืœ ื”ื ืงื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื—) ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
256
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืกืคืง.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื•ืื ื‘ืกืคื™ืงื• ืขื•ืžื“ ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™:",
257
+ "<b>ืฉืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื•ื“ืข ืžื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืœื ื”ื•ื“ืข.</b> ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื•ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
258
+ ],
259
+ [
260
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง.</b> ื”ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ืกืคืง ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืกืคืง ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘, ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืžืชื ื”, ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ื™ื”ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืื ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื ืœื ื“ื‘ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื‘ืกืคืง ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ืฉืžื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ืžืœื™ืงืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื”:",
261
+ "<b>ืชืขืฉื ื” ื•ื“ืื™.</b> ื•ืชืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช:",
262
+ "<b>ืฉืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื”.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืžืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื“ืื™ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ื™ื•ืœื“ืช:"
263
+ ],
264
+ [
265
+ "<b>ื•ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืœื˜ืขืžื™ื”, ื“ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
266
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืœื–ื” ืื ืืชื” ืื›ืœืช ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื™ื”ื ืืฉื ื›ื•ืœื• ืขืœื™ืš:",
267
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืชื ืื™ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช, ืืœื ืื ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื, ืื™ ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:"
268
+ ],
269
+ [
270
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช.</b> ื•ืžืชื ื” ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ:",
271
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื”ื—ืœื‘. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื ื ืงืžื. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืŸ, ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•: "
272
+ ],
273
+ [
274
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื›ื•ืณ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืขืœ ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช, ื”ื›ื ืžื•ื“ื• ื“ื—ื™ื™ื‘, ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘:",
275
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™:",
276
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช. ื•ืžืชื ื”, ืื ืื ื™ ืื›ืœืชื™ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืืชื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ื‘ืืฉื ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื—ืœืงืš ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™. ื•ืื ืื ื™ ืื›ืœืชื™ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืืชื” ื—ืœื‘ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœืงื™ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœืš ื•ื—ืœืงืš ื‘ืืฉื ืžื—ื•ืœ ืœื™:",
277
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ืืœื ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื•ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื ื ืงืžื. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ื”ื•ื ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•:"
278
+ ],
279
+ [
280
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื›ื•ืณ ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื“ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš ื—ืœื‘ ืื›ืœ:",
281
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืืฃ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ื—ื˜ืืช (ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืฉืดื™ ืขื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช), ืžืฉื•ื ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:",
282
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืื›ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื”ืขืœืžื•ืช. ืฉืื ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื, ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ืช:",
283
+ "<b>ื–ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืžื•ืกืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื—ืœื‘ ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžืฉื•ื ืกืคืง ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
284
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ืžืชื ื™ืŸ:",
285
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ืชืดืง ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื•:"
286
+ ],
287
+ [
288
+ "<b>ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื—ืชื™ื›ื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžื—ืžืช ืกืคืง ืฉืœ ื ื•ืชืจ, ืฉื”ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ื›ืจืช ื›ื—ืœื‘. ื•ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœ ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื—ืœื‘ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืกื•ืจ ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ:",
289
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช.</b> ืฉืชื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ื™ื“ื™ืขื” ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื. ื“ืื™ ืœืื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืชื ื™ ื”ื›ื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ื›ื“ืชื ื™ ืœืขื™ืœ, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืจื•ื‘ ื ื•ืชืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื“ืœื ื—ื–ื™ ืœืžื™ื“ื™, ื•ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื‘ื ืขืœ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
290
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื.</b> ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืฉืื™ื ื” ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื—ื˜ื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืฉืฉืชื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืื•ืช ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ื‘ืชื ืื™, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ืœื›ื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœ ืžื—ื•ืกืจื™ ื›ืคืจื”:"
291
+ ]
292
+ ],
293
+ [
294
+ [
295
+ "<b>ื”ืžื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ. ืขื ืฉืืจ ืฆืื ื• ื›ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื’ืžื•ืจื™ื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื” ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื™ื”:",
296
+ "<b>ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘.</b> ื“ืžืชื•ืš ืฉืœื‘ื• ื ื•ืงืคื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื•ืžืชื™ืจื ืžืกืคืง ื”ื—ื˜ื, ื’ืžืจ ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœื™ื” ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ื™ืฆื˜ืจืš, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื•ืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื ื•ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื ื“ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
297
+ "<b>ื”ื“ื ื™ืฉืคืš.</b> ืœืืžื” ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ [ืฆืดืœ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”]:",
298
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ืงื‘ื•ืจื”, ื”ืื™ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื•ืœ ืฉื˜ืขื•ืŸ ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
299
+ "<b>ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื.</b> ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ื•ื“ืข ืœื•:",
300
+ "<b>ื™ืื›ืœ.</b> ื”ื‘ืฉืจ. ื“ืจื—ืžื ื ืืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ) ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื ื™ื“ืข ื•ื ืกืœื— ืœื•, ื‘ืฉืขืช ืกืœื™ื—ื” ืœื ืชื”ื ื™ื“ื™ืขื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื“ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืขืช ืกืœื™ื—ื” ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื™ื“ื™ืขื”, ื•ื”ืจื™ ื’ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื›ืคืจืช ืกืคื™ืงื•, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœื™ื” ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื›ืฉืจ:",
301
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื“ื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ื™ื–ืจืง.</b> ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ืžืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคืกื•ืœ ืœื™ืงืจื‘, ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ืœื™ื–ืจืง ื›ื–ืจื•ืง ื“ืžื™, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื›ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ื™ื“ื™ืขื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™: "
302
+ ],
303
+ [
304
+ "<b>ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืขื“ ืฉืœื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื, ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ, ื“ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื‘ืืฉื ืชืœื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื‘ื• ื ื•ืงืคื• ื’ืžืจ ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืกืคืง, ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืืžืจื• ืœื• ืื›ืœืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื ืฉื”ื•ื–ืžื• ื”ืขื“ื™ื, ืื™ ื ืžื™ ื›ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืื›ืœ ื•ื ืžืฆื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืื’ืœืื™ ืžืœืชื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื”:",
305
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื“ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืจื”:",
306
+ "<b>ื ื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžื™ ืฉืฉื ื” ืœืขื™ืœ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ ืœื ืฉื ื” ื”ื›ื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืœืขื•ืœื, ืื™ื ื• ื ืฉืจืฃ ืืœื ื ืงื‘ืจ:",
307
+ "<b>ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ, ื›ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื”ื›ื ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืฉืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉืœื ื”ืจื’ ื™ืฆื ื•ื™ืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ:",
308
+ "<b>ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™, ืฉืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื ืขืจืคื” ื ืžืฆื ื”ื”ื•ืจื’, ืชืฆื ื•ืชืจืขื” ื‘ืขื“ืจ. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ ื›ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™, ื“ืืฉื ื•ื“ืื™ ืžืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื™ืงื‘ืจ, ื•ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ื›ืฉื ื•ื“ืข ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืกืงืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”. ื•ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื›ืŸ ื›ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ, ื“ืฉื•ืจ ื”ื ืกืงืœ ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ืžืฉื ืกืงืœ ืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืขื’ืœื” ืขืจื•ืคื” ืื ื ื•ื“ืข ื”ื”ื•ืจื’ ืžืฉื ืขืจืคื” ื”ืขื’ืœื” ืชืงื‘ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื”:",
309
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืคืจื” ืกืคื™ืงื”.</b> ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขืจื™ืคื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืกืคืง ื”ื™ื” ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ืœื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื•ืชืงื‘ืจ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื’ืœื•ืช ื”ืขืจื•ืคื•ืช:"
310
+ ],
311
+ [
312
+ "<b>ืžืชื ื“ื‘ ืื“ื ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื›ืœ ืขืฆืžื• ืฉืœ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื. ื“ืื™ ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ ืžืชื™ื“ืข ืœื™ื” ืฉื—ื˜ื ืืžืื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืืœื ืฉืžืข ืžื™ื ื” ื ื“ื‘ื” ื”ื•ื:",
313
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืื—ืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ื“ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ื”ื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ื—ืฉ ื‘ืกืคืง ืฉื•ื ื—ื˜ื ืฉืžื ืขืฉื” ืื• ืœืื•, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืฉืชื ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ื—ืฉ, ื“ื”ื ื›ื™ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›:",
314
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื˜ืขืžื ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืžืงืžื™ ื“ืžืชื™ื“ืข ืœื™ื”, ืœื”ื’ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ื•ื“ืข ืœื•, ืฉื”ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืกื” ืขืœ ื’ื•ืคื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ื ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื: "
315
+ ],
316
+ [
317
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–:ืœืณ) ืžื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ื›ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ ืชื˜ื”ืจื•, ื—ื˜ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื• ืืœื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืœื ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ื, ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžื›ืคืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ื“ื™ื“ืข ื‘ื™ื” ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืงื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžื›ืคืจ:"
318
+ ],
319
+ [
320
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืœื“ื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ืื ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ืื ืžื™ืŸ ืคื˜ื•ืจ:",
321
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืžื›ืฉื™ืจืชื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื.</b> ื“ืžื—ื•ืกืจืช ื›ืคืจื” ื”ื™ื ืžืกืคืง, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืขื“ ืฉืชื‘ื™ื ื›ืคืจืชื”:",
322
+ "<b>ืžืฉื ืžืœืงื” ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ืœื“ื”:",
323
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืชืจืช ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื’ืžื•ืจื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืกืจ, ื“ืœื ืืกืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ืืœื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืžืœื™ืงื” ืœื. ืื‘ืœ ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื’ื–ืจื• ื“ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืฉืžื ื™ืืžืจื• ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืกืคืง. ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžืœื™ืงื” ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืืกื•ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื“ืฉืžื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื ื•ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื”:"
324
+ ],
325
+ [
326
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืฉื›ืš ื”ื•ื ื“ื™ืŸ ืืฉื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช (ืฉื ื”ืณ) ื‘ืขืจื›ืš ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืงืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœืืฉื, ื•ืชืจื’ื•ื ืฉืงืœื™ื ืกืœืขื™ื. ื•ืืฉื ื’ื–ื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ ืœืžื“ื™ื ืžืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉื•ื”, ื ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš, ื•ื ืืžืจ ืœื”ืœืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ืš. ื•ืืฉื ืฉืคื—ื” ื—ืจื•ืคื” ื ืžื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ืœ, ื”ื•ื™ ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ืกืฃ ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืฉืœืฉื” ืืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืื™ืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ืžืฆื•ืจืข ื•ืืฉื ื ื–ื™ืจ ื“ื‘ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœืืฉื, ืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืงืœื™ื:",
327
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืคืจืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ืคื” ืืœื ืกืœืข, ืื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ื, ื›ืฉืจ, ื“ื‘ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื•ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื•ืชื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ืคื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ื›ืคืจื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•, ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืงื ื”ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืœื ื‘ืกืœืข, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื™ืจืขื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืงื— ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ืืฉื ื•ืœืฉื ืืฉื, ื•ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืืฉื ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
328
+ "<b>ืœืงื— ื‘ื”ื ืฉื ื™ ืืœื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืœืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžืขืœ ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ื•ื™ืฆืื• ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
329
+ "<b>ื™ืคื” ืขืฉืจื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉืŸ, ืฉื”ืกืœืข ืืจื‘ืขื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื:",
330
+ "<b>ื”ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•.</b> ืœืฉื ืื•ืชื• ืืฉื ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช:",
331
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœืžืขื™ืœืชื•.</b> ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ืœื ืฉื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืื•ืชื” ืœืืฉื, ืืœื ืฉื™ืชื ื ื• ืœื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืฉื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฉืŸ, ืฉื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจืŸ ื•ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื–ื•ื–ื™ื. ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืืฉื ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืชื• ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
332
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืœืืฉื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืœืงื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืฉื ื™ ืื™ืœื™ื ืื—ื“ ืœืืฉื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืžืขืœ ื‘ืกืœืข:",
333
+ "<b>ืื ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœ ืืฉื ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืืฉืžื•.</b> ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืฉืžื• ื ืœืงื— ืžืžืขื•ืช ืฉื ืคืจืฉื• ืœื•:",
334
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื™ืงืจื‘ ืœืžืขื™ืœืชื• ืœืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืกืœืข ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื”ื• ื ืžื™ ื™ืคื” ืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ ืกืœืขื™ื ื›ืกืฃ:",
335
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืžื” ืกืœืข ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”.</b> ืงืจืŸ ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื• ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืกืœืข ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:"
336
+ ],
337
+ [
338
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื” ื‘ื ื• ืื—ืจื™ื•.</b> ืื ืฉื’ื’ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื‘ืฉื’ื’ืช ื—ื˜ืืช, ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืื‘ื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื›ื•ืคืจ ื‘ื” ืขืœ ืฉื’ื’ืชื•:"
339
+ ],
340
+ [
341
+ "<b>ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืฉืขื™ืจื”.</b> ืื ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื™ืงื— ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืœื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ืงื— ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืขื™ืจื” ืื ื™ืจืฆื”:",
342
+ "<b>ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืœืฉืขื™ืจื”.</b> ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœืงื ื•ืช ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”:",
343
+ "<b>ื”ืขื ื™, ื™ื‘ื™ื</b> ื‘ื”ืŸ <b>ืขื•ืฃ</b>, ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื’ื‘ื™ ื›ืฉื‘ื” ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื”, ืžื—ื˜ืืชื• ืืฉืจ ื—ื˜ื, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืžืžืงืฆืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื—ื˜ืืชื•, ืฉืื ื”ืขื ื™ ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืฃ ืžืžืงืฆืช ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืขื•ืฃ ื ืžื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืื ื”ืขื ื™ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื™ื ืžืžืงืฆืช ื“ืžื™ ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื”, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืื ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืฃ, ืื• ืื ื”ืขืฉื™ืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ืฉื‘ื” ืื• ืฉืขื™ืจื”:",
344
+ "<b>ื•ื ืกืชืื‘ื”.</b> ื”ื•ืžืžื”:",
345
+ "<b>ืื ืจืฆื” ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืขื ื™:",
346
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืขื•ืฃ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื“ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื™ืดื) ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืื•ืชื”, ืžื” ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื‘ื”ืžื” ื ืคื“ื™ืช ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืœื ืขืฆื™ื ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ื•ืœื ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคื“ื™ื: "
347
+ ],
348
+ [
349
+ "<b>ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื ืœืขื–ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ื›ืชื ื”ืงื“ื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืœืขื–ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ) ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขื–ื™ื ืชืงื—ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื) ืื• ืœืฉื” ื‘ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ืื• ื‘ืขื–ื™ื. ื™ื›ื•ืœ, ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื• ื›ื‘ืฉ ื•ืขื– ื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ื‘ืฉ ื“ื•ืงื.",
350
+ "<b>ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืื ื›ื‘ืฉ ื™ื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื•.</b> ื•ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืฉืขื™ืจืช ืขื–ื™ื, ื›ืืŸ ื”ืงื“ื™ื ืขื– ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ืœืœืžื“ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉืงื•ืœื™ื ื•ืื™ ื–ื” ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื” ื™ื‘ื™ื:",
351
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ื ืงื•ื“ืžื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ื“ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”:",
352
+ "<b>ืื ื–ื›ื” ื”ื‘ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจื‘.</b> ืฉืจื•ื‘ ื—ื›ืžืชื• ืœืžื“ ืžืžื ื•:",
353
+ "<b>ืงื•ื“ื ืืช ื”ืื‘.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืื‘ื™ื“ื” ื•ืœืคื“ื•ืช ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื™ ื•ืœื”ื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ืœืคืจื•ืง ืขืžื•. ื•ืื ืื‘ื™ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ ื—ื›ื ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืงื•ืœ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืจื‘ื•, ืื‘ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœืจื‘ื•, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื‘ื”ืง:"
354
+ ]
355
+ ]
356
+ ],
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+ "versions": [
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+ [
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+ "On Your Way",
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+ "http://mobile.tora.ws/"
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
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+ ]
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+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json ADDED
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim",
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+ "versionSource": "http://sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "status": "locked",
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+ "license": "CC-BY",
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+ "versionNotes": "",
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+ "shortVersionTitle": "Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "direction": "ltr",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืงื™ื ื™ื",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
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+ [
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+ [
25
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืœืžื˜ื” โ€“ from the red line [encircling the Temple altar at precisely half its height], as it is written (Leviticus 5:9): โ€œHe shall sprinkle some of the blood of the purification (i.e., sin-offering) on the side of the altar, and what remains of the blood shall be drained out at the base of the altar,โ€ the wall that its remainder is poured out toward the bottom of the altar (see Talmud Zevakhim 64b), and this is the lower wall below the red line, for the upper wall, that is from the [red] line and above, sometimes, it is poured out to the surrounding ledge (which was five cubits above the altarโ€™s base, six cubits from the ground; it was one cubit wide on all sides, surrounding the altar. The priests would walk on this ledge while performing certain sacrificial functions), such as that he performed it above the surrounding ledge, that the [red] line is a cubit below the surrounding ledge.",
26
+ "ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžืขืœื” โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 4:25, 30, 34): โ€œ[The priest shall take with his finger some of the blood of the purification offering and put it] on the horns of the altar [of burnt offering],โ€ on the integral portion of the horn [of the altar]. ",
27
+ "ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื” โ€“ The burnt offering of the bird is above, as it is written (Leviticus 1:15): โ€œ[The priest shall bring it to the altar,] pinch off its head, and turn the whole into smoke on the altar; and its blood shall be drained [against the side of the altar],โ€ just as the burning on the altar/letting rise in smoke is at the top of the altar, so the pinching and the wringing out [of the blood of the sacrifice] is at the top of the altar.",
28
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžื˜ื” โ€“ as it is written concerning it (Leviticus 4:7): โ€œ[The priest shall put some of the blood on the horns of the altar of aromatic incense, which is in the Tent of Meeting, before the LORD,] and all the rest of the blood he shall pour out at the base of the altar/ืืœ-ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— of burnt offering.โ€",
29
+ "ื•ืื ืฉื™ื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ this that is invalid if he performed the act [of offering] the sin-offering of the bird above [the red line], specifically regarding the sprinkling. But the pinching of the birdโ€™s head of a sin-offering, even above [the red line] is kosher/fit, for pinching of the birdโ€™s head is kosher in every place of the altar. But the burnt-offering of birds does not have sprinkling of blood, but only the wringing/squeezing out the blood, and if he performed it below [the red line] it is invalid.",
30
+ "ืกื“ืจ ืงื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as for example, in the case of a man suffering from gonorrhea/ื–ื‘, a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type blood on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding/ื–ื‘ื” and a woman after childbirth vaginally/ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, and ritual impurity with regard to the Temple and its sacred articles/ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• and hearing the sound of an imprecation/ืฉืžื™ืขืช ืงื•ืœ ืืœื” and an erroneous statement without legal consequences/ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™ ืฉืคืชื™ื, for all of them bring a bird in poverty, but rather that the man suffering from gonorrhea and the woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type blood bring a bird, whether they are in poverty or in wealth, and even though there are bird-offerings of the convert which are obligations, and both of them are burnt-offerings, the Tanna/teacher was not troubled by them, because they are not all that frequent.",
31
+ "ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ because only burnt-offerings and peace-offerings are brought for vows and free-will offerings, but birds are not brought as peace-offerings, therefore, vows and free-will offerings are all burnt-offerings."
32
+ ],
33
+ [
34
+ "ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ โ€“ but it is not neutralized in a majority, for these are considered living creatures and are not neutralized.",
35
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ a dove or a pigeon of a sin-offering that was mixed up with two couples of sacrificial birds of an obligatory offering, that is couples of sacrificial birds for a woman giving birth or a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding/ื–ื‘ื” for each couple of sacrificial birds - of them one for a burnt-offering and one for a sin-offering, and it is now found that there are five pairs of pigeons that are mixed up together.",
36
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ื” โ€“ and he is not able to bring from those five pairs of pigeons other than two sin-offerings alone, that is the kosher number in two couples of sacrificial birds of an obligation. For if he made three sins-offerings, perhaps from the two couples of sacrificial birds, he made it, and not from that which was mixed up/confused in them, and from the two couples of sacrificial birds, they are not able to make only two sin-offerings, and he cannot make even one burnt-offering and one sin-offering.",
37
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ a pigeon or a dove that was separated for the sake of a burnt-offering.",
38
+ "ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ with two mere couples of sacrificial birds.",
39
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ as is explained above concerning the sin-offering.",
40
+ "ื‘ืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ื ื“ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขื˜ืช โ€“ as for example, one couple of sacrificial birds which is separated that were burnt-offerings, that was combined/confused with several unassigned couples of sacrificial birds that are burnt-offerings, that were mixed up/confused with several regular couples of sacrificial birds of women who gave birth or of a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding, that each couple of sacrificial birds, one of them is a sin-offering and one of them is a burnt-offering.",
41
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example, one unassigned set of sacrificial birds that became mixed up with several sets of sacrificial birds for burnt-offerings, and we call these burnt-offerings that were set aside as a free-will offering, because with vows and free-will offerings, all of them are burnt-offerings as is taught in the Mishnah at the beginning of the chapter (Tractate Kinnim, Chapter 1, Mishnah 1)."
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ that the couple of sacrificial birds of obligatory offering that some of them are sin-offerings and some of them were burnt-offerings were mixed up with the couple of sacrificial birds for free-will offering โ€“ all of which are burnt offerings.",
45
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• โ€“ from the couple of birds concerning which it not been decided if it for the woman who just experienced childbirth or for a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding that became mixed up with a couple of sacrificial birds of a woman who experiences childbirth or that of another woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding.",
46
+ "ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ and he (i.e., the priest) offers up only two from the four that are mixed up, one for a burnt offering and one for a sin-offering, and nothing additional. For if he (i.e., the priest) had made two burnt offerings, perhaps he would do them from one nest, and every couple of birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is to be the burnt offering, and which is to be the sin-offering.",
47
+ "ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ โ€“ if one couple of birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is to be the burnt offering, and which is to be the sin-offering that was mixed up with two or three other couples of birds, he (i.e., the priest) is not able to offer up other than one set of birds, a single pigeon for a sin-offering and a single pigeon for a burnt-offering. But he (i.e., the priest) cannot make two burnt-offerings, lest he take the couple of birds that has been first selected for a woman who gave birth, who cannot make from it other than one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering. And similarly, if ten couples of birds were mixed with one-hundred, he (i.e., the priest) does not offer up from all of them other than ten sets of birds, some of them for sin-offerings and some of them for burnt-offerings and he rest of them are invalid, and that which is the smaller thing is kosher/fit.",
48
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ืื—ื“ โ€“ one birth and another birth, a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding with another woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding.",
49
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืช โ€“ a woman who has given birth with a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding, whether from two women whether from one woman, as will be explained further on."
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ not because Rabbi Yossi holds that there is a retroactive designation, and we should say that when the Kohen offered up one set of birds for one single denomination/class of them, the matter became clarified retroactively that from the beginning at the time of the taking of the set of birds, this set of birds was hers, but rather, the Gemara (Tractate Eruvin 37a) in the chapter: โ€œWith any [food] do they prepare an Eruvโ€ that Rabbi Yossi is speaking that they made a condition at the time of purchase that the Kohen is able to make a set of birds that he desires for the sake of whichever woman that he wants. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
53
+ ]
54
+ ],
55
+ [
56
+ [
57
+ "ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” โ€“ that he did not specify that this one (i.e., bird) is for a sin-offering and that one is for a burnt-offering. And we donโ€™t require that it had been decided upon, for it is obvious, that if one of them flew-off, he (i.e., the owner) would purchase another mate for the second [offering], for since they are separated one from the other (i.e., one for a sin-offering and the other for a burnt-offering), and each one has a designation/denomination upon it. But even a couple of sacrificial birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is which and they stand together to be specified/defined, you might think I would say that if one flew off, the other would die, this comes to teach us that this is not the case.",
58
+ "ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช โ€“ among couples of sacrificial birds that their judgment is that all of them would die, as for example, a sin-offering that got mixed in with a burnt-offering, as it is taught in the first chapter (Tractate Kinnin, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2).",
59
+ "ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช โ€“ whether a couple of birds concerning which it has not been decided which is to be burnt offering, and which of them is the sin-offering that stand to be offered up.",
60
+ "ืคืกื•ืœ ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื• โ€“ because it is not undetermined, and has been decided if it is for a sin-offering or for a burnt-offering, therefore, it does not invalidate other than the one that is its match in the pair, as will be explained further on."
61
+ ],
62
+ [
63
+ "ืคืจื— โ€“ one pigeon from this [pair of unassigned birds] to the other womanโ€™s [pair of unassigned birds].",
64
+ "ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ืชื• โ€“ from the place that it separated itself. And it invalidates it itself or another from the place where it became mixed. For when one pigeon flew out from two couples of birds to two other couples of birds, there are three pigeons alone and five pigeons alone, but from three pigeons, one is not able to sacrifice only two, one for a burnt-offering and one for a sin-offering, for if he would make two of them burnt-offerings it is fund that the third that remains was fixed/established, and that one (i.e., pigeon) which flew away is for a sin-offering, and he is not able to offer any further from the five individual pigeons, other than the two sin-offerings, according to the law of sin-offerings that were mixed with an obligatory offering, as we stated in the first chapter (see Tractate Kinnim, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2), that is not kosher/fit other than the number of sin-offerings that is part of the obligatory offering. Alternatively, one does not offer up [as a sacrifice] the third that remains, for we are concerned that perhaps that they will offer up the one that flew away with the five single pigeons and make it is a sin-offering, and his fellow that remains with three individual birds will also make it a sin-offering, and it is found that there will be two sin-offerings from one couple of sacrificial birds. And similarly, from the five individual pigeons he is not able to offer only two sin-offerings and two burnt-offerings, for if he made three sin-offerings or three burnt-offerings, perhaps he would make them from two couples of sacrificial birds of one woman, and there is no law of two couples of sacrificial birds other than with two sin-offerings and two burnt-offerings, and that is that is it invalid โ€“ it or another [bird] in the place where it was mixed, and it invalidates the other [bird] that is corresponding to it from the place that it flew off and was separated from there.",
65
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื• โ€“ it (i.e., the original bird who flew off) returned and one of the five individual pigeons flew off into [this group of three], that it was now found four individual pigeons from here and four individual pigeons from there. The one through its return invalidates from the place that it separated from and left from there, and it or another are invalid in the place where it mixed there, and the cannot offer up other than one sin-offering and one burnt offering from the four that are here, and one sin-offering and one burnt-offering from the other four. For perhaps, that individual pigeon that flew away second is from the same two couples of sacrificial birds and is not the one that became mixed in it initially, and there remained there three individual pigeons from the two couples of sacrificial birds and that one that flew away there first, and similarly in the second place. But if he made in one place two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering, that [bird] which flew away to the other side would be set for a a sin-offering offering and he would not be able to offer up there [anything] other than one sin-offering, for perhaps, all thee sin-offerings that were made from here and there will be from two couples of sacrificial birds of one woman, therefore, one makes in every place one burnt-offering and one sin-offering, or two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering on this side and one sin-offering on that side, or two sin-offerings and a burnt offering on this side, and on the second side one burnt-offering, but if they returned and mixed together, always, there wonโ€™t be for them less than two couples of sacrificial birds that are fit/kosher."
66
+ ],
67
+ [
68
+ "ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•' โ€“ one pigeon flew off from the [woman with the] first [pair] to the [woman who had] two pairs, immediately that individual [bird] that remained in the first [pair] was disqualified/made unfit, for if one would make of it a sin-offering, it would established that it (i.e., the bird) that flew off was for a burnt-offering, and one is not able to offer up [from] the second bird, and with other couples of birds that were mixed up with them, burnt-offerings are [offered up] from only half-of the, like the burnt-offering that was mixed up with an obligatory [sacrifice]. And similarly if it flew off from the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], perhaps it flew off from the body of the second, but that which flew off from the first [woman] remained there with the second, and one cannot make from the second only two individual pigeons, one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering, for if he made two burnt offerings, perhaps he would make them from the pigeons of the body of the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], and if so, that [bird] which flew off from the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] would be fixed for a sin-offering and he would not be able to make with the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] only half of them as sin-offerings, but not more. And similarly, if it flew off from the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], perhaps the one (i.e., bird) that flew off was from the body of [couples of sacrificial birds] of the third [woman] , and there did not remain with her other than five individual pigeons and one pigeon from the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] that was mixed up with the, and he (i.e., the Kohen) is not able to make with the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] anything other than two burnt offerings and two sin-offerings because it was mixed up with the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds]. And similarly, when it (i.e., the bird) flew off from the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds] to the fifth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds], the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds] is not kosher, other than for three sin-offerings and three sin-offerings. And similarly, from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], he (i.e., the Kohen) four sin-offerings and four burnt-offering. And similarly, from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], it is not kosher/fit with the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] other than five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, for it if he (i.e., the Kohen) had made six burnt-offerings, it that [bird] which flew off would be established for sin-offerings in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] but he would not be able to make with the seventh [couples of sacrificial birds] anything other than seven sin-offerings without any burnt-offerings. But when he (i.e., the Kohen) returns from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial offerings] and one pigeon flew off from the sixth, perhaps it was not the same [bird] that flew off at the beginning from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], but rather from the body of the seventh that it flew off, and it invalidated in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] two pigeons , and it is not kosher other than six sin-offerings and six sin-offerings, for he (i.e., the Kohen) had made seven sin-offerings, that [pigeon] that flew off would be fixed [and with others] for a burnt-offering, and he would not be able to offer only burnt-offerings form half of the pigeons, for the other half would be invalid according to the law of a burnt-offering that was mixed up with an obligatory sacrifice. And similarly, when it (i.e., the pigeon) flew off from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the fifth, it was disqualified in its return another couple of sacrificial birds and it is not kosher/fit with the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] other than four sin-offerings and four burnt-offerings, for perhaps from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] flew off one from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] and one from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] in [its] return, and there does not remain for her other than ten individual pigeons from her couples, but if he (i.e., the Kohen) made five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, perhaps the two individual pigeons that flew off from her would be offered both as burnt-offerings, and if so, they would make seven burnt-offerings with complements of bird offerings, or if both of them would be made as sin-offerings, it would not be able to make with six couples of bird-offerings six burnt-offerings and six sin-offerings. And similarly, from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], and from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings]. And from the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], for there isnโ€™t in the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] other than two individual pigeons, one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt offering. But if you say, but why did the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings lose two [pigeons], for from those [birds] which flew away in the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] with [their] return, they are not offered up [as sacrifices], for it is taught that the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] has none, for we should have said that the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] had two couples of bird offerings but in the second, there arenโ€™t any, or in the second there is one couple of bird-offerings but in the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] there is one set? But it is possible to say that since in the other [womenโ€™s couples] of bird offerings, from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples] onward, two sets of bird-offerings were disqualified, one while going and one returning, we make this decree similarly with the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings]. But with the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], only one couple of bird offerings is invalidated, for only one pigeon went from it in the return, whereas while going, nothing was invalidated and there is nothing missing from it.",
69
+ "ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ โ€“ this does not refer to the first or second [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings, for since they donโ€™t have anything but those [birds] left to die, if one of them flew off from the rest of the couples of bird-offerings, all of them would be left to die, as it is taught shortly in the Mishnah, and if one of those left to die flew off to all of them (i.e., the couples of bird-offerings), all of them would be left to die. But rather, it refers to the [bird] from the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] who flew off from it to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], or from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], or from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] or from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings,โ€ and returned from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings until the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], for from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] is missing two individual pigeons, one through the first return and the other with the second return, and there isnโ€™t fit/kosher in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-sacrifices other than five individual pigeons for burnt-offerings and five individual pigeons for sin-offerings, for if he (i.e., the Kohen) would make six burnt-offerings, perhaps the two [birds] that left from it would be offered up as burnt-offerings, which are eight burnt-offerings, but in the seven couples of bird-offerings, there arenโ€™t only burnt-offerings. And from the sixth [womanโ€™s couple of bird-offerings] there is missing four individual pigeons, two through flying away and the first [one] returning, and two [pigeons] from the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], but there remained two kosher couples of bird-offerings, for if he (i.e., the Kohen) made three burnt-offerings, perhaps the four [birds] that left it will be burnt-offerings, hence seven burnt-offerings, but there arenโ€™t in six couples of bird-offerings anything other than six burnt-offerings. And similarly, in the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], there is nothing kosher/fit there other than one [bird] for a burnt-offering and one [bird] for a sin-offering. And similarly, it is difficult here, since with the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] she has nothing, he (i.e., the Kohen) would be able to offer from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] three burnt-offerings and three sin-offerings, for those that left from fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] are not offered up, and according to this, that the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] has none other than one that he would be able to offer up, he would be able to offer up with the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] two burnt-offerings and two sin-offerings. But rather, we decreed that with each flying off [of a bird] and each return [of a bird], two couples of bird-offerings [a decree for this one โ€“ couple of bird-offerings โ€“ is for the sake of/on account of that one โ€“ couple of bird-offerings] are affected. And similarly, when it (i.e., the bird) flew off and returned a third time, they have nothing except for the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] that she has four [pairs of birds], similarly we decree with each flying off and return [of a bird] two couples of bird-offerings [are affected].",
70
+ "ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ an explanation, with flying off and retuning a third time, but rather, always, one will offer up from it five couples of bird-offerings. For three individual pigeons flew off from it at the most, and there remained with it only eleven individual pigeons, he (i.e., the Kohen) will make from them five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, since even the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] has nothing. But here we donโ€™t make the decree through this flying off like with the other couples of bird-offerings, sine it does not lose with flying off at any time, they didnโ€™t make a decree regarding the return [of the birds to the nest]. But the Halakha is not according to the opinion of there are those who say."
71
+ ],
72
+ [
73
+ "ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” โ€“ he did not explain which was [designated/specified] for a sin-offering and which was [designated/specified] for a burnt-offering.",
74
+ "ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช โ€“ that it is known that this one was [designated/specified] for a sin-offering and that one was [designated] for a burnt-offering. But here, we are speaking when the two pigeons were combined together after they were designated/specified, and now it is not known which is for a sin-offering and which is for a burnt offering, and this is shown in the concluding clause [of the Mishnah] that teaches: โ€œor [if] at first one which had been designated flew off to the first undesignated pair, all of them are left to die, but if the individual pigeons that had been designated/specified did not became mixed with each other, why should they be [all] left to die, but if the burnt-offering flew off, the remaining [bird] for the sin-offering should be offered up, and similarly, the unspecified/undesignated couple of sacrificial birds , should be offered up as one burnt-offering because of the burnt-offering that became mixed up with it. But we are speaking of when individual pigeons that were designated became mixed up one with another, but if one individual pigeon from the pair of sacrificial birds had not been designated/specified had been combined with that which was designated, he (i.e., the Kohen) should take one pair for second [bird] and designate one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering, and the third that had been combined/mixed up together, all of them should be left to die. If one from the three that had been mixed up/combined returned and became combined with the individual [bird] remaining from the undesignated/specified group, or at the outset of flying off, combined one from the designated [pair] to that which was not designated/specified, which is the first as we stat, meaning to say, that at the outset of flying off, one went and combined with an undesignated pair, all of them should be left to die, for since the individual pigeons which had been designated had combined together, they are no longer offered up, and when one of them flee off in another place, that is, one from the ones left to die that flew off among those that were to be offered up, all of them should be left to die."
75
+ ],
76
+ [
77
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื›ืืŸ โ€“ an individual pigeon that was designated/specified for a sin-offering to one side, and an individual pigeon that was designated/specified for a burnt-offering to the second side, and two individual pigeons of an undesignated/unspecified nature (i.e., either for a sin-offering or for a burnt-offering) in the center.",
78
+ "ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืข โ€“ one individual pigeon to the right and one individual pigeon to the left.",
79
+ "ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ that the one that is combined with the sin-offerings will be made for a sin-offering, and the one that is with the burnt-offerings will be made a burnt-offering, but not for a sin-offering, for perhaps he (i.e., the Kohen) will make it from the designated/specified [ones] for a burnt-offering.",
80
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืœืืžืฆืข โ€“ they (i.e., the pigeons) returned from the sides, one from here and the other from there and combined together, they are left to die, for they are a [designated] sin-offering and a [designated] burnt-offering that were combined/mixed together. But those which remained, each one alone, each are offered according to their respective law.",
81
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ื™ื ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ those [designated] for sin-offerings and/or burnt-offerings are combined/mixed, and all are left to die.",
82
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” โ€“ but rather either both of them are turtle-doves or both of them are pigeons.",
83
+ "ืชื›ืคื•ืœ ื•ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” โ€“ as according to the law for the sin-offering. For the sin-offering is the essence/main object, whether he (i.e., the Kohen) set it aside first or whether he set it aside at the end.",
84
+ "ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ โ€“ but she does not bring the second, but rather from the species that she set aside/designated first, whether it was a sin-offering first or whether it was a bunt-offering. And the Halakha is according to the first Tanna/teacher (i.e., that both the sin-offering and burnt-offering shojld come from the same species).",
85
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื” โ€“ for it is a sin-offering where its owners had died. But if it is not for this reason, we bring a sin-offering even though she offered a burnt-offering first. But even thought that in every case/place the sin-offering precedes the burnt-offering, this is especially for the Mitzvah, but not to be indispensable/to invalidate an act by omission."
86
+ ]
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ [
90
+ "ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื ืžืœืš (under what circumstances do the rules apply? In the case of a Kohen who makes inquiry) โ€“ It is referring to the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim, Mishnayot 2-3]. And this is what we stated: Under what circumstances do the rules apply? That a sin-offering that was combined/mixed with a burnt-offering that all of them should be left to die, and similarly, one to this one and two to that one and the third to that one, that the minority is Kosher/fit, these words regard a Kohen that comes to inquire and to ask what is their law. But a Kohen who does not inquire and acted according to this own knowledge, one complete couple of sacrificial birds above [the red line] for one woman, the burnt offering is kosher/fit but the sin-offering is invalid. But if he made [an offering of] one complete couple of sacrificial birds below [the red line], the sin-offering is valid and the burnt-offering is invalid. Therefore, one (i.e., sin-offering) for this one [woman] and one (i.e., burnt-offering) for that one [woman, two [complete couples of sacrificial birds] for this one [woman] (i.e., sin-offering) and two [complete couples of sacrificial birds] for that one [woman] (i.e., burnt-offering) and made all of them, above [the red line], half are kosher which are the burnt-offerings and half of them are invalid which are sin-offerings. But if he made [an offering of] all of them, below [the red line], the sin-offerings are kosher/fit but the burnt-offerings are invalid. And all of the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim] speaks of ab initio, but this chapter speaks of post-facto/after-the-fact. And one [burnt-offering] to this woman and two [burnt-offerings] to that woman, that we stated above when he (i.e., the Kohen) makes inquiry, the minority are kosher, here without inquiry, the majority are kosher/fit, since he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering of] half of them above [the red line] and half of them below [the red line]. How so? Behold that from one [sin-offering] for this [woman], he (i.e., the Kohen) made that couple of bird-offerings of [this] woman above [the red line] and from two couples of bird-offerings of another woman, he (i.e., the Kohen) made one individual pigeon from them above [the red line] in order that half of them would be above, and there remained three individual pigeons below [the red line], behold two burnt-offerings above [the red line] ae kosher/fit, and two sin-offerings below [the red line], behold two couples of bird-offerings are kosher/fit, and the third is invalid, and this is the majority that is kosher. And similarly, two [couples of bird-offerings] for this woman and three [couples of bird-offerings] for that woman, from the two couples of bird-offerings, there are four individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line], and furthermore, he (i.e., the Kohen) took one individual pigeon from the three couples of bird offerings, there are five individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line] and five [individual pigeons offered] below [the red line]; from the five individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line], there are three burnt-offerings and from [that offered] below [the red line] there are three sin-offerings, behold three couples of bird-offerings are kosher, and this is the majority that are kosher/fit, but however, ten [couples of bird-offerings] for this [woman] and one-hundred [couples of bird-offerings] for that [woman], it is impossible to find in this matter because they are pairs, and one needs to state that the majority are kosher/fit, as is taught in our Mishnah, he does not return ought other than one to this [woman] and two to that [woman], etc., which are not pairs, but since it is taught in the Mishnah above that in this manner the minority are kosher/fit, it also teaches in this manner that the majority are kosher/fit without making inquiry. But however, even with ten [couples of sacrificial birds] to this [woman] and one-hundred [couples of sacrificial birds] to that [woman], the majority are kosher, for there is nothing invalid from them other than ten [couples of sacrificial birds], for perhaps all of the couples of sacrificial birds were of one woman [offered] above [the red line] and the sin-offerings were invalidated, or all of them [were offered] below [the red line] and the burnt-offerings were invalidated, by force, ten complete couples of bird-sacrifices are invalid.",
91
+ "ืืช ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ [half of them are kosher/fit and half are invalid] since he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering up] of a complete couple of bird-offerings above [the red line]. For since these couples of bird-offerings were for two women, they should bring another couple of bird-offerings in partnership and give them between them, if from the first is a burnt-offering for Leah, the let the last be a sin-offering for Leah, or its opposite. And specifically, he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering of] a complete couple of bird-offerings above [the red line], but if he split up/divided the couples of bird-offerings, one individual pigeon above [the red line] and one individual pigeon below [the red line] everything is Kosher, for I state that the burnt-offering is above [the red line] and the sin-offering is below [the red line], for the couples of bird-offerings are specified through the action of the Kohen."
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ "ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื—ืœื•ืง ื›ื•' โ€“ meaning to say, that the couple of sacrificial-birds of one woman is not divided in half, but rather one couple of sacrificial birds [is offered] above [the red line] and another womanโ€™s couple of sacrificial birds [is offered] below [the red line], half of it is kosher/fit and half of it is invalid.",
95
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example, one [couple of sacrificial birds] to this [woman] and two [couples of sacrificial birds] to that [woman] where there is a division of one womanโ€™s [couple of sacrificial birds to be offered] above [the red line] and below [the red line], the majority are kosher, as has been explained."
96
+ ],
97
+ [
98
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• โ€“ this also refers to that which is taught above in the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim, Mishnah 3], a burnt-offering that became mixed/combined with a sin-offering or the opposite, all of them are left to die. And these words [apply] when [the priest] made inquiry on the mixture and made [the offering] of one couple of sacrificial birds above [the red line] and one couple of sacrificial birds below [the red line], half of them are kosher/fit and half of them are invalid. But even though that he did not come to make inquiry, we state to him that he (i.e., the Kohen) should not offer them up, as it is taught, they should all be left to die, now that he didnโ€™t make any inquiry, we state that each one should be performed according to Halakha and they are kosher/fit."
99
+ ],
100
+ [
101
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช โ€“ two women who purchased three couples of sacrificial birds, this one (i.e., woman) needs a burnt offering and a complete couple of sacrificial birds, that is two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering, and the second [woman] needs one sin offering and one complete couple of sacrificial birds, which are two sin-offerings and one burnt-offering, and they designated/specified one individual pigeon from the couple of sacrificial birds for a burnt-offering for this one (i.e., woman) and one individual pigeon as a sin-offering for that one [woman], and one from the couple of sacrificial birds they left undesignated , for they didnโ€™t specify which would be for a burnt-offering and which for a sin-offering. But the third [woman] they designated/specified which was for a burnt-offering and which was for a sin-offering, but the owners didnโ€™t specify behold a sin-offering for this [woman] and a burnt-offering for that one [woman] and an undesignated couple of sacrificial birds and a designated couple of sacrificial birds, and he (i.e., the Kohen) needs to offer up as a sacrifice these two couples of sacrificial birds undesignated for both of them, the burnt-offerings above [the red line] and the sin-offerings below [the red line], and a burnt-offering for this one [woman] and a sin-offering for that [woman] he needs to offer in the name of the owners. But if the Kohen gave them, one-half below [the red line] and one-half above [the red line], none are kosher/fit other than the undesignated ones, which type did he made as a burnt-offering and which type did he make as a sin-offering, it is kosher/fit, since each couple of sacrificial birds was of its own.",
102
+ "ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ื‘ื™ืžื™ื”ื โ€“ since he purchased them in a mixture, the one fulfilled for the sin-offering and the other fulfilled for the burnt-offering."
103
+ ],
104
+ [
105
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ that is to say, that which we taught above in the Chapter One [Tractate Kinnim, Mishnah two] a sin-offering that was combined/confused with an obligatory sacrifice is not kosher/fit other than only the number corresponding to the sin-offerings among [the offerings brought in fulfillment of] an obligation, that sometimes, that number goes up to half kosher/fit and half invalid, and sometimes it goes to less than half, and it will explain further on how so.",
106
+ "ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ explanation, two couples of bird sacrifices for an obligation they have twice as many as that brought for a sin-offering, as for example, that he offered up as a sacrifice from them one burnt-offering and there remained two sin-offerings and one burnt-offering.",
107
+ "ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ that one burnt-offering that remains cannot be offered lest this is the one that is set for a sin-offering, and a sin-offering that is confused/combined he (i.e., the Kohen) cannot offer up lest it is the remaining burnt-offering, therefore he does not offer up ought other than two sin-offerings, but the sin-offering that is confused/combined and the burnt-offering that remains are invalid, and this is half of them are kosher/fit and half of them are invalid.",
108
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ โ€“ explanation, as for example, that she offered up one sin-offering from the two couples of bird sacrifices and there remained two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering. Behold they are four individual pigeons with the sin-offering that was confused/mixed up between them, and he is not able to offer up two burnt-offerings lest he take the confused/mixed-up sin-offering, and also he cannot offer up two sin-offerings lest he take that [bird] that is set for the burnt-offering, therefore, he doesnโ€™t sacrifice anything other than one sin-offering, for the burnt-offering of that is the lesser number that is the less than that which is half-kosher/fit. And in a similar manner we explain also and similarly the burnt-offering that was confused/mixed-up with an obligatory sacrifice."
109
+ ],
110
+ [
111
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืœื›ืฉืืœื“ ื–ื›ืจ โ€“ we are dealing with a poor woman who gave birth, whereas if she was rich, she brings a sheep for her obligatory offering.",
112
+ "ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืœืžืขืœื” -that the couple of sacrificial birds for a free-will offering โ€“ both of them are burnt-offerings and the couple of sacrificial birds of the obligatory sacrifice is a burnt-offering above [the red line] and a sin-offering below [the red line], but he did not do so, but rather two [burnt-offerings] above [the red line] and two [sin-offerings] below, and he did not make inquiry with her to know on what she brought, and one individual pigeon was invalidated, therefore, she needs to bring another individual pigeon and she will offer it above [the red line].",
113
+ "ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ that is to say, in what case is this statement said, when they (i.e., the birds) were of one kind. But if there were two couples of sacrificial birds that she brought from two different species, that is, one couple of sacrificial birds that are turtle-doves and another that are pigeons, she must bring one individual turtle-dove and one individual pigeon, in order to replace the individual bird that was invalidated, and we donโ€™t know if it was from the turtle-doves or from the pigeons, and it is taught in the Mishnah above (see Tractate Kinnin, Chapter 2, Mishnah 5): โ€œThey do not bring turtle-doves to make up pairs for young pigeons, or young pigeons to make up pairs for turtle-doves.โ€",
114
+ "ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” - when she brought two couples of bird sacrifices to the Kohen, she specified and stated: \"these are for my vow, and those are for my obligation [sacrifice].\"",
115
+ "ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ meaning to say, if these two couples of bird sacrifices were from one species, that is, both of them were turtle-doves or both of them pigeons, and the Kohen offered from them two above [the red line] and two below [the red line], only one individual pigeon is kosher from all of the four that he sacrificed, and it is the burnt-offering that is the obligatory sacrifice, and she needs to bring three more individual pigeons and he (i.e., the Kohen) offers them one below [the red line] which is the sin-offering that is in the obligatory [sacrifice] and two above [the red line] and this is the vow.",
116
+ "ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข โ€“ if she brought two couples of two bird sacrifices from two species and specified in her vow but the Kohen did not know which two them he performed (i.e., sprinkled the blood of) above [the red line] and which two of them he performed (i.e., sprinkled the blood of) below [the red line], she needs to bring four individual birds, for perhaps the two turtle-doves that she brought for her vow and they are burnt-offerings were performed below [the red line] and there remains for her the entire vow [to be fulfilled]. But the two pigeons which are obligatory were performed above [the red line] and the remains for her one pigeon for the sin-offering of her obligation, or perhaps the two pigeons of her obligation were performed below [the red line] and there remains upon her the pigeon of the burnt-offering from her obligatory [sacrifice].",
117
+ "ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” โ€“ as for example, that she said at the time of vow: โ€œI pledge upon myself a couple of sacrificial birds from a certain species, and she specified her vow as [mentioned] above, she did not specify anything at the time of the vow, but rather after she made an unspecified vow: โ€œI pledge upon myself a couple of sacrificial birds,โ€ she brought from whichever species that she wanted and stated: โ€œthese are for my vow.โ€",
118
+ "ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช โ€“ here we are speaking as for example, that after she established her vow and brought her vow with her obligatory [sacrifice] to the Kohen, the Kohen executed two [sprinklings of the blood of the sacrificial birds] above [the red line] and two [sprinklings of the blood of the sacrificial birds] below [the red line] and he did not know if he executed her vow above [the red line] and her obligatory sacrifice below [the red line] if [not] the opposite, and she also forgot which species [of birds] she established for her vow, whether turtle-doves or pigeons, she needs to bring another five single pigeons, for perhaps the vow was executed/performed below [the red line] and the obligatory [sacrifice] was executed above [the red line] and none of it was kosher/fit except the burnt-offering that is part of the obligatory offering alone and there remains upon her the sin-offering of the obligatory sacrifice and two burnt-offerings of the vow, but because she forgot which species [of birds] she established for her vow, she needs to bring two turtle doves and two pigeons and to execute/perform [the sprinkling of the blood] for all of them above [the red line] in order to fulfill her [sacrificial] obligation regarding her vow, and she also needs to bring a pigeon or a turtle dove for the sin-offering to complete her obligatory [sacrifice], hence five individual pigeons. And these words, when she brought from the outset her vow and her obligatory sacrifice, all of them were from one species [of birds]. But if she knew that at the outset that she brought her vow and her obligatory sacrifices from two kinds and she forgot from which species she established her vows, she needs to bring six individual pigeons, four [of them] to complete her vow, that is two turtle doves and two pigeons as we stated above, since she doesnโ€™t know from which species she established her vow and she needs to fulfill her obligation of both of them, and the two turtle doves or the two pigeons to execute [the sprinkling of the blood] of one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering to complete her obligatory sacrifice. But here we donโ€™t say that it is enough for her with one pigeon or turtle dove for a sin-offering alone and that the burnt-offering that she offered initially will fulfill for her for the sake of her obligatory sacrifice as was stated above, for it is all well when she brought it from one species, she doesnโ€™t need to bring [more] for the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice, whichever way you turn, if those turtle doves that she established for her vow will both be executed below [the red line], if so, [the blood] of her obligatory sacrifice [was sprinkled] above [the red line] completely and she fulfilled her obligation from the burnt-offering, but if [the sprinkling of the blood of] the her obligatory sacrifice was executed as a burnt-offering below [the red line] and the sin offering above [the red line], if so, her vow also was executed [through sprinkling of blood] one above [the red line] and one below [the red line] and she fulfilled her obligation of her vow through one [of the sprinklings] , and the two turtle doves that she brought now with one [of them] she fulfilled her obligation regarding her vow and with one [of them] she fulfilled her obligation regarding the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice. But if her obligatory sacrifice was performed completely [through sprinkling of the blood of the birds] below [the red line] then her sin-offering is kosher/fit, and her bunt-offering is invalid, the two turtle doves that she brought now โ€“ with one of them she completed her obligatory sacrifice and with of them it was a freewill offering, but the sin-offering that she brings now, is brought in doubtful [fulfillment] and she cannot consume it. But if the first ones were doves, she should bring now for her sin-offering a pigeon, but the burnt-offering is not necessary, whichever way you turn as we stated regarding the turtle doves. But when she brought two kinds of couples of bird sacrifices and she forgot which species she established for her vow and which species she established for her obligatory [sacrifice], and she also forgot what she stated explicitly and the Kohen executed each and every species [of bird] one [whose blood was sprinkled] above [the red line] and the other below [the red line] for he would hold that both of them are unspecified obligatory [sacrifices], she will bring four for her vow โ€“ two turtle doves and two doves, because she does not know which species she established for her vow, and also two species [that she needs for the sin-offering for her pair for the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice], because she doesnโ€™t know from which species it was, and we require a turtle dove corresponding to a turtle dove and a dove corresponding to a dove.",
119
+ "ื ืชื ืชื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example โ€“ that she established her vow and established her obligatory [sacrifice] and brought to the Kohen a couple of sacrificial birds for her vow and a couple of sacrificial birds for her obligatory [sacrifice] and she does not know from which species she established for her vow and from which species she established for her obligatory [sacrifice], or if she gave to the Kohen two species or one species and the Kohen [himself] does not know if he executed every [sprinkling of blood] above [the red line] or every [sprinkling of blood] below [the red line] or half [of them] above [the red line] and half [of them] below [the red line], behold this one brings four individual birds for her vow โ€“ two turtle doves and two pigeons, and she also brings two for her obligatory [sacrifice] โ€“ one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering from whichever of the two species that she wants, and she brings a sin-offering.",
120
+ "ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื›ื•' โ€“ just as when the sheep is alive, only one voice comes forth from it, but when it is dead that it would be appropriate that its voice would stop, there comes out from it seven voices as it explains further on, here also, when she initially made her vow prior to bringing anything, she did not need anything other than one couple of sacrificial birds for her vow and one couple of sacrificial birds for her obligatory [sacrifice], but after she had established her vow and brought her vow and her obligatory [sacrifice], because she doesnโ€™t know what she established and the Kohen does not know what he offered up as a sacrifice , she needs to bring four individual birds for her vow and four for her obligatory [sacrifice] as we stated.",
121
+ "ืงืจื ื™ื• ืœื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช โ€“ for Shofarot, that we call the Shofar (before the destruction of the Temple) is now called a trumpet (see Talmud Sukkah 34a).",
122
+ "ืืฃ ืฆืžืจื• โ€“ to make from it Tekhelet (i.e., the purple-blue thread used for the show-fringes on the prayer shawl). They make from its wool a coat that is entirely Tekhelet and on the skirts of the garment are bells that produces a sound/voice. The first Tanna/teacher does not consider it because the Tekhelet does not produce a sound but rather the bells that are on the skirts of the garment around it.",
123
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ืขืงืฉื™ื ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ even all of this is similar to this matter, for just as when it (i.e., the animal) is dead, its voice is seven, so also the Sages of Torah, when they age and come to feebleness/weakness in [physical] strength, they add wisdom [through their teaching].",
124
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืกื™ืจ ืฉืคื” ืœื ืืžื ื™ื โ€“ but Scripture is speaking about the common, uneducated person, for further on from this it is written (Job 12:24): โ€œHe deranges the leaders of the [uneducated/common] people, [And makes them wander in a trackless waste].โ€",
125
+ "ื‘ื™ืฉื™ืฉื™ื ื—ื›ืžื” โ€“ that is the Sages, but for the uneducated/common people, what is wisdom for them?"
126
+ ]
127
+ ]
128
+ ],
129
+ "sectionNames": [
130
+ "Chapter",
131
+ "Mishnah",
132
+ "Comment"
133
+ ]
134
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim/English/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Kinnim",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืœืžื˜ื” โ€“ from the red line [encircling the Temple altar at precisely half its height], as it is written (Leviticus 5:9): โ€œHe shall sprinkle some of the blood of the purification (i.e., sin-offering) on the side of the altar, and what remains of the blood shall be drained out at the base of the altar,โ€ the wall that its remainder is poured out toward the bottom of the altar (see Talmud Zevakhim 64b), and this is the lower wall below the red line, for the upper wall, that is from the [red] line and above, sometimes, it is poured out to the surrounding ledge (which was five cubits above the altarโ€™s base, six cubits from the ground; it was one cubit wide on all sides, surrounding the altar. The priests would walk on this ledge while performing certain sacrificial functions), such as that he performed it above the surrounding ledge, that the [red] line is a cubit below the surrounding ledge.",
10
+ "ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžืขืœื” โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 4:25, 30, 34): โ€œ[The priest shall take with his finger some of the blood of the purification offering and put it] on the horns of the altar [of burnt offering],โ€ on the integral portion of the horn [of the altar]. ",
11
+ "ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื” โ€“ The burnt offering of the bird is above, as it is written (Leviticus 1:15): โ€œ[The priest shall bring it to the altar,] pinch off its head, and turn the whole into smoke on the altar; and its blood shall be drained [against the side of the altar],โ€ just as the burning on the altar/letting rise in smoke is at the top of the altar, so the pinching and the wringing out [of the blood of the sacrifice] is at the top of the altar.",
12
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžื˜ื” โ€“ as it is written concerning it (Leviticus 4:7): โ€œ[The priest shall put some of the blood on the horns of the altar of aromatic incense, which is in the Tent of Meeting, before the LORD,] and all the rest of the blood he shall pour out at the base of the altar/ืืœ-ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— of burnt offering.โ€",
13
+ "ื•ืื ืฉื™ื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ this that is invalid if he performed the act [of offering] the sin-offering of the bird above [the red line], specifically regarding the sprinkling. But the pinching of the birdโ€™s head of a sin-offering, even above [the red line] is kosher/fit, for pinching of the birdโ€™s head is kosher in every place of the altar. But the burnt-offering of birds does not have sprinkling of blood, but only the wringing/squeezing out the blood, and if he performed it below [the red line] it is invalid.",
14
+ "ืกื“ืจ ืงื ื™ื ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as for example, in the case of a man suffering from gonorrhea/ื–ื‘, a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type blood on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding/ื–ื‘ื” and a woman after childbirth vaginally/ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, and ritual impurity with regard to the Temple and its sacred articles/ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• and hearing the sound of an imprecation/ืฉืžื™ืขืช ืงื•ืœ ืืœื” and an erroneous statement without legal consequences/ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™ ืฉืคืชื™ื, for all of them bring a bird in poverty, but rather that the man suffering from gonorrhea and the woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type blood bring a bird, whether they are in poverty or in wealth, and even though there are bird-offerings of the convert which are obligations, and both of them are burnt-offerings, the Tanna/teacher was not troubled by them, because they are not all that frequent.",
15
+ "ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ because only burnt-offerings and peace-offerings are brought for vows and free-will offerings, but birds are not brought as peace-offerings, therefore, vows and free-will offerings are all burnt-offerings."
16
+ ],
17
+ [
18
+ "ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ โ€“ but it is not neutralized in a majority, for these are considered living creatures and are not neutralized.",
19
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ a dove or a pigeon of a sin-offering that was mixed up with two couples of sacrificial birds of an obligatory offering, that is couples of sacrificial birds for a woman giving birth or a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding/ื–ื‘ื” for each couple of sacrificial birds - of them one for a burnt-offering and one for a sin-offering, and it is now found that there are five pairs of pigeons that are mixed up together.",
20
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ื” โ€“ and he is not able to bring from those five pairs of pigeons other than two sin-offerings alone, that is the kosher number in two couples of sacrificial birds of an obligation. For if he made three sins-offerings, perhaps from the two couples of sacrificial birds, he made it, and not from that which was mixed up/confused in them, and from the two couples of sacrificial birds, they are not able to make only two sin-offerings, and he cannot make even one burnt-offering and one sin-offering.",
21
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ a pigeon or a dove that was separated for the sake of a burnt-offering.",
22
+ "ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ with two mere couples of sacrificial birds.",
23
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ as is explained above concerning the sin-offering.",
24
+ "ื‘ืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ื ื“ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขื˜ืช โ€“ as for example, one couple of sacrificial birds which is separated that were burnt-offerings, that was combined/confused with several unassigned couples of sacrificial birds that are burnt-offerings, that were mixed up/confused with several regular couples of sacrificial birds of women who gave birth or of a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month when she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding, that each couple of sacrificial birds, one of them is a sin-offering and one of them is a burnt-offering.",
25
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example, one unassigned set of sacrificial birds that became mixed up with several sets of sacrificial birds for burnt-offerings, and we call these burnt-offerings that were set aside as a free-will offering, because with vows and free-will offerings, all of them are burnt-offerings as is taught in the Mishnah at the beginning of the chapter (Tractate Kinnim, Chapter 1, Mishnah 1)."
26
+ ],
27
+ [
28
+ "ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ that the couple of sacrificial birds of obligatory offering that some of them are sin-offerings and some of them were burnt-offerings were mixed up with the couple of sacrificial birds for free-will offering โ€“ all of which are burnt offerings.",
29
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• โ€“ from the couple of birds concerning which it not been decided if it for the woman who just experienced childbirth or for a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding that became mixed up with a couple of sacrificial birds of a woman who experiences childbirth or that of another woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding.",
30
+ "ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ and he (i.e., the priest) offers up only two from the four that are mixed up, one for a burnt offering and one for a sin-offering, and nothing additional. For if he (i.e., the priest) had made two burnt offerings, perhaps he would do them from one nest, and every couple of birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is to be the burnt offering, and which is to be the sin-offering.",
31
+ "ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ โ€“ if one couple of birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is to be the burnt offering, and which is to be the sin-offering that was mixed up with two or three other couples of birds, he (i.e., the priest) is not able to offer up other than one set of birds, a single pigeon for a sin-offering and a single pigeon for a burnt-offering. But he (i.e., the priest) cannot make two burnt-offerings, lest he take the couple of birds that has been first selected for a woman who gave birth, who cannot make from it other than one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering. And similarly, if ten couples of birds were mixed with one-hundred, he (i.e., the priest) does not offer up from all of them other than ten sets of birds, some of them for sin-offerings and some of them for burnt-offerings and he rest of them are invalid, and that which is the smaller thing is kosher/fit.",
32
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ืื—ื“ โ€“ one birth and another birth, a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding with another woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding.",
33
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช โ€“ a woman who has given birth with a woman who experiences a flow of menstrual-type on three consecutive days during a time of the month in which she is not due to experience menstrual bleeding, whether from two women whether from one woman, as will be explained further on."
34
+ ],
35
+ [
36
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ not because Rabbi Yossi holds that there is a retroactive designation, and we should say that when the Kohen offered up one set of birds for one single denomination/class of them, the matter became clarified retroactively that from the beginning at the time of the taking of the set of birds, this set of birds was hers, but rather, the Gemara (Tractate Eruvin 37a) in the chapter: โ€œWith any [food] do they prepare an Eruvโ€ that Rabbi Yossi is speaking that they made a condition at the time of purchase that the Kohen is able to make a set of birds that he desires for the sake of whichever woman that he wants. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
37
+ ]
38
+ ],
39
+ [
40
+ [
41
+ "ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” โ€“ that he did not specify that this one (i.e., bird) is for a sin-offering and that one is for a burnt-offering. And we donโ€™t require that it had been decided upon, for it is obvious, that if one of them flew-off, he (i.e., the owner) would purchase another mate for the second [offering], for since they are separated one from the other (i.e., one for a sin-offering and the other for a burnt-offering), and each one has a designation/denomination upon it. But even a couple of sacrificial birds concerning which it has not yet been decided which is which and they stand together to be specified/defined, you might think I would say that if one flew off, the other would die, this comes to teach us that this is not the case.",
42
+ "ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช โ€“ among couples of sacrificial birds that their judgment is that all of them would die, as for example, a sin-offering that got mixed in with a burnt-offering, as it is taught in the first chapter (Tractate Kinnin, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2).",
43
+ "ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช โ€“ whether a couple of birds concerning which it has not been decided which is to be burnt offering, and which of them is the sin-offering that stand to be offered up.",
44
+ "ืคืกื•ืœ ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื• โ€“ because it is not undetermined, and has been decided if it is for a sin-offering or for a burnt-offering, therefore, it does not invalidate other than the one that is its match in the pair, as will be explained further on."
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "ืคืจื— โ€“ one pigeon from this [pair of unassigned birds] to the other womanโ€™s [pair of unassigned birds].",
48
+ "ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ืชื• โ€“ from the place that it separated itself. And it invalidates it itself or another from the place where it became mixed. For when one pigeon flew out from two couples of birds to two other couples of birds, there are three pigeons alone and five pigeons alone, but from three pigeons, one is not able to sacrifice only two, one for a burnt-offering and one for a sin-offering, for if he would make two of them burnt-offerings it is fund that the third that remains was fixed/established, and that one (i.e., pigeon) which flew away is for a sin-offering, and he is not able to offer any further from the five individual pigeons, other than the two sin-offerings, according to the law of sin-offerings that were mixed with an obligatory offering, as we stated in the first chapter (see Tractate Kinnim, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2), that is not kosher/fit other than the number of sin-offerings that is part of the obligatory offering. Alternatively, one does not offer up [as a sacrifice] the third that remains, for we are concerned that perhaps that they will offer up the one that flew away with the five single pigeons and make it is a sin-offering, and his fellow that remains with three individual birds will also make it a sin-offering, and it is found that there will be two sin-offerings from one couple of sacrificial birds. And similarly, from the five individual pigeons he is not able to offer only two sin-offerings and two burnt-offerings, for if he made three sin-offerings or three burnt-offerings, perhaps he would make them from two couples of sacrificial birds of one woman, and there is no law of two couples of sacrificial birds other than with two sin-offerings and two burnt-offerings, and that is that is it invalid โ€“ it or another [bird] in the place where it was mixed, and it invalidates the other [bird] that is corresponding to it from the place that it flew off and was separated from there.",
49
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื• โ€“ it (i.e., the original bird who flew off) returned and one of the five individual pigeons flew off into [this group of three], that it was now found four individual pigeons from here and four individual pigeons from there. The one through its return invalidates from the place that it separated from and left from there, and it or another are invalid in the place where it mixed there, and the cannot offer up other than one sin-offering and one burnt offering from the four that are here, and one sin-offering and one burnt-offering from the other four. For perhaps, that individual pigeon that flew away second is from the same two couples of sacrificial birds and is not the one that became mixed in it initially, and there remained there three individual pigeons from the two couples of sacrificial birds and that one that flew away there first, and similarly in the second place. But if he made in one place two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering, that [bird] which flew away to the other side would be set for a a sin-offering offering and he would not be able to offer up there [anything] other than one sin-offering, for perhaps, all thee sin-offerings that were made from here and there will be from two couples of sacrificial birds of one woman, therefore, one makes in every place one burnt-offering and one sin-offering, or two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering on this side and one sin-offering on that side, or two sin-offerings and a burnt offering on this side, and on the second side one burnt-offering, but if they returned and mixed together, always, there wonโ€™t be for them less than two couples of sacrificial birds that are fit/kosher."
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•' โ€“ one pigeon flew off from the [woman with the] first [pair] to the [woman who had] two pairs, immediately that individual [bird] that remained in the first [pair] was disqualified/made unfit, for if one would make of it a sin-offering, it would established that it (i.e., the bird) that flew off was for a burnt-offering, and one is not able to offer up [from] the second bird, and with other couples of birds that were mixed up with them, burnt-offerings are [offered up] from only half-of the, like the burnt-offering that was mixed up with an obligatory [sacrifice]. And similarly if it flew off from the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], perhaps it flew off from the body of the second, but that which flew off from the first [woman] remained there with the second, and one cannot make from the second only two individual pigeons, one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering, for if he made two burnt offerings, perhaps he would make them from the pigeons of the body of the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], and if so, that [bird] which flew off from the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] would be fixed for a sin-offering and he would not be able to make with the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] only half of them as sin-offerings, but not more. And similarly, if it flew off from the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], perhaps the one (i.e., bird) that flew off was from the body of [couples of sacrificial birds] of the third [woman] , and there did not remain with her other than five individual pigeons and one pigeon from the second [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] that was mixed up with the, and he (i.e., the Kohen) is not able to make with the third [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] anything other than two burnt offerings and two sin-offerings because it was mixed up with the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds]. And similarly, when it (i.e., the bird) flew off from the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds] to the fifth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds], the fourth [womanโ€™s complement of sacrificial birds] is not kosher, other than for three sin-offerings and three sin-offerings. And similarly, from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], he (i.e., the Kohen) four sin-offerings and four burnt-offering. And similarly, from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], it is not kosher/fit with the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] other than five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, for it if he (i.e., the Kohen) had made six burnt-offerings, it that [bird] which flew off would be established for sin-offerings in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] but he would not be able to make with the seventh [couples of sacrificial birds] anything other than seven sin-offerings without any burnt-offerings. But when he (i.e., the Kohen) returns from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial offerings] and one pigeon flew off from the sixth, perhaps it was not the same [bird] that flew off at the beginning from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds], but rather from the body of the seventh that it flew off, and it invalidated in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] two pigeons , and it is not kosher other than six sin-offerings and six sin-offerings, for he (i.e., the Kohen) had made seven sin-offerings, that [pigeon] that flew off would be fixed [and with others] for a burnt-offering, and he would not be able to offer only burnt-offerings form half of the pigeons, for the other half would be invalid according to the law of a burnt-offering that was mixed up with an obligatory sacrifice. And similarly, when it (i.e., the pigeon) flew off from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] to the fifth, it was disqualified in its return another couple of sacrificial birds and it is not kosher/fit with the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] other than four sin-offerings and four burnt-offerings, for perhaps from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] flew off one from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] and one from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of sacrificial birds] in [its] return, and there does not remain for her other than ten individual pigeons from her couples, but if he (i.e., the Kohen) made five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, perhaps the two individual pigeons that flew off from her would be offered both as burnt-offerings, and if so, they would make seven burnt-offerings with complements of bird offerings, or if both of them would be made as sin-offerings, it would not be able to make with six couples of bird-offerings six burnt-offerings and six sin-offerings. And similarly, from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], and from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings]. And from the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] to the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], for there isnโ€™t in the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] other than two individual pigeons, one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt offering. But if you say, but why did the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings lose two [pigeons], for from those [birds] which flew away in the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] with [their] return, they are not offered up [as sacrifices], for it is taught that the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] has none, for we should have said that the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] had two couples of bird offerings but in the second, there arenโ€™t any, or in the second there is one couple of bird-offerings but in the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings] there is one set? But it is possible to say that since in the other [womenโ€™s couples] of bird offerings, from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples] onward, two sets of bird-offerings were disqualified, one while going and one returning, we make this decree similarly with the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings]. But with the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird offerings], only one couple of bird offerings is invalidated, for only one pigeon went from it in the return, whereas while going, nothing was invalidated and there is nothing missing from it.",
53
+ "ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ โ€“ this does not refer to the first or second [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings, for since they donโ€™t have anything but those [birds] left to die, if one of them flew off from the rest of the couples of bird-offerings, all of them would be left to die, as it is taught shortly in the Mishnah, and if one of those left to die flew off to all of them (i.e., the couples of bird-offerings), all of them would be left to die. But rather, it refers to the [bird] from the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] who flew off from it to the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], or from the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], or from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] or from the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings,โ€ and returned from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] to the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings until the third [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], for from the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] is missing two individual pigeons, one through the first return and the other with the second return, and there isnโ€™t fit/kosher in the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-sacrifices other than five individual pigeons for burnt-offerings and five individual pigeons for sin-offerings, for if he (i.e., the Kohen) would make six burnt-offerings, perhaps the two [birds] that left from it would be offered up as burnt-offerings, which are eight burnt-offerings, but in the seven couples of bird-offerings, there arenโ€™t only burnt-offerings. And from the sixth [womanโ€™s couple of bird-offerings] there is missing four individual pigeons, two through flying away and the first [one] returning, and two [pigeons] from the second [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], but there remained two kosher couples of bird-offerings, for if he (i.e., the Kohen) made three burnt-offerings, perhaps the four [birds] that left it will be burnt-offerings, hence seven burnt-offerings, but there arenโ€™t in six couples of bird-offerings anything other than six burnt-offerings. And similarly, in the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings], there is nothing kosher/fit there other than one [bird] for a burnt-offering and one [bird] for a sin-offering. And similarly, it is difficult here, since with the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] she has nothing, he (i.e., the Kohen) would be able to offer from the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] three burnt-offerings and three sin-offerings, for those that left from fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] are not offered up, and according to this, that the fifth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] has none other than one that he would be able to offer up, he would be able to offer up with the fourth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] two burnt-offerings and two sin-offerings. But rather, we decreed that with each flying off [of a bird] and each return [of a bird], two couples of bird-offerings [a decree for this one โ€“ couple of bird-offerings โ€“ is for the sake of/on account of that one โ€“ couple of bird-offerings] are affected. And similarly, when it (i.e., the bird) flew off and returned a third time, they have nothing except for the seventh [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] that she has four [pairs of birds], similarly we decree with each flying off and return [of a bird] two couples of bird-offerings [are affected].",
54
+ "ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ an explanation, with flying off and retuning a third time, but rather, always, one will offer up from it five couples of bird-offerings. For three individual pigeons flew off from it at the most, and there remained with it only eleven individual pigeons, he (i.e., the Kohen) will make from them five sin-offerings and five burnt-offerings, since even the sixth [womanโ€™s couples of bird-offerings] has nothing. But here we donโ€™t make the decree through this flying off like with the other couples of bird-offerings, sine it does not lose with flying off at any time, they didnโ€™t make a decree regarding the return [of the birds to the nest]. But the Halakha is not according to the opinion of there are those who say."
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” โ€“ he did not explain which was [designated/specified] for a sin-offering and which was [designated/specified] for a burnt-offering.",
58
+ "ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช โ€“ that it is known that this one was [designated/specified] for a sin-offering and that one was [designated] for a burnt-offering. But here, we are speaking when the two pigeons were combined together after they were designated/specified, and now it is not known which is for a sin-offering and which is for a burnt offering, and this is shown in the concluding clause [of the Mishnah] that teaches: โ€œor [if] at first one which had been designated flew off to the first undesignated pair, all of them are left to die, but if the individual pigeons that had been designated/specified did not became mixed with each other, why should they be [all] left to die, but if the burnt-offering flew off, the remaining [bird] for the sin-offering should be offered up, and similarly, the unspecified/undesignated couple of sacrificial birds , should be offered up as one burnt-offering because of the burnt-offering that became mixed up with it. But we are speaking of when individual pigeons that were designated became mixed up one with another, but if one individual pigeon from the pair of sacrificial birds had not been designated/specified had been combined with that which was designated, he (i.e., the Kohen) should take one pair for second [bird] and designate one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering, and the third that had been combined/mixed up together, all of them should be left to die. If one from the three that had been mixed up/combined returned and became combined with the individual [bird] remaining from the undesignated/specified group, or at the outset of flying off, combined one from the designated [pair] to that which was not designated/specified, which is the first as we stat, meaning to say, that at the outset of flying off, one went and combined with an undesignated pair, all of them should be left to die, for since the individual pigeons which had been designated had combined together, they are no longer offered up, and when one of them flee off in another place, that is, one from the ones left to die that flew off among those that were to be offered up, all of them should be left to die."
59
+ ],
60
+ [
61
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื›ืืŸ โ€“ an individual pigeon that was designated/specified for a sin-offering to one side, and an individual pigeon that was designated/specified for a burnt-offering to the second side, and two individual pigeons of an undesignated/unspecified nature (i.e., either for a sin-offering or for a burnt-offering) in the center.",
62
+ "ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืข โ€“ one individual pigeon to the right and one individual pigeon to the left.",
63
+ "ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ that the one that is combined with the sin-offerings will be made for a sin-offering, and the one that is with the burnt-offerings will be made a burnt-offering, but not for a sin-offering, for perhaps he (i.e., the Kohen) will make it from the designated/specified [ones] for a burnt-offering.",
64
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืœืืžืฆืข โ€“ they (i.e., the pigeons) returned from the sides, one from here and the other from there and combined together, they are left to die, for they are a [designated] sin-offering and a [designated] burnt-offering that were combined/mixed together. But those which remained, each one alone, each are offered according to their respective law.",
65
+ "ื—ื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ื™ื ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ those [designated] for sin-offerings and/or burnt-offerings are combined/mixed, and all are left to die.",
66
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” โ€“ but rather either both of them are turtle-doves or both of them are pigeons.",
67
+ "ืชื›ืคื•ืœ ื•ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” โ€“ as according to the law for the sin-offering. For the sin-offering is the essence/main object, whether he (i.e., the Kohen) set it aside first or whether he set it aside at the end.",
68
+ "ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ โ€“ but she does not bring the second, but rather from the species that she set aside/designated first, whether it was a sin-offering first or whether it was a bunt-offering. And the Halakha is according to the first Tanna/teacher (i.e., that both the sin-offering and burnt-offering shojld come from the same species).",
69
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื” โ€“ for it is a sin-offering where its owners had died. But if it is not for this reason, we bring a sin-offering even though she offered a burnt-offering first. But even thought that in every case/place the sin-offering precedes the burnt-offering, this is especially for the Mitzvah, but not to be indispensable/to invalidate an act by omission."
70
+ ]
71
+ ],
72
+ [
73
+ [
74
+ "ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื ืžืœืš (under what circumstances do the rules apply? In the case of a Kohen who makes inquiry) โ€“ It is referring to the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim, Mishnayot 2-3]. And this is what we stated: Under what circumstances do the rules apply? That a sin-offering that was combined/mixed with a burnt-offering that all of them should be left to die, and similarly, one to this one and two to that one and the third to that one, that the minority is Kosher/fit, these words regard a Kohen that comes to inquire and to ask what is their law. But a Kohen who does not inquire and acted according to this own knowledge, one complete couple of sacrificial birds above [the red line] for one woman, the burnt offering is kosher/fit but the sin-offering is invalid. But if he made [an offering of] one complete couple of sacrificial birds below [the red line], the sin-offering is valid and the burnt-offering is invalid. Therefore, one (i.e., sin-offering) for this one [woman] and one (i.e., burnt-offering) for that one [woman, two [complete couples of sacrificial birds] for this one [woman] (i.e., sin-offering) and two [complete couples of sacrificial birds] for that one [woman] (i.e., burnt-offering) and made all of them, above [the red line], half are kosher which are the burnt-offerings and half of them are invalid which are sin-offerings. But if he made [an offering of] all of them, below [the red line], the sin-offerings are kosher/fit but the burnt-offerings are invalid. And all of the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim] speaks of ab initio, but this chapter speaks of post-facto/after-the-fact. And one [burnt-offering] to this woman and two [burnt-offerings] to that woman, that we stated above when he (i.e., the Kohen) makes inquiry, the minority are kosher, here without inquiry, the majority are kosher/fit, since he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering of] half of them above [the red line] and half of them below [the red line]. How so? Behold that from one [sin-offering] for this [woman], he (i.e., the Kohen) made that couple of bird-offerings of [this] woman above [the red line] and from two couples of bird-offerings of another woman, he (i.e., the Kohen) made one individual pigeon from them above [the red line] in order that half of them would be above, and there remained three individual pigeons below [the red line], behold two burnt-offerings above [the red line] ae kosher/fit, and two sin-offerings below [the red line], behold two couples of bird-offerings are kosher/fit, and the third is invalid, and this is the majority that is kosher. And similarly, two [couples of bird-offerings] for this woman and three [couples of bird-offerings] for that woman, from the two couples of bird-offerings, there are four individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line], and furthermore, he (i.e., the Kohen) took one individual pigeon from the three couples of bird offerings, there are five individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line] and five [individual pigeons offered] below [the red line]; from the five individual pigeons [offered] above [the red line], there are three burnt-offerings and from [that offered] below [the red line] there are three sin-offerings, behold three couples of bird-offerings are kosher, and this is the majority that are kosher/fit, but however, ten [couples of bird-offerings] for this [woman] and one-hundred [couples of bird-offerings] for that [woman], it is impossible to find in this matter because they are pairs, and one needs to state that the majority are kosher/fit, as is taught in our Mishnah, he does not return ought other than one to this [woman] and two to that [woman], etc., which are not pairs, but since it is taught in the Mishnah above that in this manner the minority are kosher/fit, it also teaches in this manner that the majority are kosher/fit without making inquiry. But however, even with ten [couples of sacrificial birds] to this [woman] and one-hundred [couples of sacrificial birds] to that [woman], the majority are kosher, for there is nothing invalid from them other than ten [couples of sacrificial birds], for perhaps all of the couples of sacrificial birds were of one woman [offered] above [the red line] and the sin-offerings were invalidated, or all of them [were offered] below [the red line] and the burnt-offerings were invalidated, by force, ten complete couples of bird-sacrifices are invalid.",
75
+ "ืืช ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ [half of them are kosher/fit and half are invalid] since he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering up] of a complete couple of bird-offerings above [the red line]. For since these couples of bird-offerings were for two women, they should bring another couple of bird-offerings in partnership and give them between them, if from the first is a burnt-offering for Leah, the let the last be a sin-offering for Leah, or its opposite. And specifically, he (i.e., the Kohen) made [the offering of] a complete couple of bird-offerings above [the red line], but if he split up/divided the couples of bird-offerings, one individual pigeon above [the red line] and one individual pigeon below [the red line] everything is Kosher, for I state that the burnt-offering is above [the red line] and the sin-offering is below [the red line], for the couples of bird-offerings are specified through the action of the Kohen."
76
+ ],
77
+ [
78
+ "ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื—ืœื•ืง ื›ื•' โ€“ meaning to say, that the couple of sacrificial-birds of one woman is not divided in half, but rather one couple of sacrificial birds [is offered] above [the red line] and another womanโ€™s couple of sacrificial birds [is offered] below [the red line], half of it is kosher/fit and half of it is invalid.",
79
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example, one [couple of sacrificial birds] to this [woman] and two [couples of sacrificial birds] to that [woman] where there is a division of one womanโ€™s [couple of sacrificial birds to be offered] above [the red line] and below [the red line], the majority are kosher, as has been explained."
80
+ ],
81
+ [
82
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• โ€“ this also refers to that which is taught above in the first chapter [of Tractate Kinnim, Mishnah 3], a burnt-offering that became mixed/combined with a sin-offering or the opposite, all of them are left to die. And these words [apply] when [the priest] made inquiry on the mixture and made [the offering] of one couple of sacrificial birds above [the red line] and one couple of sacrificial birds below [the red line], half of them are kosher/fit and half of them are invalid. But even though that he did not come to make inquiry, we state to him that he (i.e., the Kohen) should not offer them up, as it is taught, they should all be left to die, now that he didnโ€™t make any inquiry, we state that each one should be performed according to Halakha and they are kosher/fit."
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช โ€“ two women who purchased three couples of sacrificial birds, this one (i.e., woman) needs a burnt offering and a complete couple of sacrificial birds, that is two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering, and the second [woman] needs one sin offering and one complete couple of sacrificial birds, which are two sin-offerings and one burnt-offering, and they designated/specified one individual pigeon from the couple of sacrificial birds for a burnt-offering for this one (i.e., woman) and one individual pigeon as a sin-offering for that one [woman], and one from the couple of sacrificial birds they left undesignated , for they didnโ€™t specify which would be for a burnt-offering and which for a sin-offering. But the third [woman] they designated/specified which was for a burnt-offering and which was for a sin-offering, but the owners didnโ€™t specify behold a sin-offering for this [woman] and a burnt-offering for that one [woman] and an undesignated couple of sacrificial birds and a designated couple of sacrificial birds, and he (i.e., the Kohen) needs to offer up as a sacrifice these two couples of sacrificial birds undesignated for both of them, the burnt-offerings above [the red line] and the sin-offerings below [the red line], and a burnt-offering for this one [woman] and a sin-offering for that [woman] he needs to offer in the name of the owners. But if the Kohen gave them, one-half below [the red line] and one-half above [the red line], none are kosher/fit other than the undesignated ones, which type did he made as a burnt-offering and which type did he make as a sin-offering, it is kosher/fit, since each couple of sacrificial birds was of its own.",
86
+ "ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ื‘ื™ืžื™ื”ื โ€“ since he purchased them in a mixture, the one fulfilled for the sin-offering and the other fulfilled for the burnt-offering."
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ that is to say, that which we taught above in the Chapter One [Tractate Kinnim, Mishnah two] a sin-offering that was combined/confused with an obligatory sacrifice is not kosher/fit other than only the number corresponding to the sin-offerings among [the offerings brought in fulfillment of] an obligation, that sometimes, that number goes up to half kosher/fit and half invalid, and sometimes it goes to less than half, and it will explain further on how so.",
90
+ "ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ explanation, two couples of bird sacrifices for an obligation they have twice as many as that brought for a sin-offering, as for example, that he offered up as a sacrifice from them one burnt-offering and there remained two sin-offerings and one burnt-offering.",
91
+ "ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ โ€“ that one burnt-offering that remains cannot be offered lest this is the one that is set for a sin-offering, and a sin-offering that is confused/combined he (i.e., the Kohen) cannot offer up lest it is the remaining burnt-offering, therefore he does not offer up ought other than two sin-offerings, but the sin-offering that is confused/combined and the burnt-offering that remains are invalid, and this is half of them are kosher/fit and half of them are invalid.",
92
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ โ€“ explanation, as for example, that she offered up one sin-offering from the two couples of bird sacrifices and there remained two burnt-offerings and one sin-offering. Behold they are four individual pigeons with the sin-offering that was confused/mixed up between them, and he is not able to offer up two burnt-offerings lest he take the confused/mixed-up sin-offering, and also he cannot offer up two sin-offerings lest he take that [bird] that is set for the burnt-offering, therefore, he doesnโ€™t sacrifice anything other than one sin-offering, for the burnt-offering of that is the lesser number that is the less than that which is half-kosher/fit. And in a similar manner we explain also and similarly the burnt-offering that was confused/mixed-up with an obligatory sacrifice."
93
+ ],
94
+ [
95
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืœื›ืฉืืœื“ ื–ื›ืจ โ€“ we are dealing with a poor woman who gave birth, whereas if she was rich, she brings a sheep for her obligatory offering.",
96
+ "ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืœืžืขืœื” -that the couple of sacrificial birds for a free-will offering โ€“ both of them are burnt-offerings and the couple of sacrificial birds of the obligatory sacrifice is a burnt-offering above [the red line] and a sin-offering below [the red line], but he did not do so, but rather two [burnt-offerings] above [the red line] and two [sin-offerings] below, and he did not make inquiry with her to know on what she brought, and one individual pigeon was invalidated, therefore, she needs to bring another individual pigeon and she will offer it above [the red line].",
97
+ "ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ that is to say, in what case is this statement said, when they (i.e., the birds) were of one kind. But if there were two couples of sacrificial birds that she brought from two different species, that is, one couple of sacrificial birds that are turtle-doves and another that are pigeons, she must bring one individual turtle-dove and one individual pigeon, in order to replace the individual bird that was invalidated, and we donโ€™t know if it was from the turtle-doves or from the pigeons, and it is taught in the Mishnah above (see Tractate Kinnin, Chapter 2, Mishnah 5): โ€œThey do not bring turtle-doves to make up pairs for young pigeons, or young pigeons to make up pairs for turtle-doves.โ€",
98
+ "ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” - when she brought two couples of bird sacrifices to the Kohen, she specified and stated: \"these are for my vow, and those are for my obligation [sacrifice].\"",
99
+ "ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ meaning to say, if these two couples of bird sacrifices were from one species, that is, both of them were turtle-doves or both of them pigeons, and the Kohen offered from them two above [the red line] and two below [the red line], only one individual pigeon is kosher from all of the four that he sacrificed, and it is the burnt-offering that is the obligatory sacrifice, and she needs to bring three more individual pigeons and he (i.e., the Kohen) offers them one below [the red line] which is the sin-offering that is in the obligatory [sacrifice] and two above [the red line] and this is the vow.",
100
+ "ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข โ€“ if she brought two couples of two bird sacrifices from two species and specified in her vow but the Kohen did not know which two them he performed (i.e., sprinkled the blood of) above [the red line] and which two of them he performed (i.e., sprinkled the blood of) below [the red line], she needs to bring four individual birds, for perhaps the two turtle-doves that she brought for her vow and they are burnt-offerings were performed below [the red line] and there remains for her the entire vow [to be fulfilled]. But the two pigeons which are obligatory were performed above [the red line] and the remains for her one pigeon for the sin-offering of her obligation, or perhaps the two pigeons of her obligation were performed below [the red line] and there remains upon her the pigeon of the burnt-offering from her obligatory [sacrifice].",
101
+ "ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” โ€“ as for example, that she said at the time of vow: โ€œI pledge upon myself a couple of sacrificial birds from a certain species, and she specified her vow as [mentioned] above, she did not specify anything at the time of the vow, but rather after she made an unspecified vow: โ€œI pledge upon myself a couple of sacrificial birds,โ€ she brought from whichever species that she wanted and stated: โ€œthese are for my vow.โ€",
102
+ "ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช โ€“ here we are speaking as for example, that after she established her vow and brought her vow with her obligatory [sacrifice] to the Kohen, the Kohen executed two [sprinklings of the blood of the sacrificial birds] above [the red line] and two [sprinklings of the blood of the sacrificial birds] below [the red line] and he did not know if he executed her vow above [the red line] and her obligatory sacrifice below [the red line] if [not] the opposite, and she also forgot which species [of birds] she established for her vow, whether turtle-doves or pigeons, she needs to bring another five single pigeons, for perhaps the vow was executed/performed below [the red line] and the obligatory [sacrifice] was executed above [the red line] and none of it was kosher/fit except the burnt-offering that is part of the obligatory offering alone and there remains upon her the sin-offering of the obligatory sacrifice and two burnt-offerings of the vow, but because she forgot which species [of birds] she established for her vow, she needs to bring two turtle doves and two pigeons and to execute/perform [the sprinkling of the blood] for all of them above [the red line] in order to fulfill her [sacrificial] obligation regarding her vow, and she also needs to bring a pigeon or a turtle dove for the sin-offering to complete her obligatory [sacrifice], hence five individual pigeons. And these words, when she brought from the outset her vow and her obligatory sacrifice, all of them were from one species [of birds]. But if she knew that at the outset that she brought her vow and her obligatory sacrifices from two kinds and she forgot from which species she established her vows, she needs to bring six individual pigeons, four [of them] to complete her vow, that is two turtle doves and two pigeons as we stated above, since she doesnโ€™t know from which species she established her vow and she needs to fulfill her obligation of both of them, and the two turtle doves or the two pigeons to execute [the sprinkling of the blood] of one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering to complete her obligatory sacrifice. But here we donโ€™t say that it is enough for her with one pigeon or turtle dove for a sin-offering alone and that the burnt-offering that she offered initially will fulfill for her for the sake of her obligatory sacrifice as was stated above, for it is all well when she brought it from one species, she doesnโ€™t need to bring [more] for the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice, whichever way you turn, if those turtle doves that she established for her vow will both be executed below [the red line], if so, [the blood] of her obligatory sacrifice [was sprinkled] above [the red line] completely and she fulfilled her obligation from the burnt-offering, but if [the sprinkling of the blood of] the her obligatory sacrifice was executed as a burnt-offering below [the red line] and the sin offering above [the red line], if so, her vow also was executed [through sprinkling of blood] one above [the red line] and one below [the red line] and she fulfilled her obligation of her vow through one [of the sprinklings] , and the two turtle doves that she brought now with one [of them] she fulfilled her obligation regarding her vow and with one [of them] she fulfilled her obligation regarding the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice. But if her obligatory sacrifice was performed completely [through sprinkling of the blood of the birds] below [the red line] then her sin-offering is kosher/fit, and her bunt-offering is invalid, the two turtle doves that she brought now โ€“ with one of them she completed her obligatory sacrifice and with of them it was a freewill offering, but the sin-offering that she brings now, is brought in doubtful [fulfillment] and she cannot consume it. But if the first ones were doves, she should bring now for her sin-offering a pigeon, but the burnt-offering is not necessary, whichever way you turn as we stated regarding the turtle doves. But when she brought two kinds of couples of bird sacrifices and she forgot which species she established for her vow and which species she established for her obligatory [sacrifice], and she also forgot what she stated explicitly and the Kohen executed each and every species [of bird] one [whose blood was sprinkled] above [the red line] and the other below [the red line] for he would hold that both of them are unspecified obligatory [sacrifices], she will bring four for her vow โ€“ two turtle doves and two doves, because she does not know which species she established for her vow, and also two species [that she needs for the sin-offering for her pair for the burnt-offering of her obligatory sacrifice], because she doesnโ€™t know from which species it was, and we require a turtle dove corresponding to a turtle dove and a dove corresponding to a dove.",
103
+ "ื ืชื ืชื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื›ื•' โ€“ as for example โ€“ that she established her vow and established her obligatory [sacrifice] and brought to the Kohen a couple of sacrificial birds for her vow and a couple of sacrificial birds for her obligatory [sacrifice] and she does not know from which species she established for her vow and from which species she established for her obligatory [sacrifice], or if she gave to the Kohen two species or one species and the Kohen [himself] does not know if he executed every [sprinkling of blood] above [the red line] or every [sprinkling of blood] below [the red line] or half [of them] above [the red line] and half [of them] below [the red line], behold this one brings four individual birds for her vow โ€“ two turtle doves and two pigeons, and she also brings two for her obligatory [sacrifice] โ€“ one for a sin-offering and one for a burnt-offering from whichever of the two species that she wants, and she brings a sin-offering.",
104
+ "ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื›ื•' โ€“ just as when the sheep is alive, only one voice comes forth from it, but when it is dead that it would be appropriate that its voice would stop, there comes out from it seven voices as it explains further on, here also, when she initially made her vow prior to bringing anything, she did not need anything other than one couple of sacrificial birds for her vow and one couple of sacrificial birds for her obligatory [sacrifice], but after she had established her vow and brought her vow and her obligatory [sacrifice], because she doesnโ€™t know what she established and the Kohen does not know what he offered up as a sacrifice , she needs to bring four individual birds for her vow and four for her obligatory [sacrifice] as we stated.",
105
+ "ืงืจื ื™ื• ืœื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช โ€“ for Shofarot, that we call the Shofar (before the destruction of the Temple) is now called a trumpet (see Talmud Sukkah 34a).",
106
+ "ืืฃ ืฆืžืจื• โ€“ to make from it Tekhelet (i.e., the purple-blue thread used for the show-fringes on the prayer shawl). They make from its wool a coat that is entirely Tekhelet and on the skirts of the garment are bells that produces a sound/voice. The first Tanna/teacher does not consider it because the Tekhelet does not produce a sound but rather the bells that are on the skirts of the garment around it.",
107
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ืขืงืฉื™ื ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ even all of this is similar to this matter, for just as when it (i.e., the animal) is dead, its voice is seven, so also the Sages of Torah, when they age and come to feebleness/weakness in [physical] strength, they add wisdom [through their teaching].",
108
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืกื™ืจ ืฉืคื” ืœื ืืžื ื™ื โ€“ but Scripture is speaking about the common, uneducated person, for further on from this it is written (Job 12:24): โ€œHe deranges the leaders of the [uneducated/common] people, [And makes them wander in a trackless waste].โ€",
109
+ "ื‘ื™ืฉื™ืฉื™ื ื—ื›ืžื” โ€“ that is the Sages, but for the uneducated/common people, what is wisdom for them?"
110
+ ]
111
+ ]
112
+ ],
113
+ "versions": [
114
+ [
115
+ "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
116
+ "http://sefaria.org"
117
+ ]
118
+ ],
119
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืงื™ื ื™ื",
120
+ "categories": [
121
+ "Mishnah",
122
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
125
+ ],
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+ "sectionNames": [
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+ "Chapter",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
130
+ ]
131
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim/Hebrew/On Your Way.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
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+ "language": "he",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim",
4
+ "versionSource": "http://mobile.tora.ws/",
5
+ "versionTitle": "On Your Way",
6
+ "status": "locked",
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+ "priority": 1.0,
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+ "license": "Public Domain",
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื•ื‘ืœื›ืชืš ื‘ื“ืจืš",
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+ "actualLanguage": "he",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
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+ "isBaseText": true,
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+ "isSource": true,
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+ "isPrimary": true,
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+ "direction": "rtl",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืงื™ื ื™ื",
17
+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
20
+ "Bartenura",
21
+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
23
+ "text": [
24
+ [
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกืงืจื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื”ื–ื” ืžื“ื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืขืœ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ื“ื ื™ืžืฆื” ืืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืงื™ืจ ืฉื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ืฉืœื• ืžืชืžืฆื™ืŸ ืœื™ืกื•ื“, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืงื™ืจ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกืงืจื. ื“ืื™ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื˜ ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชืžืฆื” ืœืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื•ืฉื”ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ืฉื”ื—ื•ื˜ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืžื”:",
27
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืงืจื ื•ืช, ื‘ื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืงืจืŸ:",
28
+ "<b>ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ืืณ) ื•ืžืœืง ื•ื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื•, ืžื” ื”ืงื˜ืจื” ื‘ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ืžืœื™ืงื” ื•ืžื™ืฆื•ื™ ื‘ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
29
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ื™ืกื•ื“:",
30
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืฉื™ื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื”ืื™ ื“ืคืกื•ืœ ืื ืขืฉื” ืžืขืฉื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื”, ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื”ื–ืื”. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžืœื™ืงื” ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืืฃ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ืฉืจื”, ื“ืžืœื™ืงื” ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืฉืจื”. ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ื”ื–ืื” ื›ื™ ืื ืžื™ืฆื•ื™, ื•ืื ืขืฉืื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ืคืกื•ืœื”:",
31
+ "<b>ืกื“ืจ ืงื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ื•ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื•ืฉืžื™ืขืช ืงื•ืœ ืืœื”, ื•ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™ ืฉืคืชื™ื, ื“ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืงืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช, ืืœื ืฉื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืงืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื’ืจ ื“ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืฉ ืชื ื ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืฉื›ื™ื—ื™ ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™:",
32
+ "<b>ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ื“ืจ ื•ื ื“ื‘ื” ืืœื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื‘ืื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช:"
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ืœื™ ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื, ื“ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ืœื™:",
36
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื”, ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืขืชื” ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื•ืช ื™ื—ื“:",
37
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืฉื–ื”ื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืœื”ื• ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช:",
38
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืคืจืฉ ืœืฉื ืขื•ืœื”:",
39
+ "<b>ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื:",
40
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
41
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขื˜ืช.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืขื ื›ืžื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืžื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”:",
42
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืกืชื•ืžื”, ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื›ืžื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื ื“ื‘ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ:"
43
+ ],
44
+ [
45
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืงื™ื ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืžืงืฆืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืขื ืงื™ื ื™ ื ื“ื‘ื” ืฉื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช:",
46
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•.</b> ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืื—ืจืช:",
47
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ืขืฉื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
48
+ "<b>ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ.</b> ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉ, ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืขื•ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื”ืงืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื•ืจืจ ืชื—ืœื” ืœื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื—ืช ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืžื ื• ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืขืฉืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืื”, ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืœื ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ:",
49
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ืœื™ื“ื” ื•ืœื™ื“ื”, ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ื–ื™ื‘ื”. ืžืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืื• ืžืืฉื” ืื—ืช:",
50
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืœื™ื“ื” ื•ื–ื™ื‘ื”, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืืฉื” ืื—ืช. ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:"
51
+ ],
52
+ [
53
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœืื• ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื™ืฉ ื‘ืจื™ืจื” ื•ื ื™ืžื ื“ื›ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉื ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืœืžืคืจืข ื“ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ืช ื”ืงืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืงืŸ ื–ื” ืฉืœื”, ืืœื ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื‘ืคืจืง ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืŸ (ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืฃ ืœืดื•) ื“ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ืฉื”ืชื ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ื” ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืงืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื” ืœืฉื ืื™ื–ื• ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืจืฆื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
54
+ ]
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ [
58
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ืœื ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื“ืคืฉื™ื˜ื ืฉืื ืคืจื— ื”ืื—ื“ ื™ืงื— ื–ื•ื’ ืœืฉื ื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืคืจืฉื™ื ื–ื” ืžื–ื” ื•ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ื•. ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื™ื—ื“ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื”ืชืคืจืฉ ื•ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ืฉืื ืคืจื— ื”ืื—ื“ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื™, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ:",
59
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช.</b> ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฉืคื˜ืŸ ืฉื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ื”ื• ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื:",
60
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ืœื™ืงืจื‘:",
61
+ "<b>ืคืกื•ืœ ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืกืชื ื•ืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื ืขื•ืœื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ืกืœ ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื•, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:"
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ืคืจื—.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื–ื• ืœื–ื•: ",
65
+ "<b>ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ืชื•.</b> ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืคืจืฉ. ื•ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘. ื“ื›ืฉืคืจื—ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืžืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืฉืชื™ื, ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืฉืื ื™ืขืฉื” ืฉืชื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื ืžืฆื ืฉื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื•ื‘ ืžื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื“ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ืื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื”ื ืฉืืจ, ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื ืžื™ ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื ืžืฆืื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืžืงืŸ ืื—ื“. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ื›ื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืื• ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืœืžื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืœื”ื• ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘, ื•ืคื•ืกืœ [ืื—ื“] ื›ื ื’ื“ื• ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืคืจื— ื•ื ืคืจืฉ ืžืฉื:",
66
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื•.</b> ื—ื–ืจ ื•ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžืื•ืชื ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืชื•ืš ืืœื• ื”ืฉืœืฉ, ืฉื ืžืฆืื• ืขืชื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ. ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื• ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืคืจืฉ ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื• ืื—ืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžืชืขืจื‘ ืฉื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ืฉื‘ื›ืืŸ, ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื”ืื—ืจื™ื. ื“ื“ืœืžื ืื•ืชื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืฉืคืจื—ื” ืฉื ื™ืช ื”ื™ื ืžืื•ืชื ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื” ืื•ืชื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ืชื” ืฉืคืจื—ื” ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ืฉื ื™. ื•ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื ืจืง ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื“ื“ื™ืœืžื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ืื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืฆื“, ื–ื” ืื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ื‘ืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช. ื•ืื ื—ื–ืจื• ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“, ืœืขื•ืœื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื:"
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืฉื ื™ื”, ืžื™ื“ ื ืคืกืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื“ืื™ ื™ืขืฉื ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ื•ื‘ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืจืง ืžื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืœืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืคืจื—, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื ืฉืืจ ืฉื ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ื•ืฃ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ื™ืขืฉื” ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืจืง ืžื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ื”ื•ื” ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื—, ื•ืœื ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ื” ืจืง ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืคื ื™ ืื•ืชื• ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืืœื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช, ื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฉืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื•ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืœื ื”ื•ื ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืžืฉืฉื™ืช, ืืœื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืคืจื— ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช [ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื] ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžื—ืฆื™ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืื—ืจื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ื–ื• ืขื•ื“ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื“ืณ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืคืจื— ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื•ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื•ืœื ื ืฉืืจ ืœื” ื›ื™ ืื ืขืฉืจ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื’ื•ืคื”, ื•ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื“ืœืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืคืจื—ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ืขืฉื• ื‘ืฉืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืื• ื™ื”ื™ื• ืขืฉื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช. ื•ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ื•ืžืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื ื™ื”, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื•ืœืžื” ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืชื™ื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืคืจื—ื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื•, ื“ื”ื ืงืชื ื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœืŸ ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ื›ืœื•ื, ืื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืงืŸ ืื—ื“. ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื ืคืกืœื• ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื ืคืกืœ ื›ื™ ืื ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ืœื ื”ืœืš ืžืžื ื” ืจืง ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื•ืื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ื” ืœื ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ื” ื›ืœื•ื ื•ืœื ื ื—ืกืจ ืžืžื ื” ื“ื‘ืจ:",
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+ "<b>ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ.</b> ืœืื• ืืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื•ืฉื ื™ื” ืงืื™, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ืœื•ื ืืœื ืžืชื™ื, ืื ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื•ืื ืคืจื— ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช ืœื›ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื ื™ืžื•ืชื•. ืืœื ืงืื™ ืืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืคืจื— ืžืžื ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื•ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช, ื•ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช, ื•ืžืฉืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื•ื—ื–ืจ ืžืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช ืขื“ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื—ืกืจ ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื•ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืจืง ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ื ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืจื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืจืง ืฉื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ื—ืกืจ ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืืจื‘ืข ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ืฉื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ื ืจืง ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ื” ื›ื™ ืื ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืงืฉื™ื ื‘ื›ืืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื“ื”ืจื™ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื•ืœืคื™ ื–ื” ืฉื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืืœื ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ืืœื ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ [ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื‘ื–ื• ืื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื•]. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ ืคืขื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ืœื•ื ืœื‘ื“ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื” ืืจื‘ืข, ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ:",
71
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ืืœื ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืžืžื ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ. ื“ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืคืจื—ื• ืžืžื ื” ืœื›ืœ ื”ื™ื•ืชืจ ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ื‘ื” ืจืง ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ื™ืขืฉื” ืžื”ื ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืฃ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื–ื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื ื” ืžืคืกื“ืช ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื ืคืขื, ืœื ื’ื–ืจื• ืขืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื:"
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
75
+ "<b>ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช.</b> ืฉื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืฉืชื™ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื™ื—ื“ ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืกื™ืคื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ืื• ืฉืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืกืชื•ืžื” ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื, ื•ืื ืœื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• ืืžืื™ ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื•ืื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืคืจื—ื”, ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืชืงืจื‘, ื•ืงืŸ ื”ืกืชื•ืžื” ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ืžืคื ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”. ืืœื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•, ื•ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืงืŸ ื”ืกืชื•ืžื” ืœืชื•ืš ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื™ืงื— ื–ื•ื’ ืœืฉื ื™ ื•ื™ืคืจื™ืฉ ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“ ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ. ื—ื–ืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืขื ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™ ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืกืชื•ืžื”, ืื• ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ืœืกืชื•ืžื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื“ืงืืžืจ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื”ืœืš ืื—ื“ ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ืกืชื•ืžื”, ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“ ืื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื•ื“, ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช ืฉืคืจื— ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:"
76
+ ],
77
+ [
78
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื›ืืŸ.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœืฆื“ ืื—ื“, ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืœืขื•ืœื” ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื‘ืืžืฆืข:",
79
+ "<b>ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืข.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืฉืžืืœ:",
80
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ื“ืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืขื•ืจื‘ ืขื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืขืฉื” ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืขื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื™ืขืฉื” ืขื•ืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื—ื˜ืืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช:",
81
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืœืืžืฆืข.</b> ื—ื–ืจื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื“ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“, ืืœื• ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ืฉืืจื• ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืœื‘ื“ื•, ืงืจื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื“ื™ื ื•:",
82
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ื™ื ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ื.</b> ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:",
83
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ืืœื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”:",
84
+ "<b>ืชื›ืคื•ืœ ื•ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช. ืฉื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื ืขื™ืงืจ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉืชื• ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉืชื• ื‘ืกื•ืฃ:",
85
+ "<b>ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื”ืฉื ื™ ืืœื ืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชืดืง:",
86
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื”.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื”. ื•ืื™ ืœื ืžื”ืื™ ื˜ืขืžื, ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืืขืดืค ืฉืงืจื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืชื—ื™ืœื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื•ื“ืžืช ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืงื ืœืžืฆื•ื” ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืขื›ื‘:"
87
+ ]
88
+ ],
89
+ [
90
+ [
91
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื ืžืœืš.</b> ืืคื™ืจืงื ืงืžื ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจื™ื ืŸ, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœื–ื• ื“ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ืžืœืš ื•ืœืฉืื•ืœ ืื™ืš ืžืฉืคื˜ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš ื•ืขืฉื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขืฆืžื• ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื” ืœืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ืขื•ืœื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืคืกื•ืœื”. ื•ืื ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžื˜ื”, ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืคืกื•ืœื”. ื”ืœื›ืš, ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ ื•ืขืฉื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ืื ืขืฉื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžื˜ื”, ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื›ืฉืจื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืคืกื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืœ ืคืจืงื ืงืžื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืคืจืงื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ื“ื™ืขื‘ื“. ื•ื‘ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ื ืžืœืš ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืœื ื ืžืœืš ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื”. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ืขืฉื” ืื•ืชื• ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืขืฉื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื›ืฉืจ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืคืกื•ืœ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœื–ื•, ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ื ื™ืฉ ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืœืงื— ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื” ื™ืฉ ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืฉืœืžื˜ื” ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืขืฉืจ ืœื–ื• ื•ืžืื” ืœื–ื•, ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืžืฆื•ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื–ื•ื’ื•ืช, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืืœื ืœืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื–ื•ื’ื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ืชื ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืืฃ ื‘ืขืฉืจ ืœื–ื• ื•ืžืื” ืœื–ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ืืœื ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ื, ื“ืฉืžื ื›ืœ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื:",
92
+ "<b>ืืช ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื”. ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ืฉืงื™ื ื™ื ื”ืืœื• ืœืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื, ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืžืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืœืœืื”, ืชื”ื ื‘ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืœืื”, ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื—ื™ืœืง ื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืฉืจ, ืฉืื ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืฉื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืžืชืคืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืขืฉื™ื™ืช ื›ื”ืŸ:"
93
+ ],
94
+ [
95
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื—ืœื•ืง ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืฉืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืื™ื ื• ื ื—ืœืง ืœืฉื ื™ื ืืœื ืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ: ",
96
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื›ื•ืณ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื•, ืฉื™ืฉ ืžื—ืœืง ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื™ืช: "
97
+ ],
98
+ [
99
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื ื ืžื™ ืงืื™ ืื“ืชื ื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื, ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื ืžืœืš, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืœื ื ืžืœืš ืขืœ ืชืขืจื•ื‘ืชื• ื•ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ ืืชื™ ืœืืžืœื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื ืชืงืจื™ื‘, ื›ื“ืชื ื™ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืœื ื ืžืœืš ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ (ืฉื›ืœ) ืื—ื“ ื ืขืฉื” ื›ื”ืœื›ืชื• ื•ื›ืฉืจ:"
100
+ ],
101
+ [
102
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช.</b> ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื–ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื•ื–ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื•, ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื™ื—ื• ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉื•, ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื ื™ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืœืœื• ืกืชื ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœืฉื ื‘ืขืœื™ื. ื•ืื ื ืชื ื ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื” ืืœื ืกืชื•ืžื”, ื“ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื“ืขื‘ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื“ืขื‘ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื›ืฉืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ื•ืงืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื•:",
103
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ืœืงื—ื•ื, ื”ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื”ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ืขื•ืœื”:"
104
+ ],
105
+ [
106
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื ื“ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ืฉืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืื•ืชื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ืœืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ, ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžื—ืฆื”, ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ ื›ื™ืฆื“:",
107
+ "<b>ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืคืœื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื ืฉืชื™ื™ืจื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช:",
108
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืงื‘ืข ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื ืฉืืจืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื•ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ื•ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ:",
109
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงืจื‘ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื ืฉืชื™ื™ืจื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื“ืณ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืขื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช, ื•ื’ื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ืื•ืชื• ืฉื ืงื‘ืข ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืขื•ืœื” ืื•ืชื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ. ื•ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”:"
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืœื›ืฉืืœื“ ื–ื›ืจ.</b> ื‘ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืขื ื™ื” ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื™ืจื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื”:",
113
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ืฉืงืŸ ื ื“ื‘ื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ, ืืœื ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ืœื ื ืžืœืš ื‘ื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขืœ ืžื” ื”ื‘ื™ืืชืŸ, ื•ื ืคืกืœื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืชื‘ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืจืช ื•ืชืงืจื™ื‘ื ื” ืœืžืขืœื”:",
114
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืชื•ืจ ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืฉื ืคืกืœื”, ื“ืœื ื™ื“ืขื™ื ืŸ ืื ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื ืžืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื•ืณ:",
115
+ "<b>ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื”.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื•ืืžืจื” ืืœื• ืœื ื“ืจื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื™:",
116
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”, ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืข ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ืžื™ื“ื™ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจืŸ. ืœืขื™ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื ื“ืจ:",
117
+ "<b>ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืื ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ื–ื” ืฉืชื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ืฆ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื“ืฉืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื ื“ืจ ื›ื•ืœื•, ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืื• ืฉืžื ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ืžื—ื•ื‘ืชื”:",
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+ "<b>ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื ื“ืจื” ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืžืžื™ืŸ ืคืœื•ื ื™. ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” ื“ืœืขื™ืœ, ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื›ืœื•ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื ื“ืจ, ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ื“ืจื” ืกืชื ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืจืฆืชื” ื•ืืžืจื” ืืœื• ืœื ื“ืจื™:",
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+ "<b>ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื›ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ืขื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข ืื ื ื“ืจื” ืขืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืžื˜ื” ืื ืœื”ื™ืคืš, ื•ื”ื™ื ื’ื ื”ื™ื ืฉื›ื—ื” ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ืื ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื”ื ื“ืจ ื ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ื ื“ืจ, ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืฉื›ื—ื” ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืืจื‘ืขืชืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœืฆืืช ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื”, ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™, ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื™ื“ืขื” ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื›ื—ื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืืจื‘ืข ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื ื“ืจื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืฆืืช ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื“ื“ื™ ืœื” ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืชืขืœื” ืœื” ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืœืฉื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื“ื‘ืฉืœืžื ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“, ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืืดื› ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžืขืœื”, ืืดื› ื ื“ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื” ืžืชื•ืš ืื—ื“, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื‘ืื—ืช ื™ื“ื™ ืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”. ื•ืื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืคืกื•ืœื”, ื”ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืช ื”ืฉืœื™ืžื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื”ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืชื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ื•ืœื ืชืื›ืœ. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื ื™ื•ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื ื• ื‘ืชื•ืจื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื›ื—ื” ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื’ื ืฉื›ื—ื” ืžื” ืคื™ืจืฉื”, ื•ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉื”ื™ื”. ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืกืชื•ืžื•ืช, ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืœื ื“ืจื”, ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื”, ื•ื’ื ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ืŸ [ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื•ื’ื” ืœืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”], ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ืื ืŸ ืชื•ืจ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืชื•ืจ ื•ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื ื” ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ:",
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+ "<b>ื ืชื ืชื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืงืŸ ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืื• ืื ื ืชื ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื• ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ืœ ืœืžืขืœื” ืื• ื”ื›ืœ ืœืžื˜ื” ืื• ืžื—ืฆื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืจื” ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืฉืชืจืฆื”, ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื—ื˜ืืช:",
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+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืฉื ืฉื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ื—ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืžื ื• ืืœื ืงื•ืœ ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจืื•ื™ ืฉื™ืคืกื•ืง ืงื•ืœื• ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืฉื‘ืขื” ืงื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ, ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื›ืฉื ื“ืจื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื›ืœื•ื ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืืœื ืงืŸ ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžื” ืงื‘ืขื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื” ื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ:",
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+ "<b>ืงืจื ื™ื• ืœื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ืœืฉื•ืคืจื•ืช. ื“ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืคื•ืจื ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจืชื:",
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+ "<b>ืืฃ ืฆืžืจื•.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืžื ื• ืชื›ืœืช. ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืžืฆืžืจื• ืžืขื™ืœ ืฉื›ื•ืœื• ืชื›ืœืช ื•ืขืœ ืฉื•ืœื™ื• ืคืขืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืžืฉืžื™ืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ. ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืชื›ืœืช ืœื ืงื ื—ืฉื™ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืชื›ืœืช ืžืฉืžื™ืข ืงื•ืœ ืืœื ื”ืคืขืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืขืœ ืฉื•ืœื™ื• ืกื‘ื™ื‘:",
124
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ืขืงืฉื™ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืืฃ ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื“ื•ืžื” ืœื”ืš ืžื™ืœืชื, ื“ื›ืฉื ืฉื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืช ืงื•ืœื• ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื›ืš ื–ืงื ื™ ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืžื–ืงื™ื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืชืฉื•ืช ื›ื—, ื”ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื”:",
125
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืกื™ืจ ืฉืคื” ืœื ืืžื ื™ื.</b> ื•ื‘ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ ืžืฉืชืขื™ ืงืจื, ื“ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืกื™ืจ ืœื‘ ืจืืฉื™ ืขื ื”ืืจืฅ:",
126
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืฉื™ืฉื™ื ื—ื›ืžื”.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ, ื—ื›ืžืช ืžื” ืœื”ื:"
127
+ ]
128
+ ]
129
+ ],
130
+ "sectionNames": [
131
+ "Chapter",
132
+ "Mishnah",
133
+ "Comment"
134
+ ]
135
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Kinnim",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Kinnim",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกืงืจื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื”ื–ื” ืžื“ื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืขืœ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ื“ื ื™ืžืฆื” ืืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืงื™ืจ ืฉื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ืฉืœื• ืžืชืžืฆื™ืŸ ืœื™ืกื•ื“, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืงื™ืจ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกืงืจื. ื“ืื™ ืงื™ืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื˜ ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชืžืฆื” ืœืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื•ืฉื”ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ืฉื”ื—ื•ื˜ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืžื”:",
10
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืงืจื ื•ืช, ื‘ื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืงืจืŸ:",
11
+ "<b>ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ืืณ) ื•ืžืœืง ื•ื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื•, ืžื” ื”ืงื˜ืจื” ื‘ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ืžืœื™ืงื” ื•ืžื™ืฆื•ื™ ื‘ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
12
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืžื˜ื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ื™ืกื•ื“:",
13
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืฉื™ื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื‘ื–ื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื”ืื™ ื“ืคืกื•ืœ ืื ืขืฉื” ืžืขืฉื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœืžืขืœื”, ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื”ื–ืื”. ืื‘ืœ ื”ืžืœื™ืงื” ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืืฃ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ืฉืจื”, ื“ืžืœื™ืงื” ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืฉืจื”. ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ื”ื–ืื” ื›ื™ ืื ืžื™ืฆื•ื™, ื•ืื ืขืฉืื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ืคืกื•ืœื”:",
14
+ "<b>ืกื“ืจ ืงื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ื•ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื• ื•ืฉืžื™ืขืช ืงื•ืœ ืืœื”, ื•ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ื™ ืฉืคืชื™ื, ื“ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืงืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช, ืืœื ืฉื–ื‘ ื•ื–ื‘ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืงืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื’ืจ ื“ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืฉ ืชื ื ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืฉื›ื™ื—ื™ ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™:",
15
+ "<b>ื‘ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ื“ืจ ื•ื ื“ื‘ื” ืืœื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื‘ืื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช:"
16
+ ],
17
+ [
18
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืจื‘ื•ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ.</b> ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ืœื™ ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื, ื“ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ืœื™:",
19
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื”, ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืขืชื” ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื•ืช ื™ื—ื“:",
20
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืฉื–ื”ื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืœื”ื• ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช:",
21
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืคืจืฉ ืœืฉื ืขื•ืœื”:",
22
+ "<b>ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื:",
23
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื ื ืœืขื™ืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
24
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื•ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขื˜ืช.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืขื ื›ืžื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชืžื ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืžื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”:",
25
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืกืชื•ืžื”, ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื›ืžื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื ื“ื‘ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื ื“ืจื™ื ื•ื ื“ื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ:"
26
+ ],
27
+ [
28
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืงื™ื ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืžืงืฆืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืขื ืงื™ื ื™ ื ื“ื‘ื” ืฉื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช:",
29
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•.</b> ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื• ืฉืœ ื–ื‘ื” ืื—ืจืช:",
30
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ืขืฉื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืœ ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช:",
31
+ "<b>ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ.</b> ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื‘ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉ, ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืขื•ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“, ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื”ืงืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื‘ื•ืจืจ ืชื—ืœื” ืœื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืื—ืช ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืžื ื• ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืขืฉืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืื”, ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืœื ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ:",
32
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ืื—ื“.</b> ืœื™ื“ื” ื•ืœื™ื“ื”, ื–ื™ื‘ื” ื•ื–ื™ื‘ื”. ืžืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืื• ืžืืฉื” ืื—ืช:",
33
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืœื™ื“ื” ื•ื–ื™ื‘ื”, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืืฉื” ืื—ืช. ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:"
34
+ ],
35
+ [
36
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœืื• ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื™ืฉ ื‘ืจื™ืจื” ื•ื ื™ืžื ื“ื›ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉื ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื‘ืจืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืœืžืคืจืข ื“ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ืช ื”ืงืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืงืŸ ื–ื” ืฉืœื”, ืืœื ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื‘ืคืจืง ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืŸ (ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืฃ ืœืดื•) ื“ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™ ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ืฉื”ืชื ื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืœืงื™ื—ื” ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืงืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื” ืœืฉื ืื™ื–ื• ืืฉื” ืฉื™ืจืฆื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
37
+ ]
38
+ ],
39
+ [
40
+ [
41
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ืœื ืžื‘ืขื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื“ืคืฉื™ื˜ื ืฉืื ืคืจื— ื”ืื—ื“ ื™ืงื— ื–ื•ื’ ืœืฉื ื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืคืจืฉื™ื ื–ื” ืžื–ื” ื•ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ื•. ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื™ื—ื“ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื”ืชืคืจืฉ ื•ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ืฉืื ืคืจื— ื”ืื—ื“ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื™, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ:",
42
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช.</b> ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฉืคื˜ืŸ ืฉื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ื”ื• ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื:",
43
+ "<b>ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ืœื™ืงืจื‘:",
44
+ "<b>ืคืกื•ืœ ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืกืชื ื•ืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื ืขื•ืœื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ืกืœ ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื›ื ื’ื“ื•, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "<b>ืคืจื—.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื–ื• ืœื–ื•: ",
48
+ "<b>ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ืชื•.</b> ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืคืจืฉ. ื•ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘. ื“ื›ืฉืคืจื—ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืžืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืฉืชื™ื, ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ืฉืื ื™ืขืฉื” ืฉืชื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื ืžืฆื ืฉื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื•ื‘ ืžื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื“ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ืื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื”ื ืฉืืจ, ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื ืžื™ ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื ืžืฆืื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืžืงืŸ ืื—ื“. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ื›ื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืื• ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืœืžื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืœื”ื• ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื•ื ืื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘, ื•ืคื•ืกืœ [ืื—ื“] ื›ื ื’ื“ื• ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืคืจื— ื•ื ืคืจืฉ ืžืฉื:",
49
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื•.</b> ื—ื–ืจ ื•ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžืื•ืชื ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืชื•ืš ืืœื• ื”ืฉืœืฉ, ืฉื ืžืฆืื• ืขืชื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื›ืืŸ. ืคื•ืกืœ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืชื• ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืคืจืฉ ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื• ืื—ืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžืชืขืจื‘ ืฉื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ืฉื‘ื›ืืŸ, ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื”ืื—ืจื™ื. ื“ื“ืœืžื ืื•ืชื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืฉืคืจื—ื” ืฉื ื™ืช ื”ื™ื ืžืื•ืชื ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื” ืื•ืชื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ืชื” ืฉืคืจื—ื” ืฉื ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ืฉื ื™. ื•ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื ืจืง ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื“ื“ื™ืœืžื ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ืื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืฆื“, ื–ื” ืื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ื‘ืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช. ื•ืื ื—ื–ืจื• ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“, ืœืขื•ืœื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื:"
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+ ],
51
+ [
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+ "<b>ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืฉื ื™ื”, ืžื™ื“ ื ืคืกืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื“ืื™ ื™ืขืฉื ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ื•ื‘ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืจืง ืžื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืœืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืคืจื—, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื ืฉืืจ ืฉื ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ื•ืฃ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ื™ืขืฉื” ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืจืง ืžื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ื”ื•ื” ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื—, ื•ืœื ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ื” ืจืง ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืจืง ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืคื ื™ ืื•ืชื• ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืืœื ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช, ื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฉืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื•ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช, ืฉืžื ืœื ื”ื•ื ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืžืฉืฉื™ืช, ืืœื ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืคืจื— ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื™ื”ื ื ืงื‘ืข ืื•ืชื• ืฉืคืจื— ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช [ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื] ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืจืง ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžื—ืฆื™ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืื—ืจื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ื–ื• ืขื•ื“ ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืืจื‘ืข ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื“ืณ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืคืจื— ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื•ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื•ืœื ื ืฉืืจ ืœื” ื›ื™ ืื ืขืฉืจ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืžื’ื•ืคื”, ื•ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื“ืœืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืคืจื—ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ืขืฉื• ื‘ืฉืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืื• ื™ื”ื™ื• ืขืฉื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ืฉืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช. ื•ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ื•ืžืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื ื™ื”, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ื›ื™ ืื ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ื•ืœืžื” ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืชื™ื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืคืจื—ื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื•, ื“ื”ื ืงืชื ื™ ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื, ื•ื”ื•ื” ืœืŸ ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ื›ืœื•ื, ืื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ื” ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืงืŸ ืื—ื“. ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื ืคืกืœื• ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื ืคืกืœ ื›ื™ ืื ืงืŸ ืื—ื“, ื“ืœื ื”ืœืš ืžืžื ื” ืจืง ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื”, ื•ืื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืœื™ื›ื” ืœื ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ื” ื›ืœื•ื ื•ืœื ื ื—ืกืจ ืžืžื ื” ื“ื‘ืจ:",
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+ "<b>ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ.</b> ืœืื• ืืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื•ืฉื ื™ื” ืงืื™, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ืœื•ื ืืœื ืžืชื™ื, ืื ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš ื•ืื ืคืจื— ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช ืœื›ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื ื™ืžื•ืชื•. ืืœื ืงืื™ ืืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืคืจื— ืžืžื ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื•ืžืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช, ื•ืžื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช, ื•ืžืฉืฉื™ืช ืœืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื•ื—ื–ืจ ืžืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœืฉืฉื™ืช ืขื“ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื—ืกืจ ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื•ืื—ืช ื‘ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืจืง ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ื ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืจื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ืข ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืจืง ืฉื‘ืข ืข๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœื•ืช. ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ื—ืกืจ ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ื“ืื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ืฉืžื ืืจื‘ืข ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ืžืžื ื” ื™ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ืฉื‘ืข ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ื ืจืง ืฉืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ื” ื›ื™ ืื ืื—ื“ ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืงืฉื™ื ื‘ื›ืืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื“ื”ืจื™ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื”ืœื›ื• ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื•ืœืคื™ ื–ื” ืฉื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืืœื ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ืืœื ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ [ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื‘ื–ื• ืื˜ืจ ื‘ื–ื•]. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ื•ื—ื–ืจ ืคืขื ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ืœื•ื ืœื‘ื“ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื” ืืจื‘ืข, ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ:",
54
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ื” ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื•ื—ื–ืจื” ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช. ืืœื ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืžืžื ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ. ื“ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืคืจื—ื• ืžืžื ื” ืœื›ืœ ื”ื™ื•ืชืจ ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ื‘ื” ืจืง ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื•ื™ืขืฉื” ืžื”ื ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืฃ ื”ืฉืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื” ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ื’ื–ืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื–ื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื ื” ืžืคืกื“ืช ื‘ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื ืคืขื, ืœื ื’ื–ืจื• ืขืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื:"
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
58
+ "<b>ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช.</b> ืฉื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืฉืชื™ ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื™ื—ื“ ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื•ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืกื™ืคื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ืื• ืฉืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืกืชื•ืžื” ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœื, ื•ืื ืœื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• ืืžืื™ ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื•ืื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืคืจื—ื”, ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืชืงืจื‘, ื•ืงืŸ ื”ืกืชื•ืžื” ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ืžืคื ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”. ืืœื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•, ื•ืื ื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืงืŸ ื”ืกืชื•ืžื” ืœืชื•ืš ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื™ืงื— ื–ื•ื’ ืœืฉื ื™ ื•ื™ืคืจื™ืฉ ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“ ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ. ื—ื–ืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืขื ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ื™ ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื‘ืกืชื•ืžื”, ืื• ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื ืชืขืจื‘ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ืœืกืชื•ืžื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื“ืงืืžืจ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืคืจื™ื—ื” ื”ืœืš ืื—ื“ ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ืกืชื•ืžื”, ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉื•ืช ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“ ืื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื•ื“, ื•ื›ื™ ืคืจื— ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืชื•ืช ืฉืคืจื— ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:"
59
+ ],
60
+ [
61
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื›ืืŸ.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœืฆื“ ืื—ื“, ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ืœืขื•ืœื” ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื ื™, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื‘ืืžืฆืข:",
62
+ "<b>ืคืจื— ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืข.</b> ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืฉืžืืœ:",
63
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ืคืกื™ื“ ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ื“ืื•ืชื• ืฉืžืขื•ืจื‘ ืขื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืขืฉื” ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืื•ืชื• ืฉืขื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื™ืขืฉื” ืขื•ืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื—ื˜ืืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื™ืขืฉื•ื”ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช:",
64
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืœืืžืฆืข.</b> ื—ื–ืจื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื“ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“, ืืœื• ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื™ื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ืฉืืจื• ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืœื‘ื“ื•, ืงืจื™ื‘ื™ื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื“ื™ื ื•:",
65
+ "<b>ื—ื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ื™ื ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ื.</b> ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:",
66
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ืืœื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”:",
67
+ "<b>ืชื›ืคื•ืœ ื•ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื•ืœืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช. ืฉื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื ืขื™ืงืจ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉืชื• ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉืชื• ื‘ืกื•ืฃ:",
68
+ "<b>ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื”ืฉื ื™ ืืœื ืžืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชืดืง:",
69
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื”ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืืชื”.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื”. ื•ืื™ ืœื ืžื”ืื™ ื˜ืขืžื, ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืืขืดืค ืฉืงืจื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืชื—ื™ืœื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื—ื˜ืืช ืงื•ื“ืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืงื ืœืžืฆื•ื” ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืขื›ื‘:"
70
+ ]
71
+ ],
72
+ [
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื ืžืœืš.</b> ืืคื™ืจืงื ืงืžื ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจื™ื ืŸ, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื™ืžื•ืชื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœื–ื• ื“ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ืžืœืš ื•ืœืฉืื•ืœ ืื™ืš ืžืฉืคื˜ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš ื•ืขืฉื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขืฆืžื• ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื” ืœืืฉื” ืื—ืช, ืขื•ืœื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืคืกื•ืœื”. ื•ืื ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžื˜ื”, ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืคืกื•ืœื”. ื”ืœื›ืš, ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ ื•ืขืฉื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื—ื˜ืื•ืช. ื•ืื ืขืฉื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžื˜ื”, ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื›ืฉืจื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืคืกื•ืœื•ืช. ื•ื›ืœ ืคืจืงื ืงืžื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืื™ ืคืจืงื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ื“ื™ืขื‘ื“. ื•ื‘ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ื ืžืœืš ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืœื ื ืžืœืš ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื”. ื›ื™ืฆื“, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ืขืฉื” ืื•ืชื• ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืžืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืขืฉื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ื•ื ืฉืืจื• ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื›ืฉืจ ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืคืกื•ืœ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœื–ื•, ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ื ื™ืฉ ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืœืงื— ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื” ื™ืฉ ืฉืœืฉ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืฉืœืžื˜ื” ืฉืœืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืขืฉืจ ืœื–ื• ื•ืžืื” ืœื–ื•, ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืžืฆื•ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื–ื•ื’ื•ืช, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืืœื ืœืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื–ื•ื’ื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ื”ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ืฉืจ, ืชื ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื‘ืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืืฃ ื‘ืขืฉืจ ืœื–ื• ื•ืžืื” ืœื–ื• ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ืืœื ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ื, ื“ืฉืžื ื›ืœ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ืื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืคืกืœื• ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืขืœ ื›ืจื—ืš ืขืฉืจื” ืงื™ื ื™ื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื:",
75
+ "<b>ืืช ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื”. ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ืฉืงื™ื ื™ื ื”ืืœื• ืœืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื, ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื•ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืžืฉืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืœืœืื”, ืชื”ื ื‘ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืœืื”, ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื—ื™ืœืง ื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืฉืจ, ืฉืื ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืฉื”ืงื™ื ื™ื ืžืชืคืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืขืฉื™ื™ืช ื›ื”ืŸ:"
76
+ ],
77
+ [
78
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื”ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื—ืœื•ืง ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืฉืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืื™ื ื• ื ื—ืœืง ืœืฉื ื™ื ืืœื ืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืงืŸ ืืฉื” ืื—ืจืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ: ",
79
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ื›ื•ืณ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœื–ื•, ืฉื™ืฉ ืžื—ืœืง ืฉืœ ืืฉื” ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื™ืช: "
80
+ ],
81
+ [
82
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื ื ืžื™ ืงืื™ ืื“ืชื ื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื, ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื ืžืœืš, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืœื ื ืžืœืš ืขืœ ืชืขืจื•ื‘ืชื• ื•ืขืฉื” ืงืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ ืืชื™ ืœืืžืœื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœื ืชืงืจื™ื‘, ื›ื“ืชื ื™ื ื™ืžื•ืชื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ, ื”ืฉืชื ื“ืœื ื ืžืœืš ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ (ืฉื›ืœ) ืื—ื“ ื ืขืฉื” ื›ื”ืœื›ืชื• ื•ื›ืฉืจ:"
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช.</b> ืฉืชื™ ื ืฉื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ, ื–ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื•ื–ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื•, ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื™ื—ื• ืกืชื•ืžื” ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืื™ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื• ื—ื˜ืืช, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉื•, ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื• ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ืงืŸ ืกืชื•ืžื” ื•ืงืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉื ื™ ื”ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืœืœื• ืกืชื ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืœื–ื• ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœืฉื ื‘ืขืœื™ื. ื•ืื ื ืชื ื ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจื” ืืœื ืกืชื•ืžื”, ื“ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื“ืขื‘ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื“ืขื‘ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื›ืฉืจ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ืœ ืงืŸ ื•ืงืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื•:",
86
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœืงืช ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ ืœืงื—ื•ื, ื”ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื”ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ืขื•ืœื”:"
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื ื“ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ืฉืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืื•ืชื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ืœืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ, ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžื—ืฆื”, ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ ื›ื™ืฆื“:",
90
+ "<b>ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืคืœื™ื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื ืฉืชื™ื™ืจื• ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช:",
91
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ.</b> ืฉืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืงื‘ืข ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื ืฉืืจืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ืฉืชื™ ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช, ื•ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช ื•ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื ืฉืืจืช ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืคืกื•ืœ:",
92
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจ.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงืจื‘ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื•ื ืฉืชื™ื™ืจื• ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื“ืณ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืขื ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ืจื™ ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ืช, ื•ื’ื ืฉืชื™ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืœื ื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืฉืžื ื™ืงื— ืื•ืชื• ืฉื ืงื‘ืข ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืขื•ืœื” ืื•ืชื• ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžื—ืฆื” ื›ืฉืจ. ื•ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื•ื ื ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”:"
93
+ ],
94
+ [
95
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืœื›ืฉืืœื“ ื–ื›ืจ.</b> ื‘ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืขื ื™ื” ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืขืฉื™ืจื” ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื”:",
96
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœืฉ ืœืžืขืœื”.</b> ืฉืงืŸ ื ื“ื‘ื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื•ืงืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ, ืืœื ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”, ื•ืœื ื ืžืœืš ื‘ื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขืœ ืžื” ื”ื‘ื™ืืชืŸ, ื•ื ืคืกืœื” ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืชื‘ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืจืช ื•ืชืงืจื™ื‘ื ื” ืœืžืขืœื”:",
97
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืงืŸ ืื—ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืชื•ืจ ื•ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืฉื ืคืกืœื”, ื“ืœื ื™ื“ืขื™ื ืŸ ืื ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื ืžืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืชื•ืจื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื•ืณ:",
98
+ "<b>ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื”.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื•ืืžืจื” ืืœื• ืœื ื“ืจื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื™:",
99
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”, ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืคืจื™ื“ื” ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืข ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ืžื™ื“ื™ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจืŸ. ืœืขื™ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ืžื”ืŸ ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื”, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื ื“ืจ:",
100
+ "<b>ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืื ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืงื™ื ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ื–ื” ืฉืชื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ืขืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื™ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ื“ืฉืžื ื”ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื ื“ืจ ื›ื•ืœื•, ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื—ื“ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืžื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืื• ืฉืžื ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืขืฉื• ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ืžื—ื•ื‘ืชื”:",
101
+ "<b>ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื ื“ืจื” ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ืžืžื™ืŸ ืคืœื•ื ื™. ื•ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื ื“ืจื” ื“ืœืขื™ืœ, ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉื” ื›ืœื•ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื ื“ืจ, ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ื“ืจื” ืกืชื ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืงืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืจืฆืชื” ื•ืืžืจื” ืืœื• ืœื ื“ืจื™:",
102
+ "<b>ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื›ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ืขื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ืœื ื™ื“ืข ืื ื ื“ืจื” ืขืฉื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืžื˜ื” ืื ืœื”ื™ืคืš, ื•ื”ื™ื ื’ื ื”ื™ื ืฉื›ื—ื” ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ืื ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ื“ืฉืžื ื”ื ื“ืจ ื ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืฉืจ ืืœื ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื‘ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืขื•ืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ื ื“ืจ, ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืฉื›ื—ื” ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืืจื‘ืขืชืŸ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœืฆืืช ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื”, ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™, ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื™ื“ืขื” ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื›ื—ื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื”, ืฆืจื™ื›ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืฉืฉ ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช, ืืจื‘ืข ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื ื“ืจื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœืฆืืช ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืื• ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืื—ื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื“ื“ื™ ืœื” ื‘ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืชืขืœื” ืœื” ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืฉื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืœืฉื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื“ื‘ืฉืœืžื ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืžืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“, ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš, ืื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื ืขืฉื” ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืืดื› ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืžืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžืขืœื”, ืืดื› ื ื“ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืื—ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื” ืžืชื•ืš ืื—ื“, ื•ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืช ื™ืฆืื” ื™ื“ื™ ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื‘ืื—ืช ื™ื“ื™ ืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”. ื•ืื ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื”ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืฉืจื” ื•ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืคืกื•ืœื”, ื”ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืช ื”ืฉืœื™ืžื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื”ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืชื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง ื•ืœื ืชืื›ืœ. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื ื™ื•ื ื™ื ืชื‘ื™ื ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื—ื˜ืืชื” ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืžืžื” ื ืคืฉืš ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื ื• ื‘ืชื•ืจื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื›ื—ื” ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื’ื ืฉื›ื—ื” ืžื” ืคื™ืจืฉื”, ื•ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉื”ื™ื”. ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืกืชื•ืžื•ืช, ืชื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืœื ื“ืจื”, ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ืœื ื“ืจื”, ื•ื’ื ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ืŸ [ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื—ื˜ืืช ืœื–ื•ื’ื” ืœืขื•ืœืช ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”], ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ืื ืŸ ืชื•ืจ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืชื•ืจ ื•ื™ื•ื ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื™ื•ื ื” ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ:",
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+ "<b>ื ืชื ืชื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืงืŸ ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืื• ืื ื ืชื ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ืŸ ืื• ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื ืขืฉื” ื”ื›ืœ ืœืžืขืœื” ืื• ื”ื›ืœ ืœืžื˜ื” ืื• ืžื—ืฆื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืœืžื˜ื”, ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืจื” ืฉืชื™ ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ื ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ืื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื ืฉืชืจืฆื”, ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื” ื—ื˜ืืช:",
104
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ืฉื ืฉื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ื—ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืžื ื• ืืœื ืงื•ืœ ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจืื•ื™ ืฉื™ืคืกื•ืง ืงื•ืœื• ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืฉื‘ืขื” ืงื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ, ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื›ืฉื ื“ืจื” ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื›ืœื•ื ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืืœื ืงืŸ ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืงืŸ ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืขื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืื” ื ื“ืจื” ื•ื—ื•ื‘ืชื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ื“ืขืช ืžื” ืงื‘ืขื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื” ื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื™ื“ื•ืช ืœื ื“ืจื” ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื” ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ:",
105
+ "<b>ืง๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ื™ื• ืœื—ืฆื•ืฆืจื•ืช.</b> ืœืฉื•ืคืจื•ืช. ื“ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืคื•ืจื ื—ืฆื•ืฆืจืชื:",
106
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืฆืžืจื•.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืžืžื ื• ืชื›ืœืช. ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืžืฆืžืจื• ืžืขื™ืœ ืฉื›ื•ืœื• ืชื›ืœืช ื•ืขืœ ืฉื•ืœื™ื• ืคืขืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืžืฉืžื™ืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ. ื•ืชื ื ืงืžื ืชื›ืœืช ืœื ืงื ื—ืฉื™ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืชื›ืœืช ืžืฉืžื™ืข ืงื•ืœ ืืœื ื”ืคืขืžื•ื ื™ื ืฉืขืœ ืฉื•ืœื™ื• ืกื‘ื™ื‘:",
107
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ืขืงืฉื™ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืืฃ ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื“ื•ืžื” ืœื”ืš ืžื™ืœืชื, ื“ื›ืฉื ืฉื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืช ืงื•ืœื• ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื›ืš ื–ืงื ื™ ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืžื–ืงื™ื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืชืฉื•ืช ื›ื—, ื”ืŸ ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื”:",
108
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืกื™ืจ ืฉืคื” ืœื ืืžื ื™ื.</b> ื•ื‘ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ ืžืฉืชืขื™ ืงืจื, ื“ืœืขื™ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžืกื™ืจ ืœื‘ ืจืืฉื™ ืขื ื”ืืจืฅ:",
109
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืฉื™ืฉื™ื ื—ื›ืžื”.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ, ื—ื›ืžืช ืžื” ืœื”ื:"
110
+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "versions": [
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+ "On Your Way",
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+ "http://mobile.tora.ws/"
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah",
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+ "versionTitle": "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "shortVersionTitle": "Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
22
+ [
23
+ [
24
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื โ€“ even though that their law is to be slaughtered in the north [part of the Temple courtyard] (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1), do not say that is like the one that is strangled (see Talmud Meilah 2a) for they were like Holy Things that died when they left the realm of religious sacrilege according to the Written Torah, that it comes to tell us that Holy Things/sacrifices that died are not worthy at all. But the south [part of the Temple courtyard] assuming that it is not appropriate for the Holy of Holies but is appropriate for offerings of lesser sanctity, therefore, they commit religious sacrilege with them, but a person who benefits from them the equivalent of a perutah/penny brings the sacrifice for religious sacrilege. But not only that they were slaughtered in the south and their blood was received In the north that one commits religious sacrilege because the essence of Divine service in the north is [according to law], and from the received tradition and onward, it is the commandment of the priesthood, but even if they were slaughtered in the north and the received their blood in the south, even though tha t the essence of the Divine service is in the south not according to the law, even so, they commit religious sacrilege through them.",
25
+ "ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” โ€“ even though that night is not the time of offering [of the sacrifice), one commits religious sacrilege with them",
26
+ "ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื โ€“ his all the more so that one is committing religious sacrilege, because he sprinkled [the blood] during the day, which is the essence of Divine service. But it is taught โ€œthis but one doesnโ€™t have to state that.โ€",
27
+ "ืื• ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ โ€“ [slaughtered them] in the north , and he thought about eating them outside of their time which is ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ/an offering disqualified by improper intention which is punishable by extirpation/ื›ืจืช , or outside of their place which is disqualified which does not have [punishment of] extirpation, one commits religious sacrilege through them.",
28
+ "ื›ืœืœ ืืžืจ ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ even though it once again became disqualified and they are not permitted to eat them, nevertheless, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with them.",
29
+ "ืฉืœื ื” โ€“ after sprinkling, or that it became defiled or that went outside of the courtyard after the sprinkling [of the blood], even though that it is not appropriate for the Kohanim, since it had one hour of availability to [for use[ prior to being left overnight, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it, for we donโ€™t call it โ€œGodโ€™s holy things,โ€ for it was appropriate for the Kohanim.",
30
+ "ื•ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื•ื–ืจืงื• ืืช ื“ืžื” (the blood of which disqualified men have received or tossed) โ€“ the ineligible had received its blood, even though that those that sprinkled/tossed it were fit, or that those who sprinkled it were disqualified, even though who received it were fit. But if after the disqualified had received the blood and sprinkled it, the fit [priests] returned and received the rest of the lifeblood (i.e., the last blood that exits before the animal is dead -which is about one-fourth of a LOG โ€“ see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1 ) and sprinkled it, thereby the sprinkling by the fit is makes inappropriate use of sacred property, but permits the meat to the Kohanim, there isnโ€™t religious sacrilege. And these words refer to the rest of the disqualified, other than those who are ritually impure, but someone ritually impure who received the blood and sprinkled it, even though the fit returned and received the rest of the lifeblood [of the animal] and sprinkled it, the meat did not have a period of availability [for use by the Kohanim] and one commits religious sacrilege, for the ritually impure, since is appropriate for the Divine Service of the community, as the sacrifice of the community postpones the ritual defilement, when he he tossed the blood, the rest of he blood became remnants, and furthermore, the tossing by the fit of the blood is not an inappropriate use of sacred property to permit the meat, and among the disqualified, you donโ€™t have an individual who makes the blood of the remnants other than the ritually impure alone."
31
+ ],
32
+ [
33
+ "ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื (beyond the veils of the courtyard) โ€“ and afterwards it (i.e., the meat) came in and afterwards tossed/sprinkled the blood.",
34
+ "ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• โ€“ even though he tossed/sprinkled the blood, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that tossing/sprinkling [of the blood] does not take effect/benefit to [meat] that leaves to exclude something from religious sacrilege.",
35
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ for since it (i.e., the meat) left [the courtyard]. For tossing/sprinkling is fit for it establishes ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ/an offering disqualified by proper intention, but it is not disqualified.",
36
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื โ€“ Rabbi Akiva holds that we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it. For he holds that tossing/sprinkling [of the blood] takes effect for [the meat] that goes out to exclude it from religious sacrilege.",
37
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•' โ€“ but, the language of โ€œsurely!โ€/โ€truly!โ€- like truthfully. But when Rabbi Akiva said that tossing/sprinkling [the blood] take effect for [the meat] that leaves [from the courtyard], as for example, that part of the meat went out but not all of it, that because it is effective for that part that is inside [the courtyard], it is effective also for that part [of the meat] that left [the courtyard] to the outside. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Akiva.",
38
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืื‘ื“ื” โ€“ now he brings a proof to that which he sasid that tossing/sprinkling effects that [meat] which left [the Temple courtyard].",
39
+ "ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช (both of them are available)โ€“ are both slaughtered and their blood was received in two cups and he tossed/sprinkled the blood from one of them.",
40
+ "ืœื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื” โ€“ of that one.",
41
+ "ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื” โ€“ from religious sacrilege.",
42
+ "ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”โ€“ whose blood was not tossed/sprinkled, since he was able to sprinkle/toss the blood of which of them that he wanted.",
43
+ "ื•ืื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื“ืžื” ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ even though it is disqualified, that it is permitted as a sin-offering. Does it not follow that it will exempt its own flesh, even though it was disqualified when it went out [of the courtyard?โ€ But Rabbi Akiva did not say that just as its blood exempts its flesh, so too it exempts the flesh of its fellow [sacrifice], but rather, when he slaughtered two sin-offerings as one, because if he wanted, he toss/sprinkles from this one, if he wanted, he sprinkles/tosses from that one, but [in the case of] one after another, Rabbi Akiva did not say that the blood would exempt the flesh of its fellow [animal sacrifice]."
44
+ ],
45
+ [
46
+ "ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื โ€“ we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with those portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar of lesser Holy Things other than after the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, as we stated at the end of the chapter (see Mishnah 4), and if they went out [from the Temple courtyard] before the sprinkling/tossing of the blood.",
47
+ "ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ just as that Rabbi Eliezer has [the opinion] that the sprinkling [of the blod] does not effect [meat] that leaves [the Temple courtyard] to exclude the meat of the most Holy Things from becoming religious sacrilege, here too, it does not take effect [for meat] that leaves to include the parts of the sacrifice offered on the altar of lesser Holy Things regarding religious sacrilege, and just as Rabbi Akiva has the opinion that sprinkling/tossing of the blood effects that [meat] which leaves [the Temple courtyard] to exclude the meat of the Most Holy Things from religious sacrilege, it effects that [meat] which leaves to include the portions of the sacrifice offered o the altar of lesser Holy Things regarding religious sacrilege."
48
+ ],
49
+ [
50
+ "ืžืขืฉื” ื“ืžื™ื โ€“ this sprinkling/tossing of the blood.",
51
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ after the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, there is no religious sacrilege with the flesh/meat, for already it has its hour of availability [for use by] the Kohanim (see Mishnah 1 of this chapter), which isits leniency, for because of the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, there comes the leniency that we donโ€™t have religious sacrilege with it.",
52
+ "ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” โ€“ whether for those portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar whether on the flesh/meat after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood[.",
53
+ "ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ โ€“ if he had the wrong intention in one of the four [Divine] Services, for sprinkling/tossing [of the blood] establishes for the wrong intention and also establishes for remnants/left-overs and that which is ritually impure, and this is make a stringemcy.",
54
+ "ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื โ€“ after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood].",
55
+ "ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ โ€“ and they commit religious sacrilege with those portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar, for it is was already appropriate to โ€œon Highโ€ (i.e.,God), and these are Holy Things and not the money of the owners.",
56
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” โ€“ whether on the portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar or on the meat/flesh, they are liable for it because of improper intention, left-overs/remnants, and that which is impure. And that means all of it is for stringency."
57
+ ]
58
+ ],
59
+ [
60
+ [
61
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ โ€“ that is to say, from when the bird is killed by pinching its neck with a finger nail, holiness is added to it, and it becomes disqualified if a ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื /a Kohen who has immersed himself that day, but is awaiting sunset, had come in contact with it or someone lacking atonement/ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื (i.e., like a woman after childbirth, a male or woman with a flux, a healed leper who have to bring a sacrifice to complete their purification). But especially if It was disqualified by a Tevul Yom. But it does not become unclean to make others unclean, for just as the Tevul Yom disqualifies the heave-offering/Terumah, so it also disqualifies that which is holy.",
62
+ "ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ โ€“ for it refers to the sprinkling of the sin offering of a bird in the place of sprinkling of an animal/cattle, for sprinkling [of the blood] establishes disqualification of an offering of inappropriate intention when he thought about it prior to this like the sprinkling of the blood of cattle and furthermore, there is the prohibition of remnant and impurity.",
63
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for since its blood had been sprinkled there is [in it] a moment of availability for the Kohanim."
64
+ ],
65
+ [
66
+ "ืžื™ืฆื” ื“ืžื” (the wringing/squeezing out of the blood) โ€“ the squeezing/wringing out of the burnt offering of the bird refers to the place of the sprinkling of the [blood] of the animal and the sprinkling of the sin-offering of the bird, for concerning the burnt-offering of the bird it is written (Leviticus 1:15 โ€“ also see Tractate Zevakhin 6:5): โ€œand its blood shall be drained out [against the side of the altar].โ€",
67
+ "ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ โ€“ for since all of it is burnt entirely, and there is no moment of availability [for use by the priests] at the end, one always commits religious sacrilege with it until it is burned entirely, and one takes from its ashes in the removal of the ashes from the altar, as it is written (Leviticus 6:3) โ€œand he shall take up the ashes to which the fire has reduced the burnt- offering on the altar [and place them beside the altar].โ€"
68
+ ],
69
+ [
70
+ "ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื โ€“ for the Kohanim do not have a moment of availability [for use] at all.",
71
+ "ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžืŸ ื›ื•' โ€“ the sprinkling of their blood establishes them for inappropriate intention to be punishable by extirpation for a person who eats of them, if he had in mind an undue intention [in the performance of a sacrificial ceremony] at the time of the ritual slaughter to offer their portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar outside of their appropriate time, for since there is no moment of availability [for use] by the Kohanim, they commit religious sacrilege with them in the house of the ashes outside of the camp where they were burned if he benefited from them.",
72
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ืชืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ (until the flesh is charred in small lumps) โ€“ that is to say, that it will be burned and become charcoal/used for kindling. But after it is charred into small lumps, furthermore, there is no sacrilege, for there is nothing where its command is performed where one commits religious sacrilege."
73
+ ],
74
+ [
75
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืจื” โ€“ because it belongs to the Kohanim, as it is written (Leviticus 7:8): โ€œthe priest [who offers a manโ€™s burnt offering] shall keep the skin of the burnt offering that he offered.โ€",
76
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ all the time that is burnet on the altar, it is burnt entirely.",
77
+ "ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ โ€“ when they lift all the ashes from top of the altar and cast them in the ash heap. And furthermore, there is no sacrilege, for its command had already been done/fulfilled."
78
+ ],
79
+ [
80
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ for there is a period of availability for the Kohanim, for the meat of the sin-offering and guilt-offering and communal sacrifices of peace-offerings, are consumed by the Kohanim.",
81
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื โ€“ for there is no period of availability for the Kohanim."
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื โ€“ that we bring on Shavuot/Atzeret.",
85
+ "ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ (when they have formed a crust in the oven) โ€“ which is the beginning of their establishment, but this formation of a light crust on the dough is considered rendering fit to be made invalid by a Tevul Yom/one who immersed himself that day [but had to wait until sunset to be pure] and those lacking atonement [through bringing a sacrifice], like the ritual slaughtering of something of the Holy of Holies. But here, we donโ€™t have the reading, \"ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”\" /being left overnight (which is found in the earlier Mishnayot of this chapter), because the โ€œtwo loavesโ€ are baked from the eve of the Festival [of Shavuot] and their baking does not supersede the festival and are eaten on the morrow on the Festival. But they are rendered fit to slaughter upon them the sacrifice, for since they have formed a light crust on their face, they are called, โ€œbread.โ€",
86
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for there is no period of availability for the Kohanim, and their commandment has already been fulfilled."
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื โ€“ here also we donโ€™t have the reading \"ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”\"/being left overnight, because it is baked on Friday (i.e., the Eve of the Sabbath) and is not consumed until the following Sabbath.",
90
+ "ืงืจื‘ื• ื”ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ืŸ (when dishes of incense have been offered) โ€“ that is, its preliminary acts, that on Shabbat at the time of the removal of the bread, they would offer dishes of incense of frankincense.",
91
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for it was permitted to the Kohanim and its command had been performed."
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ "ื”ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื• โ€“ through the sanctification of the mouth [enunciating it].",
95
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื โ€“ because there is a period of availability to the Kohanim.",
96
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ (with the handful of the meal offering the priest takes to be put on the altar) = until it is burned completely and it leaves to the ash heap according to the law of the parts of the sin-offering and guilt-offering burned on the altar. And after that, there is no sacrilege with it, for its commandment had been performed."
97
+ ],
98
+ [
99
+ "ื•ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื โ€“ the meal offering that comes with the sacrifice where there are no remnants, and all of these are burned entirely.",
100
+ "ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื• โ€“ mere sanctification by mouth.",
101
+ "ื•ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ because they donโ€™t have permitting factors",
102
+ "(i.e., in animal sacrifices the blood is the permitting factor while in meal offerings it is the handful of flour; an offering whose permitting factor was not offered is not rendered unfit by improper intention), as for example, peace-offerings and sin-offerings and guilt-offerings, that their blood permits the portions of offerings consumed on the altar and the meat/flesh to the Kohanim, or something that has a permitting factor to the altar alone, such as the burnt-offering of birds and oxen that are burned, that their blood is a permitting factor to the altar alone, as for example, the two loaves (brought as a communal sacrifice on Shavuot) that the blood of the lambs is the permitting factor, and the shewbread (see Leviticus 24:5-9) that are in the dishes are a permitting factor, as for example, the meal offerings that have a permitting factor through a handful of the meal offering which the priest takes to put on the altar. All of these, there is no liability because of inappropriate intention and left-over and impure until the permitting factors are offered, for this is written regarding inappropriate intention (Leviticus 7:18): โ€œ[If any of the flesh of his sacrifice of well-being is eaten on the third day,] it shall not be acceptable; [it shall not count for him who offered it. It is an offensive thing],โ€ and we stated the same ceremonies which are needed for the atoning efficacy of the legally performed offering, are required for making it an unfit offering (the eating of which is punishable by extirpation). But the remnant and impure we derive from ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ /offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention in Tractate Zevakhim in chapter two โ€œAll of the Sacrificesโ€ /ื›ืœ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื (Talmud Zevakhim 28b and 45b).",
103
+ "ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ like those of the handful of the meal offering which the priest takes to put on the altar and the frankincense which are themselves permitting factors themselves but they do not permit any other thing.",
104
+ "ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ because impure things we include them, from what is written (Leviticus 22:3): โ€œif any man among your offspring, while in a state of impurity , partakes of any sacred donation that the Israelite people may consecrate to the LORD, that person shall be cut off [from before Me,โ€ the Biblical verse speaks of all of the Holy Things to make one liable because it is impure, and that which is remnant is derived from the impure (see Talmud Zevakhim 45b)."
105
+ ]
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ [
109
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื›ื•' ื™ื•ืžืชื• โ€“ that these are from five sin-offerings that we derive that they died, and these three have always died, whether prior to atonement or after atonement [of the person who brought them], for they are not offered. And this Mishnah is taught at the beginning of the fourth chapter of [Tractate] Temurah and there I have explained it."
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื–ื™ืจื•ืชื• โ€“ but he didnโ€™t specify, โ€œthese for my burnt-offering (he-lamb), and these for my sin-offering (ewe-lamb) and these for my peace-offering (ram).โ€ (see Numbers 6:14)",
113
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื โ€“ with all of these monies.",
114
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ that is to say, that for each and every Meโ€™ah (a small silver coin worth 32 Perutot or one-sixth of a Denar), we are able to say that he set them aside for peace-offerings. But peace-offerings are Lesser Holy Things and they donโ€™t have the law of religious sacrilege associated with them, as is taught at the end of the first chapter [of Meilah, Mishnah 4], for Lesser Holy Things prior to the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, one does not commit sacrilege. But even though there is also among them the sin-offering and burnt-offering which are eligible for religious sacrilege, since there are also the monies for the peace-offerings which are not eligible for religious sacrilege, if he brought upon them the sacrilege sacrifice, we find that he brings unconsecrated things into the Temple courtyard, therefore, they are not available for benefit nor religious sacrilege.",
115
+ "ืžืช โ€“ A person who sets aside money, and these monies were undefined, as he did not specify that these were for the sin-offering and these for the burnt-offering and these for the peace-offering, all these monies would all [to the Temple treasury] as a donation.",
116
+ "ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื— โ€“ for a sin-offering whose owners died.",
117
+ "ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as we state [Tractate Kinim, at the end of Chapter 2 โ€“ Mishnah 5]: โ€œThe woman who died let her heirs bring her bunt-offering,โ€ for it is a mere gift.",
118
+ "ื•ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ โ€“ like the law regarding the peace-offering of the Nazir (see Mishnah Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6 - also found in a standard traditional Siddur as part of the morning service).",
119
+ "ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื โ€“ for regarding bread, it is written (Numbers 6:19): โ€and he shall place them (the shoulder of the ram, one unleavened cake and one unleavened wafer) and place them on he hands of the nazirite [after he has shaved his consecrated hair],โ€ but he is not there since he died."
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "ื”ื“ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื• โ€“ that is prior to its (i.e., the bloodโ€™s) sprinkling/tossing, as it is written (Leviticus 17:11): โ€œ[For the life of the flesh is in the blood,] and I have assigned it to you for making expiation for your lives upon the altar,โ€ for expiation I have given it but not for sacrilege.",
123
+ "ื™ืฆื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื• โ€“ that is after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood on the altar]. As it is taught in the Mishnah (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6): โ€œThe two streams of blood that mingled together in the [flow of the] surrounding channel and flowed down into the Kidron Brook and are sold to gardeners for fertilizer and the law of sacrilege applies to them [until the sale].โ€ This religious sacrilege is from the Rabbis and not from the Torah, for there is nothing where its command is performed and the law of religious sacrilege applies.",
124
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ a perforation was in the altar through which the libations would descend to pits, and these are the foundations of the altar which are hollow and very deep. But if he placed his hand inside and received the libations prior to their descending into the pit, he does not commit religious sacrilege, for their command had already been fulfilled."
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ their ashes [of the incense] and the remnants of the wicks of the Menorah he would remove [from the inner altar] and place them near the outer altar, the place where he places there the removal of the ashes from altar of the outer altar, and after he took them out to there, they are not available for benefit nor do the laws of sacrilege apply, for in these, it is not written (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œand place them beside the altarโ€ as with the ashes of the incense of the burnt-offering.",
128
+ "ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• โ€“ this is what he said: a person who dedicates the monetary value of he ashes, at the outside, prior to his removing it to the Temple courtyard, the laws of sacrilege apply, as for example, that he said, โ€œthe monetary value of the ashes is upon me,โ€ and afterwards he removed it outside and another person came and benefitted from the ashes, even though its commandment had already been performed, nevertheless, the laws of sacrilege apply, for since he benefitted from it and there is what is missing from the ashes, again, one cannot estimate how much they were worth when it is being evaluated, and is found that he is causing loss to that which is dedicated and because of this, he immediately commits sacrilege when he benefits from it.",
129
+ "ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ when he sanctified them (i.e., the turtledoves) prior to their maturation and the pigeons after their maturation.",
130
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื โ€“ and this is not similar to lacking time (i.e., an offering cannot be made because its time to be offered has not yet arrived) for an animal/cattle which is holy prior to its appropriate time and it he offered it after his time, for an animal/cattle because this legal status required might easily have been attained because it is considered that it has sanctity when it possesses a defect in order to need redemption, it also has sanctify even when it is not at the appropriate time, but birds which one cannot say about them this regarding this legal status, for the defect does not invalidate the birds and they donโ€™t have redemption, for redemption is only mentioned regarding cattle, that is so that theey donโ€™t have the sanctity of being offered too early.",
131
+ "ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžื ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ since later on they are appropriate, they have the application of the laws of sacrilege now. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
132
+ ],
133
+ [
134
+ "ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ since milk and eggs are not appropriate for the altar, therefore they are not available for benefit and the laws of sacrilege do not apply to them.",
135
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ that is so that the laws of sacrilege apply to them, since they are the sanctify of money, and are appropriate for the repair of the Temple house. But in the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 12b) it explains that this Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows: When is this said? When they sanctified the things of the body to the altar, but if their monetary value is dedicated for the altar, such as if he said, โ€œthe value of this bird,โ€ or โ€œthe value of this animal is dedicated to the Templeโ€ to bring from them a burnt offering, it is made as if one dedicated them for the repair of the Temple house, for certainly the dedication of the monetary value of the altar, the laws of religious sacrilege apply to the eggs and the milk."
136
+ ],
137
+ [
138
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ it states that their body is appropriate.",
139
+ "ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœื ืžื™ื โ€“ their body is appropriate for the repair of the Temple house for building, but their body is not appropriate for the altar, for it is not appropriate for the libation of waters but rather potable, running spring water, for they would not make water libations in the Temple other than from the waters of the Shiloah.",
140
+ "ืืฉืคื” ืžืœืื” ื–ื‘ืœ โ€“ its body is not appropriate either for the altar nor for repair of the Temple house but rather for its monetary value.",
141
+ "ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืžืœื ื™ื•ื ื™ื โ€“ it is appropriate for the altar but not for the repair of the Temple house.",
142
+ "ืื™ืœืŸ ืžืœื ืคื™ืจื•ืช โ€“ it is appropriate for the altar for First Fruits but not for the repair of the Temple house.",
143
+ "ืฉื“ื” ืžืœืื” ืขืฉื‘ื™ื โ€“ it is not appropriate either for the altar nor for the repair of the Temple house.",
144
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ืŸ โ€“ they are not subject to the law of sacrilege in what they became more valuable after it was dedicated [to the Temple].",
145
+ "ื•ืœื“ ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช (offspring of the tithe of cattle) โ€“ if a female cow came out tenth that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff (see Leviticus 27:32 โ€“ โ€œAll tithes of the herd or the flock โ€“ of all that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff, every tenth one โ€“ shall be holy to the LORDโ€), and it had a male issue prior to that, it cannot suck any further from her, for her male issue is unconsecrated, and she (i.e., the mother) is tithe, and it is found that he would be benefitting from the milk of something dedicated, for the tithing of cattle is something holy.",
146
+ "ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื ื›ืŸ โ€“ meaning to say, this one โ€œthat passed under the shepherdโ€™s staffโ€ undefined, It should not suck from it (i.e., the tithe of cattle), but others that had donated [their beasts] beforehand, are permitted to make a condition prior to tithing that if the tithe of their cattle should be a female beast, its milk would be unconsecrated in order that its young can suck from her with legal permission, and similarly also with the offspring of that which is dedicated, that they would not dedicate the milk of their mother. Such is what my Rabbis/Teachers have explained, but it is spoken with an expression of uncertainty. But Maimonides explained [that the expression] โ€œand others donate,โ€ that whomever whose heart causes him to donate who donate milk to cause to suck the offspring of a tithed and dedicated animal, because it is forbidden for offspring to suck from them, for the Rabbis declared that it should be considered like shearing and Divine service that is forbidden with Holy Things. Therefore, they donโ€™t have a remedy other than that others will donate milk to cause them (i.e., the offspring) to suck, since they were forbidden from sucking from the milk of their mother. And this is correct.",
147
+ "ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื• ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ and even if they made a condition that they would perform the work of their meals, we donโ€™t eat from the dried figs of that which is dedicated [to the Temple], but rather, the treasure gives them the cost of food from that which is dedicated and they purchase [food] from the market.",
148
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืคืจื” โ€“ that threshes in the vetches of that which is dedicated [to the Temple], we muzzle its mouth so that it doesnโ€™t eat from that which is dedicated, as it is written (Deuteronomy 25:4): โ€œYou shall not muzzle an ox while it is threshing,โ€ with threshing that is appropriate for it you donโ€™t muzzle, but you do muzzle [an ox] with threshing of dedicated/sacred things that is not appropriate for it, for it is not permitted to eat that which is dedicated/consecrated [to the Temple]."
149
+ ],
150
+ [
151
+ "ืฉืจืฉื™ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ (the roots of a privately owned tree that come into consecrated ground) โ€“ they do not benefit nor do the laws of sacrilege apply, for we follow after the tree, and this refers to the tree of a private person. But these words, when there is nothing between the tree of a private person and the sanctified property other than sixteen cubits or less. But if there is between them more than sixteen cubits, the laws of sacrilege apply with the roots that are growing in the sanctified field, for it no longer follows after the tree.",
152
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ โ€“ (see the Talmud, Tractate Bava Batra 26b) as for example that there is between a consecrated tree and the ground of a private person more than sixteen cubits, that the roots that are growing are of the private person and they donโ€™t follow after the consecrated tee since they are distanced from it by so much, therefore, the laws of sacrilege do not apply, But if there isnโ€™t between them sixteen cubits or less, the laws of sacrilege apply.",
153
+ "ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ My Rabbis/Teachers explained for me, as for example, that a well that is unconsecrated flows/gushes forth in a privately owned field, but it continues and goes out and passes through a consecrated field. We donโ€™t derive benefit from it within the consecrated field. But the laws of sacrilege do not apply, because it is through a private [field] that it gushes forth.",
154
+ "ื™ืฆืื• โ€“ the water that is in this well that flows/gushes forth from the field of a private individual and passes in a consecrated field and leaves from the consecrated field, we derive benefit from it ab initio.",
155
+ "ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื›ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ this is concerning the libation of water in the seven days of the Festival [of Sukkot] as is taught in the Mishnah (in Tractate Sukkah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 10): โ€œAs the rite concerning it [is performed] on a weekday, so the rite concerning it [is performed] on the Sabbath. But on the Eve of the Sabbath one would fill with water from the Shiloah a gold jug which was not sanctified [and he would leave it in a chamber (in the Temple)],โ€ but from those waters, they would not derive benefit nor would the laws of religious sacrilege be applicable, for they were not sanctified for the water libation for religious sacrilege until they were placed in a golden flask, which is a sanctified utensil.",
156
+ "ืขืจื‘ื” โ€“ that they would lean them upright near the altar (literally, at the sides of the altar), as it is taught in the Mishnah in the Chapter โ€œThe Lulav and the Willowโ€ (Chapter 4, Mishnah 5).",
157
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืœื•ืœื‘ โ€“ at the outside before they would lean it. For even though they did not gather it other than in order to lean it on the altar."
158
+ ],
159
+ [
160
+ "ืงืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ that the bird bruilt it from the wood and chips that it brought from another place.",
161
+ "ืฉื‘ืืฉืจื” ื™ืชื™ื– ื‘ืงื ื” โ€“ he should cause the nest to fall to the ground with a reed, and specifically, cause it to fly off, but he should not ascend on the Asherah/idolatrous tree, for if he ascends to take the nest, it is found that he is benefitting from the Asherah. But the eggs and the chicks that are in the nest, all the time that they need their mother, it is forbidden, whether at the top of a sanctified tree or whether at the top of an Asherah.",
162
+ "ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืจืฉ โ€“ the Aramaic translation of โ€œforest,โ€ thicket, wild-growing bushes.",
163
+ "ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืœื• โ€“ in the trees and on the branches and on the leaves.",
164
+ "",
165
+ "ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืืช ื”ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ Maimonides explained, to include the pieces of wood that they cut with a saw at the time when they prepare them for beams, that they commit religious sacrilege with them.",
166
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉืคื•ื™ื™ืŸ (but not with their shavings/planings/chips) โ€“ thin boards that they planed/sawed from the trees when they split them.",
167
+ "ื ื•ื™ื” (sproutings, leaves and flowers) โ€“ leaves that are on the trees of the forest."
168
+ ]
169
+ ],
170
+ [
171
+ [
172
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ if he benefitted from two kinds of Holy Things of the altar at the equivalent of a penny, he has committed religious sacrilege/misappropriation. But they combine also up to an oliveโ€™s bulk because of eating from sacrileges offered with the inappropriate intention or remnants or something impure, or to make one liable above an oliveโ€™s bulk outside the Temple courtyard.",
173
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ for religious sacrilege. But there is no inappropriate intention or remnant with them.",
174
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ but not for another thing, as we have said, that the Holy Things dedicated for the repair of the Temple do not have [the prohibitions] of offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention and remnant and ritual impurity."
175
+ ],
176
+ [
177
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to an oliveโ€™s bulk, to make one liable because of offering them outside the Temple courtyard, and to make one liable because of offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention, and remnant and [ritual] impurity, and for religious sacrilege if he benefitted from all of them the equivalent of a penny.",
178
+ "ื•ื”ืกื•ืœืช โ€“ the meal offering that comes with the burnt offering.",
179
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื™ืŸ โ€“ for the libations, for the burnt offering requires a meal-offering and libations.",
180
+ "ื•ืฉืฉื” ื‘ืชื•ื“ื” โ€“ for the offering of thanksgiving requires bread added to the five things that are associated with the burnt-offering (i.e., meat, fat, fine flour, wine and oil). But all of them combine up to an oliveโ€™s bulk for offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention, and remnant and ritual impurity, but not for religious sacrilege, for the thanksgiving offering and the Lesser Holy Things do not have religious sacrilege, as is taught at the end of the first chapter [of Tractate Meilah, Mishnah 4).",
181
+ "ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ โ€“ which is one one-hundredth of unconsecrated produce, and similarly, the tenth of the tenth of Demai/doubtfully tithed produce (see parallel text found in Tractate Orlah, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1).",
182
+ "ื•ื”ื—ืœื” โ€“ for even it is called Terumah/heave-offering, as it is written (Numbers 15:20): โ€œas the first yield of your baking, you shall set aside a loaf as a gift.โ€",
183
+ "ื•ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื โ€“ they are called Terumah/heave-offering, as the Master stated: (Deuteronomy 12:17): โ€œor of your contributionsโ€/\"ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ื™ื“ืš\" โ€“ these are the first fruits, as it is written regarding them (Deuteronomy 26:4): โ€œThe priest shall take the basket from your hand [and set it down in from of the altar of the LORD your God].โ€ (see Talmud Meilah 15b and Makkot 17a and parallels)",
184
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืืกื•ืจ โ€“ that if [one part of] leaven fell from all of them in order to make leavened bread within the started dough of unconcentrated produce [of ninety-nine parts], it is forbidden.",
185
+ "ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ โ€“ he who eats from all of them inadvertently an oliveโ€™s bulk pays the one-fifth [in addition to the principal]."
186
+ ],
187
+ [
188
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืคื™ื’ื•ืœื™ื โ€“ from burnt-offerings, from sin-offerings, and from guilt-offerings and peace-offerings.",
189
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to consuming from them an oliveโ€™s bulk to becoming liable for extirpation. And similarly, all the remnants.",
190
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ื ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื โ€“ and even the carrion of an unclean animal with the carrion of a pure animal, combine to an oliveโ€™s bulk regarding ritual impurity. But not in regard to flogging, for he is not flogged until he consumes an oliveโ€™s bulk of the carrion of only a pure animal, or an oliveโ€™s bulk from only an impure animal, because they are two categories/denominations, for one who consumes the flesh of an ritually impure animal is not flogged because of carrion other than because of his eating the flesh of an ritually impure animal.",
191
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืจืฆื™ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ for an oliveโ€™s bulk, to make those who consume them liable for flogging, and the eight reptiles that are written in the Torah (Leviticus 11:29-30) combine with each other, to make those who consume them liable for a lentilโ€™s bulk. According to the measure of their ritual impurity, so is the measure of their consumption.",
192
+ "ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ื•ื‘ืฉืจื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื โ€“ for we extend the scope/include them from Scripture as it is written (Leviticus 11:29): โ€œthe following shall be impure for you from among the things that swarm on the earth,โ€ to include he blood of that which swarms that it will defile like its flesh.",
193
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ (all things that are alike in [duration of] uncleanness and in requisite measure)โ€“ as, for example, carrion with carrion, or reptile/creeping animal with reptile/creeping animal.",
194
+ "ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ([in duration of] uncleanness but not in requisite measure) โ€“ as, for example, carrion and reptile as their uncleanness is similar, and both of them there are ritually unclean until evening, but not their requisite measure, [since] for carrion, the measure of its uncleanness is an olives bulk, whereas for reptiles, its measure is a lentilโ€™s bulk.",
195
+ "ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื™ื• ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• โ€“ as for example, a carrion and a dead person, for both of them defile in an oliveโ€™s bulk. But not in its defilement, for whereas defilement with a dead person is seven [days], and defilement with a carrion is only until the evening.",
196
+ "ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• โ€“ as for example, a dead person and a reptile, for defilement with a dead person is seven days, but defilement with a reptile is only until the evening. But with its requisite measure also, they are not equal/equivalent, for the measure of defilement with the dead is an oliveโ€™s bulk, and the measure of a reptile is as a lentilโ€™s bulk.",
197
+ "ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ since they are separate entities."
198
+ ],
199
+ [
200
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช (two categories) โ€“ two separate negative commandments.",
201
+ "ื‘ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื (the lesser of the two of them)- that is to say, it combines for [ritual] defilement even with the lesser requisite measurement, as for example, that it would combine for less than the equivalent of a lentilโ€™s bulk of a creeping reptile to complete the equivalent of an oliveโ€™s bulk of a carrion, and all the more so, that it would not combine to the requisite greater measurement. And similar, half of an oliveโ€™s bulk of a dead corpse does not combine to a half of an oliveโ€™s bulk of carrion to become impure, even for the impurity until evening.",
202
+ "ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืื‘ โ€“ this is the offspring of a first degree of uncleanness.",
203
+ "ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื•ืœื“ ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื” โ€“ this is the offspring of second degree of uncleanness.",
204
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to the equivalent of an eggโ€™s bulk, which is the measurement of impurity for foodstuffs.",
205
+ "ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื โ€“ to become third-degree [of uncleanness] in the manner that the second [degree of uncleanness] becomes third [degree of uncleanness], which is the lesser of the two of them. But it does not combine to that which would become second [degree of uncleanness] like it makes the first [degree of uncleanness] become second [degree of uncleanness], for if so, it was like the greater/more stringent of the two of them."
206
+ ],
207
+ [
208
+ "ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” โ€“ a person (i.e., a Kohen) who consumes ritually impure foods at the volume of half-a-loaf [of bread] which is an egg and a half [in volume] according to the words of Maimonides, and two eggsโ€™ [bulk] according to the words of my Rabbis/Teachers, his body is made invalid from eating heave-offering/Terumah and invalidates the Terumah through his contact until he immerses [in a Mikveh].",
209
+ "ื‘ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื™ืจื•ื‘ (see also Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2) โ€“ A person who wants to walk more than two-thousand cubits on Shabbat makes a joining of borders/ ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื—ื•ืžื™ืŸ and places the food for two [Sabbath] meals in the place where he desires that he will establish his Eruv, and he walks from the place of his Eruv and beyond [another] two-thousand cubits. And this is six eggs according to Maimonides and eight eggs according to my Rabbis/Teachers.",
210
+ "ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืœื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ for food does not defile with less than an egg, as it is written (Leviticus 11:34): โ€œAs to any food that may be eaten, [if shall become impure if it came in contact with water],โ€ that implies a food that is eaten at once, and the Sages estimated that the esophagus does not hold more than the egg of a chicken.",
211
+ "ื‘ื›ื’ืจื•ื’ืจืช ืœื”ื•ืฆืืช ืฉื‘ืช (see also Tractate Shabbat, Chapter 7, Mishnah 4) โ€“ a person who removes foodstuffs on the Sabbath from one domain to another is not liable with less than a dry figโ€™s bulk.",
212
+ "ื‘ื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื (see also Tractate Yoma, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2)โ€“ The Biblical verse changed it and wrote (Leviticus 16:29): \"ืชืขื ื•\" /โ€you shall practice self-denial,โ€ but did not write โ€œืชืื›ืœื• โ€œ/โ€you shall [not] eat,โ€ that implies that the All-Merciful was not stringent other than with self-denial/affliction, and the Sages estimated that with a date a personโ€™s mind is set at ease, ut less than a date, a personโ€™s mind is not set at ease.",
213
+ "ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช โ€“ a person who drinks impure liquids at a volume of a quarter-LOG, his (i.e., the Kohenโ€™s) body is invalidated from consuming heave-offering/Terumah and invalidates Terumah through his contact until he immerses [in a Mikveh]",
214
+ "ื•ื›ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื• (a mouthful, a quantity of liquid filling up oneโ€™s cheek) โ€“ that he drinks a quantity filling up his cheek on Yoom Kippur is liable. Less than this, he is exempt (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2)."
215
+ ],
216
+ [
217
+ "ื”ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ (see also Tractate Orlah, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1) โ€“ that if he consumed half-of-a-measure from this one (i.e., Orlah/fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted) and half-of-a-measure from that one (i.e., Kilei HaKerem/food crops in a vineyard โ€“ which unlike the prohibition of a mixture of seeds, it is prohibited to derive any benefit from the crop grown in the vineyard and all of the produce must be burned โ€“ see Tractate Kilayim), they combine [together to make that person liable] to be flogged [forty times โ€“ actually, forty minus one). Alternatively, Orlah and Kilei HaKerem are mixed together that fell into something permitted, they combine [to become prohibited] with dry produce in one out of two hundred, and with moist produce, if it provides a taste/flavor.",
218
+ "ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ โ€“ since they are two distinctive categories, but if there is in a pot to nullify her taste of the Orlah/fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted, on its own, and the taste of Kilei HaKerem/food crops in a vineyard on its own, everything is permitted. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon.",
219
+ "ื”ื‘ื’ื“ โ€“ which defiles [through the treading of someone with a flux] three handbreadths by three handbreadths.",
220
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืง โ€“ that it defiles [through the treading of someone with a flux or other impurities] four handbreadths by four handbreadths.",
221
+ "ื•ื”ืขื•ืจ โ€“ five handbreadths by five handbreadths.",
222
+ "ื•ื”ืžืคืฅ (poor-manโ€™s mattress) โ€“ six handbreadths by six handbreadths. The cloth/ื‘ื’ื“ combines with the sack/ืฉืง โ€“ that is less than it, to become defiled by four handbreadths by four handbreadths. And similarly, each other combines to that which is a less than it, and all of them combine with each other to defile according to the lesser measurement of defilement, but not the lesser with the greater.",
223
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื˜ืžื ืžื•ืฉื‘ (suitable to be made unclean as that used for sitting) โ€“ that is to say, even though we have stated above (see Mishnah 3 of this chapter) that everything where their measurements are not equivalent they do not combine, here they combine even though their measurements are not equivalent, for since they are equivalent for this things โ€“ each one of them suitable to be made ritually impure as that used for the sitting of the person with a flux, therefore, they combine for the defilement of sitting."
224
+ ]
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ [
228
+ "ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืข\"ืค ืœื ืคื’ื ืžืขืœ (even though he did not cause deterioration) โ€“ it is a dispute between Rabbi Akiva and the Sages is explained in the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 18a) in regard to a garment worn between other [garments] (literally, โ€œmiddle garment), for the garment deteriorates immediately, because he rubs himself against the walls. But they also donโ€™t dispute also regarding the inner garment that is against his skin, for that one also deteriorates immediately on account of sweat, but only regarding the โ€œmiddle garmentโ€ [do they dispute]. Rabbi Akiva holds for since that is a thing that does not deteriorate immediately, even though it does deteriorate after time, it is like something that has no deterioration and they commit religious sacrilege with it, because he benefited from it the equivalent of a penny. But the Rabbis hold for since there is deterioration regardless, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it until he causes deterioration.",
229
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ โ€“ anything that does not deteriorate, as for example, [if a woman] put a chain around her neck, a golden chain/necklace dedicated to the Temple property, or a ring in her hand or she drank from a golden cup dedicated to the Temple property (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 4). All of these, there is no deterioration in them, but rather, since she benefitted from them the worth of a penny, she has committed religious sacrilege. And how do we estimate benefit with them? We estimate how much a woman wants to give when she lends ornaments as they are to take them to a wedding meal to be honored by them, like that measurement that she pays to the Temple property the principal plus one-fifth when she used them.",
230
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื โ€“ as for example, he wore a shirt or covered himself with a cloak or used an ax to split wood, because they will eventually deteriorate, he did not commit sacrilege until he caused deterioration in them the equivalent value of a penny.",
231
+ "ืชืœืฉ โ€“ [tore] hair.",
232
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช โ€“ we are speaking of a sin-offering of something with a defect that stands to be redeemed and it is something that has a deterioration, therefore, he did not commit sacrilege until he causes deterioration the equivalent value of a penny, but in the pure sinโ€”offering that the pulling of wool and hair out [of the lamb], he didnโ€™t do anything, for as such it is appropriate to be offered now, like it was at the beginning, it would be like the golden cup which is something that has no deterioration, and since he benefitted from it, he has committed religious sacrilege.",
233
+ "ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืชื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืขืœ โ€“ for since it died, it is not redeemable, for we donโ€™t redeem Holy Things to feed them to dogs, and we are speaking about whether it is was a pure sin-offering or a sin-offering with a defect (see Tractate Meilah 19a)."
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "ื•ืคื’ื ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ โ€“ as, for example, he wore Holy clothing with the benefit of the measurement equivalent to one-half of a penny and deterioration of one-half of a penny, that he tore it and caused deterioration to it like the measurement of one-half of a penny.",
237
+ "ืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ โ€“ that it has in it deterioration but he didnโ€™t cause deterioration.",
238
+ "ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ โ€“ as, for example, he spilled liquid of Holy things but did not benefit.",
239
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ โ€“ on himself, and there will be on the thing that has in it deterioration, for regarding religious sacrilege, it is written (Leviticus 5:15): โ€œ[When a person commits a trespass,] being unwittingly remiss [about any of the LORDโ€™s sacred things],โ€ and with the consuming of heave offering, it is written (Numbers 18:32): โ€œYou will incur no guilt,โ€ just as the sin that is stated regarding the eating of heave-offering one causes deterioration and derives benefit, and just as he caused deterioration and benefited, even the sin offering mentioned In regard to religious sacrilege, it needs to be that he causes deterioration and benefits and in that thing itself that he causes deterioration, he derived benefit and not with another thing (see Talmud Meilah 19b)."
240
+ ],
241
+ [
242
+ "ื‘ืžืงื•ื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ืžื” ื•ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช โ€“ a pure animal/beast, a pure animal/beast that is of the Holy Things of the altar. For these donโ€™t exist for the redemption and are not eligible for deterioration, for even if one person rode on the animal/beast and it became weak or he tore out [hair] from its wool, it is still worthy for sacrifice, but there is sacrilege after another sacrilege in it. And similarly, if one person drank from a golden cup, even if he caused it deterioration and it became worse, because it has the holiness [of the body], and does not refer to redemption, it is still appropriate for [Divine] service and there is in it one sacrilege after another. But the Holy Things of keeping the Temple in repair, as, for the example, the beasts/animals of the Holy Things of Temple repair, there is no religious sacrilege after religious sacrilege, because they are things that are redeemed, but because one person committed sacrilege with it when he removed it to unconsecrated use, furthermore, it lacks religious sacrilege.",
243
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ โ€“ that has no deterioration and is not disqualified, which is every thing that has no redemption, like those that we mentioned, even if he caused deterioration to it, there is sacrilege following sacrilege. But there is a distinction between the first Tanna/teacher and Rabbi [Judah the Prince], regarding the pure Holy things of the Altar that were made in them defects, and he transgressed and slaughtered them prior to redemption. Rabbi [Judah the Prince] states that they should be buried, because they required placement and appraisement and that is not possible because they died Therefore, they should be buried, for since they no longer are capable of being redeemable, there is sacrilege following sacrilege, when someone benefits from them after ritual slaughter (and he adds the issue of the dedication of wood to the altar, for according to him, their law is like a sacrifice). But the Sages say that they should be redeemed (see Talmud Meilah 19b and Tractate Menahot 106b), for they donโ€™t require placement and appraisement, and si the holiness of these monies there is no religious sacrilege following religious sacrilege. And the Halakah is according to the Sages."
244
+ ],
245
+ [
246
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ โ€“ In the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 20a), it establishes it with the treasurer of the that which is consecrated, as they were the stone or beam that were transmitted to his hand from the outset, but when he took them for himself, they still were in the domain of that which is consecrated, for where he carried them in his house, they were in the domain of the consecrated as at first, but if he gave it to his fellow, he removed it from his domain and changed it from that which is consecrated to unconsecrated and he committed religious sacrilege, but his fellow did not commit sacrilege for it had already gone to unconsecrated matters.",
247
+ "ื‘ื ืื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืชื• โ€“ he didnโ€™t build it within the structure of his house in actuality , for if so, he would benefit immediately when he added it to the building of his house. But rather, as for example, when he placed it in the aperture in the roof looking to the ground floor that is not in the building, for now, he has no benefit until he will live underneath it and benefit from it the equivalent of a penny, such as that his produce were placed underneath the aperture in the roof, but rains were dripping upon them, but he closed the mouth of the aperture in the roof with a sanctified stone, since it protected them for the equivalent of a penny, he committed religious sacrilege.",
248
+ "ื ืชื ื” ืœื‘ืœืŸ โ€“ in order that he would permit him to bathe in the bathhouse."
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื• โ€“ he ate one-half a measure and fed his fellow one-half a measure, or he benefitted one-half a measure and caused his fellow to benefit one-half a measure. And similarly, his benefit and the eating of his fellow, such as an amount which is one-half a measurement and his fellow ate half-a measurement or the opposite, all these combine to make him liable for a guilt-offering for sacrilege.",
252
+ "ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” โ€“ as for example, that he ate one-half of a measurement today and one-half of a measurement the next day in one act of forgetfulness, or he ate or benefitted like one-half a measurement today and he friend or caused his fellow to benefit like a half-measurement for the morrow, they combine and even for an extended period of time, and as long as they would be in one act of forgetfulness, as it is written (Leviticus 5:15): โ€œ When a person commits a trespass,โ€ nevertheless, that he will commit a religious trespass, he would be liable for a guilt offering."
253
+ ]
254
+ ],
255
+ [
256
+ [
257
+ "ื”ืฉืœื™ื— โ€“ the owner of the house/householder gave him (i.e., the agent) something that is dedicated to a sacred purpose of monies dedicated to the Temple to remove them in the designation of unconsecrated [things], and the agent performed his agency.",
258
+ "ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ โ€“ for in regards to religious sacrilege, there Is a deputy to an illegal act (i.e., in this case, the responsibility for an illegal act can be shifted to the employer โ€“ as opposed to the normal scenario where it cannot โ€“ see Talmud Kiddushin 42b). But in entire Torah, there is no deputy for an illegal act except for the case of religious sacrilege/misappropriation because it is written concerning it (Numbers 5:6): โ€œand that person realizes his guilt,โ€ the person who acted inadvertently firs , which is the person who sent the individual representing him.",
259
+ "ืชืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื•ืจื—ื™ื โ€“ from that meat that is dedicated to a sacred purpose.",
260
+ "ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ื‘ื“ โ€“ [liver] dedicated to a sacred purpose.",
261
+ "ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ but only/provided that the agent would say, โ€œtake two [pieces],โ€ from my own intention, then the owner of the house committed sacrilege/misappropriation , for the agent did not abrogate his agency even though he added on to the words of the person sending him, therefore, the person sending him misappropriated/committed sacrilege for his agency had been fulfilled, and the agent [himself] misappropriated/committed sacrilege because he added of his own consent/knowledge, and the guests also are liable on the third piece [of meat] that they took from their own consent/knowledge. But if the agent did not say, โ€œtake two [pieces of meat] from my own knowledge,โ€ but rather [said], โ€œtake two [pieces of meat] through the agency of the owner of the house,โ€ the person who sent him committed sacrilege for his words had been fulfilled, but the agent is exempt because he [merely] added upon the agency of the owner of the house and did not abrogate his agency โ€“ but what he had added, he did not add with his own consent.",
262
+ "ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื (chest/case) โ€“ in the Greek language, they call a chest/case a ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื (Genesis 50:26): โ€œand placed in a coffin [in Egypt],โ€ the Aramaic Targum/translation โ€œand they placed him in a chest.โ€",
263
+ "ืืข\"ืค ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื™ ืืœื ืžื–ื” ื›ื•' ืžืขืœ โ€“ because the agent acted according to his statement/word, but matters that are in the heart are not matters (as he had abrogated his agency)."
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ โ€“ who are not capable of carrying out a commission/agency, nevertheless, since his agency was done, the person who sent him committed sacrilege/misappropriation.",
267
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ โ€“ who received the money from the hand of the deaf-mute/ื—ืจืฉ, imbecile/ืฉื•ื˜ื” or the minor/ืงื˜ืŸ, is liable when he spends the monies of sacred property on his possessions.",
268
+ "ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ โ€“ the householder [is reminded] prior to the monies reaching the hand of the storekeeper, and since he remembered, he furthermore is not liable for a sacrifice of sacrilege/misappropriation, for there is no sacrifice of misappropriation/sacrilege for a wanton act.",
269
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ โ€“ and this is the case where the houseowner and the agent were reminded, for here, there is no one who acted inadvertently other than the storekeeper. But if the houseowner is reminded but the agent is not reminded, the agent committed misappropriation because inadvertently erred first.",
270
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื” โ€“ that is to say if the storekeeper knew about this penny that it is holy prior to his spending it or that it became combined with the rest of the pennies that he has, how should he act and be free to use his pennies."
271
+ ],
272
+ [
273
+ "ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื ืžืขืœื• โ€“ the houseowner did not commit sacrilege for his agency was not performed with a penny, but the agent did not commit misappropriation because he did not abrogate his agency of the houseowner with a penny, but for less than a penny, there isnโ€™t an liability for sacrilege.",
274
+ "ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ โ€“ that he abrogated the agency of the houseowner, whether with wicks or with candles, and there is In both of [the expenditure of] a penny."
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ "ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืขืœื• โ€“ as long as that Etrog/citron would be worth two pennies like the houseowner gave him. The houseowner committed sacrilege since the agent purchased for him according to what he said and worth as he gave him, he thusly performed his agency, but the agent committed a misappropriation for he purchased of his own intention a pomegranate with a penny that was not in the agency of the houseowner.",
278
+ "ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื”\"ื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ โ€“ for he (i.e., the houseowner) said to the agent, If you would purchase an Etrog/citron for two pennies like I gave to you, you would bring me a large Etrog/citron worth four pennies, [but] now that you didnโ€™t give other than a penny, you brought me an Etrog/citron worth two pennies which is a small and bad, it is found that you did not perform my agency. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda."
279
+ ],
280
+ [
281
+ "ืื ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ tied up with an unusual knot even though it doesnโ€™t have upon it a seal, or knots like the other knots and seals.",
282
+ "ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ for he (i.e., the owner) revealed his intention that it was not appropriate that he should use that which was deposited, for since, he bound them in an unusual knot or placed upon it a seal.",
283
+ "ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ โ€“ it is called (i.e., loose), all the time that it is not tied with an unusual knot but rather it is tied like other ties and lacks a seal upon it.",
284
+ "ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžืขืœ โ€“ for it is like the depositor said to him that he can use them, since they are not bound up, and he had indeed performed his agency, and the depositor also did not commit an act of sacrilege for he did not state explicitly that he (i.e., the money changer) can use them.",
285
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ โ€“ who sells produce or spices in the store.",
286
+ "ื›ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ if he deposited with him (i.e., the storekeeper) money, even though they are not tied up, he may not use them, therefore if they were monies devoted to a sacred purpose and they were used, he has committed religious sacrilege/misappropriation.",
287
+ "ื›ืฉืœื—ื ื™ โ€“ and he is permitted to use the monies that were deposited with him when they are not bound up, therefore, he did not commit a religious sacrilege."
288
+ ],
289
+ [
290
+ "ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” โ€“ for the needs of his use, he has committed religious sacrilege.",
291
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ he did not commit religious sacrilege ",
292
+ "until he spent all the money that was in the purse for the needs of unconsecrated products. And the Halakah is according to the Sages.",
293
+ "ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื™ืก ื–ื” โ€“ that is to say, do not use up the penny from this purse until there will be in it something consecrated."
294
+ ]
295
+ ]
296
+ ],
297
+ "sectionNames": [
298
+ "Chapter",
299
+ "Mishnah",
300
+ "Comment"
301
+ ]
302
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah/English/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,300 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Meilah",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื โ€“ even though that their law is to be slaughtered in the north [part of the Temple courtyard] (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1), do not say that is like the one that is strangled (see Talmud Meilah 2a) for they were like Holy Things that died when they left the realm of religious sacrilege according to the Written Torah, that it comes to tell us that Holy Things/sacrifices that died are not worthy at all. But the south [part of the Temple courtyard] assuming that it is not appropriate for the Holy of Holies but is appropriate for offerings of lesser sanctity, therefore, they commit religious sacrilege with them, but a person who benefits from them the equivalent of a perutah/penny brings the sacrifice for religious sacrilege. But not only that they were slaughtered in the south and their blood was received In the north that one commits religious sacrilege because the essence of Divine service in the north is [according to law], and from the received tradition and onward, it is the commandment of the priesthood, but even if they were slaughtered in the north and the received their blood in the south, even though tha t the essence of the Divine service is in the south not according to the law, even so, they commit religious sacrilege through them.",
10
+ "ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” โ€“ even though that night is not the time of offering [of the sacrifice), one commits religious sacrilege with them",
11
+ "ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื โ€“ his all the more so that one is committing religious sacrilege, because he sprinkled [the blood] during the day, which is the essence of Divine service. But it is taught โ€œthis but one doesnโ€™t have to state that.โ€",
12
+ "ืื• ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ โ€“ [slaughtered them] in the north , and he thought about eating them outside of their time which is ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ/an offering disqualified by improper intention which is punishable by extirpation/ื›ืจืช , or outside of their place which is disqualified which does not have [punishment of] extirpation, one commits religious sacrilege through them.",
13
+ "ื›ืœืœ ืืžืจ ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ even though it once again became disqualified and they are not permitted to eat them, nevertheless, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with them.",
14
+ "ืฉืœื ื” โ€“ after sprinkling, or that it became defiled or that went outside of the courtyard after the sprinkling [of the blood], even though that it is not appropriate for the Kohanim, since it had one hour of availability to [for use[ prior to being left overnight, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it, for we donโ€™t call it โ€œGodโ€™s holy things,โ€ for it was appropriate for the Kohanim.",
15
+ "ื•ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื•ื–ืจืงื• ืืช ื“ืžื” (the blood of which disqualified men have received or tossed) โ€“ the ineligible had received its blood, even though that those that sprinkled/tossed it were fit, or that those who sprinkled it were disqualified, even though who received it were fit. But if after the disqualified had received the blood and sprinkled it, the fit [priests] returned and received the rest of the lifeblood (i.e., the last blood that exits before the animal is dead -which is about one-fourth of a LOG โ€“ see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1 ) and sprinkled it, thereby the sprinkling by the fit is makes inappropriate use of sacred property, but permits the meat to the Kohanim, there isnโ€™t religious sacrilege. And these words refer to the rest of the disqualified, other than those who are ritually impure, but someone ritually impure who received the blood and sprinkled it, even though the fit returned and received the rest of the lifeblood [of the animal] and sprinkled it, the meat did not have a period of availability [for use by the Kohanim] and one commits religious sacrilege, for the ritually impure, since is appropriate for the Divine Service of the community, as the sacrifice of the community postpones the ritual defilement, when he he tossed the blood, the rest of he blood became remnants, and furthermore, the tossing by the fit of the blood is not an inappropriate use of sacred property to permit the meat, and among the disqualified, you donโ€™t have an individual who makes the blood of the remnants other than the ritually impure alone."
16
+ ],
17
+ [
18
+ "ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื (beyond the veils of the courtyard) โ€“ and afterwards it (i.e., the meat) came in and afterwards tossed/sprinkled the blood.",
19
+ "ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• โ€“ even though he tossed/sprinkled the blood, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that tossing/sprinkling [of the blood] does not take effect/benefit to [meat] that leaves to exclude something from religious sacrilege.",
20
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ for since it (i.e., the meat) left [the courtyard]. For tossing/sprinkling is fit for it establishes ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ/an offering disqualified by proper intention, but it is not disqualified.",
21
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื โ€“ Rabbi Akiva holds that we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it. For he holds that tossing/sprinkling [of the blood] takes effect for [the meat] that goes out to exclude it from religious sacrilege.",
22
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•' โ€“ but, the language of โ€œsurely!โ€/โ€truly!โ€- like truthfully. But when Rabbi Akiva said that tossing/sprinkling [the blood] take effect for [the meat] that leaves [from the courtyard], as for example, that part of the meat went out but not all of it, that because it is effective for that part that is inside [the courtyard], it is effective also for that part [of the meat] that left [the courtyard] to the outside. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Akiva.",
23
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืื‘ื“ื” โ€“ now he brings a proof to that which he sasid that tossing/sprinkling effects that [meat] which left [the Temple courtyard].",
24
+ "ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช (both of them are available)โ€“ are both slaughtered and their blood was received in two cups and he tossed/sprinkled the blood from one of them.",
25
+ "ืœื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื” โ€“ of that one.",
26
+ "ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื” โ€“ from religious sacrilege.",
27
+ "ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”โ€“ whose blood was not tossed/sprinkled, since he was able to sprinkle/toss the blood of which of them that he wanted.",
28
+ "ื•ืื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื“ืžื” ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ even though it is disqualified, that it is permitted as a sin-offering. Does it not follow that it will exempt its own flesh, even though it was disqualified when it went out [of the courtyard?โ€ But Rabbi Akiva did not say that just as its blood exempts its flesh, so too it exempts the flesh of its fellow [sacrifice], but rather, when he slaughtered two sin-offerings as one, because if he wanted, he toss/sprinkles from this one, if he wanted, he sprinkles/tosses from that one, but [in the case of] one after another, Rabbi Akiva did not say that the blood would exempt the flesh of its fellow [animal sacrifice]."
29
+ ],
30
+ [
31
+ "ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื โ€“ we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with those portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar of lesser Holy Things other than after the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, as we stated at the end of the chapter (see Mishnah 4), and if they went out [from the Temple courtyard] before the sprinkling/tossing of the blood.",
32
+ "ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ just as that Rabbi Eliezer has [the opinion] that the sprinkling [of the blod] does not effect [meat] that leaves [the Temple courtyard] to exclude the meat of the most Holy Things from becoming religious sacrilege, here too, it does not take effect [for meat] that leaves to include the parts of the sacrifice offered on the altar of lesser Holy Things regarding religious sacrilege, and just as Rabbi Akiva has the opinion that sprinkling/tossing of the blood effects that [meat] which leaves [the Temple courtyard] to exclude the meat of the Most Holy Things from religious sacrilege, it effects that [meat] which leaves to include the portions of the sacrifice offered o the altar of lesser Holy Things regarding religious sacrilege."
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "ืžืขืฉื” ื“ืžื™ื โ€“ this sprinkling/tossing of the blood.",
36
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ after the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, there is no religious sacrilege with the flesh/meat, for already it has its hour of availability [for use by] the Kohanim (see Mishnah 1 of this chapter), which isits leniency, for because of the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, there comes the leniency that we donโ€™t have religious sacrilege with it.",
37
+ "ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” โ€“ whether for those portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar whether on the flesh/meat after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood[.",
38
+ "ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ โ€“ if he had the wrong intention in one of the four [Divine] Services, for sprinkling/tossing [of the blood] establishes for the wrong intention and also establishes for remnants/left-overs and that which is ritually impure, and this is make a stringemcy.",
39
+ "ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื โ€“ after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood].",
40
+ "ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ โ€“ and they commit religious sacrilege with those portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar, for it is was already appropriate to โ€œon Highโ€ (i.e.,God), and these are Holy Things and not the money of the owners.",
41
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” โ€“ whether on the portions of the sacrifice offered on the altar or on the meat/flesh, they are liable for it because of improper intention, left-overs/remnants, and that which is impure. And that means all of it is for stringency."
42
+ ]
43
+ ],
44
+ [
45
+ [
46
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ โ€“ that is to say, from when the bird is killed by pinching its neck with a finger nail, holiness is added to it, and it becomes disqualified if a ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื /a Kohen who has immersed himself that day, but is awaiting sunset, had come in contact with it or someone lacking atonement/ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื (i.e., like a woman after childbirth, a male or woman with a flux, a healed leper who have to bring a sacrifice to complete their purification). But especially if It was disqualified by a Tevul Yom. But it does not become unclean to make others unclean, for just as the Tevul Yom disqualifies the heave-offering/Terumah, so it also disqualifies that which is holy.",
47
+ "ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ โ€“ for it refers to the sprinkling of the sin offering of a bird in the place of sprinkling of an animal/cattle, for sprinkling [of the blood] establishes disqualification of an offering of inappropriate intention when he thought about it prior to this like the sprinkling of the blood of cattle and furthermore, there is the prohibition of remnant and impurity.",
48
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for since its blood had been sprinkled there is [in it] a moment of availability for the Kohanim."
49
+ ],
50
+ [
51
+ "ืžื™ืฆื” ื“ืžื” (the wringing/squeezing out of the blood) โ€“ the squeezing/wringing out of the burnt offering of the bird refers to the place of the sprinkling of the [blood] of the animal and the sprinkling of the sin-offering of the bird, for concerning the burnt-offering of the bird it is written (Leviticus 1:15 โ€“ also see Tractate Zevakhin 6:5): โ€œand its blood shall be drained out [against the side of the altar].โ€",
52
+ "ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ โ€“ for since all of it is burnt entirely, and there is no moment of availability [for use by the priests] at the end, one always commits religious sacrilege with it until it is burned entirely, and one takes from its ashes in the removal of the ashes from the altar, as it is written (Leviticus 6:3) โ€œand he shall take up the ashes to which the fire has reduced the burnt- offering on the altar [and place them beside the altar].โ€"
53
+ ],
54
+ [
55
+ "ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื โ€“ for the Kohanim do not have a moment of availability [for use] at all.",
56
+ "ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžืŸ ื›ื•' โ€“ the sprinkling of their blood establishes them for inappropriate intention to be punishable by extirpation for a person who eats of them, if he had in mind an undue intention [in the performance of a sacrificial ceremony] at the time of the ritual slaughter to offer their portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar outside of their appropriate time, for since there is no moment of availability [for use] by the Kohanim, they commit religious sacrilege with them in the house of the ashes outside of the camp where they were burned if he benefited from them.",
57
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ืชืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ (until the flesh is charred in small lumps) โ€“ that is to say, that it will be burned and become charcoal/used for kindling. But after it is charred into small lumps, furthermore, there is no sacrilege, for there is nothing where its command is performed where one commits religious sacrilege."
58
+ ],
59
+ [
60
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืจื” โ€“ because it belongs to the Kohanim, as it is written (Leviticus 7:8): โ€œthe priest [who offers a manโ€™s burnt offering] shall keep the skin of the burnt offering that he offered.โ€",
61
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ all the time that is burnet on the altar, it is burnt entirely.",
62
+ "ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ โ€“ when they lift all the ashes from top of the altar and cast them in the ash heap. And furthermore, there is no sacrilege, for its command had already been done/fulfilled."
63
+ ],
64
+ [
65
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ for there is a period of availability for the Kohanim, for the meat of the sin-offering and guilt-offering and communal sacrifices of peace-offerings, are consumed by the Kohanim.",
66
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื โ€“ for there is no period of availability for the Kohanim."
67
+ ],
68
+ [
69
+ "ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื โ€“ that we bring on Shavuot/Atzeret.",
70
+ "ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ (when they have formed a crust in the oven) โ€“ which is the beginning of their establishment, but this formation of a light crust on the dough is considered rendering fit to be made invalid by a Tevul Yom/one who immersed himself that day [but had to wait until sunset to be pure] and those lacking atonement [through bringing a sacrifice], like the ritual slaughtering of something of the Holy of Holies. But here, we donโ€™t have the reading, \"ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”\" /being left overnight (which is found in the earlier Mishnayot of this chapter), because the โ€œtwo loavesโ€ are baked from the eve of the Festival [of Shavuot] and their baking does not supersede the festival and are eaten on the morrow on the Festival. But they are rendered fit to slaughter upon them the sacrifice, for since they have formed a light crust on their face, they are called, โ€œbread.โ€",
71
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for there is no period of availability for the Kohanim, and their commandment has already been fulfilled."
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื โ€“ here also we donโ€™t have the reading \"ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”\"/being left overnight, because it is baked on Friday (i.e., the Eve of the Sabbath) and is not consumed until the following Sabbath.",
75
+ "ืงืจื‘ื• ื”ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ืŸ (when dishes of incense have been offered) โ€“ that is, its preliminary acts, that on Shabbat at the time of the removal of the bread, they would offer dishes of incense of frankincense.",
76
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ for it was permitted to the Kohanim and its command had been performed."
77
+ ],
78
+ [
79
+ "ื”ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื• โ€“ through the sanctification of the mouth [enunciating it].",
80
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื โ€“ because there is a period of availability to the Kohanim.",
81
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ (with the handful of the meal offering the priest takes to be put on the altar) = until it is burned completely and it leaves to the ash heap according to the law of the parts of the sin-offering and guilt-offering burned on the altar. And after that, there is no sacrilege with it, for its commandment had been performed."
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "ื•ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื โ€“ the meal offering that comes with the sacrifice where there are no remnants, and all of these are burned entirely.",
85
+ "ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื• โ€“ mere sanctification by mouth.",
86
+ "ื•ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ because they donโ€™t have permitting factors",
87
+ "(i.e., in animal sacrifices the blood is the permitting factor while in meal offerings it is the handful of flour; an offering whose permitting factor was not offered is not rendered unfit by improper intention), as for example, peace-offerings and sin-offerings and guilt-offerings, that their blood permits the portions of offerings consumed on the altar and the meat/flesh to the Kohanim, or something that has a permitting factor to the altar alone, such as the burnt-offering of birds and oxen that are burned, that their blood is a permitting factor to the altar alone, as for example, the two loaves (brought as a communal sacrifice on Shavuot) that the blood of the lambs is the permitting factor, and the shewbread (see Leviticus 24:5-9) that are in the dishes are a permitting factor, as for example, the meal offerings that have a permitting factor through a handful of the meal offering which the priest takes to put on the altar. All of these, there is no liability because of inappropriate intention and left-over and impure until the permitting factors are offered, for this is written regarding inappropriate intention (Leviticus 7:18): โ€œ[If any of the flesh of his sacrifice of well-being is eaten on the third day,] it shall not be acceptable; [it shall not count for him who offered it. It is an offensive thing],โ€ and we stated the same ceremonies which are needed for the atoning efficacy of the legally performed offering, are required for making it an unfit offering (the eating of which is punishable by extirpation). But the remnant and impure we derive from ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ /offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention in Tractate Zevakhim in chapter two โ€œAll of the Sacrificesโ€ /ื›ืœ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื (Talmud Zevakhim 28b and 45b).",
88
+ "ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ like those of the handful of the meal offering which the priest takes to put on the altar and the frankincense which are themselves permitting factors themselves but they do not permit any other thing.",
89
+ "ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ because impure things we include them, from what is written (Leviticus 22:3): โ€œif any man among your offspring, while in a state of impurity , partakes of any sacred donation that the Israelite people may consecrate to the LORD, that person shall be cut off [from before Me,โ€ the Biblical verse speaks of all of the Holy Things to make one liable because it is impure, and that which is remnant is derived from the impure (see Talmud Zevakhim 45b)."
90
+ ]
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ [
94
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื›ื•' ื™ื•ืžืชื• ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ that these are from five sin-offerings that we derive that they died, and these three have always died, whether prior to atonement or after atonement [of the person who brought them], for they are not offered. And this Mishnah is taught at the beginning of the fourth chapter of [Tractate] Temurah and there I have explained it."
95
+ ],
96
+ [
97
+ "ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื–ื™ืจื•ืชื• โ€“ but he didnโ€™t specify, โ€œthese for my burnt-offering (he-lamb), and these for my sin-offering (ewe-lamb) and these for my peace-offering (ram).โ€ (see Numbers 6:14)",
98
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื โ€“ with all of these monies.",
99
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ that is to say, that for each and every Meโ€™ah (a small silver coin worth 32 Perutot or one-sixth of a Denar), we are able to say that he set them aside for peace-offerings. But peace-offerings are Lesser Holy Things and they donโ€™t have the law of religious sacrilege associated with them, as is taught at the end of the first chapter [of Meilah, Mishnah 4], for Lesser Holy Things prior to the sprinkling/tossing of the blood, one does not commit sacrilege. But even though there is also among them the sin-offering and burnt-offering which are eligible for religious sacrilege, since there are also the monies for the peace-offerings which are not eligible for religious sacrilege, if he brought upon them the sacrilege sacrifice, we find that he brings unconsecrated things into the Temple courtyard, therefore, they are not available for benefit nor religious sacrilege.",
100
+ "ืžืช โ€“ A person who sets aside money, and these monies were undefined, as he did not specify that these were for the sin-offering and these for the burnt-offering and these for the peace-offering, all these monies would all [to the Temple treasury] as a donation.",
101
+ "ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื— โ€“ for a sin-offering whose owners died.",
102
+ "ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as we state [Tractate Kinim, at the end of Chapter 2 โ€“ Mishnah 5]: โ€œThe woman who died let her heirs bring her bunt-offering,โ€ for it is a mere gift.",
103
+ "ื•ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“ โ€“ like the law regarding the peace-offering of the Nazir (see Mishnah Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6 - also found in a standard traditional Siddur as part of the morning service).",
104
+ "ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื โ€“ for regarding bread, it is written (Numbers 6:19): โ€and he shall place them (the shoulder of the ram, one unleavened cake and one unleavened wafer) and place them on he hands of the nazirite [after he has shaved his consecrated hair],โ€ but he is not there since he died."
105
+ ],
106
+ [
107
+ "ื”ื“ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื• โ€“ that is prior to its (i.e., the bloodโ€™s) sprinkling/tossing, as it is written (Leviticus 17:11): โ€œ[For the life of the flesh is in the blood,] and I have assigned it to you for making expiation for your lives upon the altar,โ€ for expiation I have given it but not for sacrilege.",
108
+ "ื™ืฆื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื• โ€“ that is after the sprinkling/tossing [of the blood on the altar]. As it is taught in the Mishnah (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6): โ€œThe two streams of blood that mingled together in the [flow of the] surrounding channel and flowed down into the Kidron Brook and are sold to gardeners for fertilizer and the law of sacrilege applies to them [until the sale].โ€ This religious sacrilege is from the Rabbis and not from the Torah, for there is nothing where its command is performed and the law of religious sacrilege applies.",
109
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ a perforation was in the altar through which the libations would descend to pits, and these are the foundations of the altar which are hollow and very deep. But if he placed his hand inside and received the libations prior to their descending into the pit, he does not commit religious sacrilege, for their command had already been fulfilled."
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ their ashes [of the incense] and the remnants of the wicks of the Menorah he would remove [from the inner altar] and place them near the outer altar, the place where he places there the removal of the ashes from altar of the outer altar, and after he took them out to there, they are not available for benefit nor do the laws of sacrilege apply, for in these, it is not written (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œand place them beside the altarโ€ as with the ashes of the incense of the burnt-offering.",
113
+ "ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• โ€“ this is what he said: a person who dedicates the monetary value of he ashes, at the outside, prior to his removing it to the Temple courtyard, the laws of sacrilege apply, as for example, that he said, โ€œthe monetary value of the ashes is upon me,โ€ and afterwards he removed it outside and another person came and benefitted from the ashes, even though its commandment had already been performed, nevertheless, the laws of sacrilege apply, for since he benefitted from it and there is what is missing from the ashes, again, one cannot estimate how much they were worth when it is being evaluated, and is found that he is causing loss to that which is dedicated and because of this, he immediately commits sacrilege when he benefits from it.",
114
+ "ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ when he sanctified them (i.e., the turtledoves) prior to their maturation and the pigeons after their maturation.",
115
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื โ€“ and this is not similar to lacking time (i.e., an offering cannot be made because its time to be offered has not yet arrived) for an animal/cattle which is holy prior to its appropriate time and it he offered it after his time, for an animal/cattle because this legal status required might easily have been attained because it is considered that it has sanctity when it possesses a defect in order to need redemption, it also has sanctify even when it is not at the appropriate time, but birds which one cannot say about them this regarding this legal status, for the defect does not invalidate the birds and they donโ€™t have redemption, for redemption is only mentioned regarding cattle, that is so that theey donโ€™t have the sanctity of being offered too early.",
116
+ "ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžื ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ since later on they are appropriate, they have the application of the laws of sacrilege now. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
117
+ ],
118
+ [
119
+ "ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ since milk and eggs are not appropriate for the altar, therefore they are not available for benefit and the laws of sacrilege do not apply to them.",
120
+ "ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ that is so that the laws of sacrilege apply to them, since they are the sanctify of money, and are appropriate for the repair of the Temple house. But in the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 12b) it explains that this Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows: When is this said? When they sanctified the things of the body to the altar, but if their monetary value is dedicated for the altar, such as if he said, โ€œthe value of this bird,โ€ or โ€œthe value of this animal is dedicated to the Templeโ€ to bring from them a burnt offering, it is made as if one dedicated them for the repair of the Temple house, for certainly the dedication of the monetary value of the altar, the laws of religious sacrilege apply to the eggs and the milk."
121
+ ],
122
+ [
123
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ it states that their body is appropriate.",
124
+ "ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœื ืžื™ื โ€“ their body is appropriate for the repair of the Temple house for building, but their body is not appropriate for the altar, for it is not appropriate for the libation of waters but rather potable, running spring water, for they would not make water libations in the Temple other than from the waters of the Shiloah.",
125
+ "ืืฉืคื” ืžืœืื” ื–ื‘ืœ โ€“ its body is not appropriate either for the altar nor for repair of the Temple house but rather for its monetary value.",
126
+ "ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืžืœื ื™ื•ื ื™ื โ€“ it is appropriate for the altar but not for the repair of the Temple house.",
127
+ "ืื™ืœืŸ ืžืœื ืคื™ืจื•ืช โ€“ it is appropriate for the altar for First Fruits but not for the repair of the Temple house.",
128
+ "ืฉื“ื” ืžืœืื” ืขืฉื‘ื™ื โ€“ it is not appropriate either for the altar nor for the repair of the Temple house.",
129
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ืŸ โ€“ they are not subject to the law of sacrilege in what they became more valuable after it was dedicated [to the Temple].",
130
+ "ื•ืœื“ ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช (offspring of the tithe of cattle) โ€“ if a female cow came out tenth that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff (see Leviticus 27:32 โ€“ โ€œAll tithes of the herd or the flock โ€“ of all that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff, every tenth one โ€“ shall be holy to the LORDโ€), and it had a male issue prior to that, it cannot suck any further from her, for her male issue is unconsecrated, and she (i.e., the mother) is tithe, and it is found that he would be benefitting from the milk of something dedicated, for the tithing of cattle is something holy.",
131
+ "ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื ื›ืŸ โ€“ meaning to say, this one โ€œthat passed under the shepherdโ€™s staffโ€ undefined, It should not suck from it (i.e., the tithe of cattle), but others that had donated [their beasts] beforehand, are permitted to make a condition prior to tithing that if the tithe of their cattle should be a female beast, its milk would be unconsecrated in order that its young can suck from her with legal permission, and similarly also with the offspring of that which is dedicated, that they would not dedicate the milk of their mother. Such is what my Rabbis/Teachers have explained, but it is spoken with an expression of uncertainty. But Maimonides explained [that the expression] โ€œand others donate,โ€ that whomever whose heart causes him to donate who donate milk to cause to suck the offspring of a tithed and dedicated animal, because it is forbidden for offspring to suck from them, for the Rabbis declared that it should be considered like shearing and Divine service that is forbidden with Holy Things. Therefore, they donโ€™t have a remedy other than that others will donate milk to cause them (i.e., the offspring) to suck, since they were forbidden from sucking from the milk of their mother. And this is correct.",
132
+ "ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื• ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ and even if they made a condition that they would perform the work of their meals, we donโ€™t eat from the dried figs of that which is dedicated [to the Temple], but rather, the treasure gives them the cost of food from that which is dedicated and they purchase [food] from the market.",
133
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืคืจื” โ€“ that threshes in the vetches of that which is dedicated [to the Temple], we muzzle its mouth so that it doesnโ€™t eat from that which is dedicated, as it is written (Deuteronomy 25:4): โ€œYou shall not muzzle an ox while it is threshing,โ€ with threshing that is appropriate for it you donโ€™t muzzle, but you do muzzle [an ox] with threshing of dedicated/sacred things that is not appropriate for it, for it is not permitted to eat that which is dedicated/consecrated [to the Temple]."
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "ืฉืจืฉื™ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ (the roots of a privately owned tree that come into consecrated ground) โ€“ they do not benefit nor do the laws of sacrilege apply, for we follow after the tree, and this refers to the tree of a private person. But these words, when there is nothing between the tree of a private person and the sanctified property other than sixteen cubits or less. But if there is between them more than sixteen cubits, the laws of sacrilege apply with the roots that are growing in the sanctified field, for it no longer follows after the tree.",
137
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ โ€“ (see the Talmud, Tractate Bava Batra 26b) as for example that there is between a consecrated tree and the ground of a private person more than sixteen cubits, that the roots that are growing are of the private person and they donโ€™t follow after the consecrated tee since they are distanced from it by so much, therefore, the laws of sacrilege do not apply, But if there isnโ€™t between them sixteen cubits or less, the laws of sacrilege apply.",
138
+ "ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ My Rabbis/Teachers explained for me, as for example, that a well that is unconsecrated flows/gushes forth in a privately owned field, but it continues and goes out and passes through a consecrated field. We donโ€™t derive benefit from it within the consecrated field. But the laws of sacrilege do not apply, because it is through a private [field] that it gushes forth.",
139
+ "ื™ืฆืื• โ€“ the water that is in this well that flows/gushes forth from the field of a private individual and passes in a consecrated field and leaves from the consecrated field, we derive benefit from it ab initio.",
140
+ "ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื›ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ this is concerning the libation of water in the seven days of the Festival [of Sukkot] as is taught in the Mishnah (in Tractate Sukkah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 10): โ€œAs the rite concerning it [is performed] on a weekday, so the rite concerning it [is performed] on the Sabbath. But on the Eve of the Sabbath one would fill with water from the Shiloah a gold jug which was not sanctified [and he would leave it in a chamber (in the Temple)],โ€ but from those waters, they would not derive benefit nor would the laws of religious sacrilege be applicable, for they were not sanctified for the water libation for religious sacrilege until they were placed in a golden flask, which is a sanctified utensil.",
141
+ "ืขืจื‘ื” โ€“ that they would lean them upright near the altar (literally, at the sides of the altar), as it is taught in the Mishnah in the Chapter โ€œThe Lulav and the Willowโ€ (Chapter 4, Mishnah 5).",
142
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืœื•ืœื‘ โ€“ at the outside before they would lean it. For even though they did not gather it other than in order to lean it on the altar."
143
+ ],
144
+ [
145
+ "ืงืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ โ€“ that the bird bruilt it from the wood and chips that it brought from another place.",
146
+ "ืฉื‘ืืฉืจื” ื™ืชื™ื– ื‘ืงื ื” โ€“ he should cause the nest to fall to the ground with a reed, and specifically, cause it to fly off, but he should not ascend on the Asherah/idolatrous tree, for if he ascends to take the nest, it is found that he is benefitting from the Asherah. But the eggs and the chicks that are in the nest, all the time that they need their mother, it is forbidden, whether at the top of a sanctified tree or whether at the top of an Asherah.",
147
+ "ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืจืฉ โ€“ the Aramaic translation of โ€œforest,โ€ thicket, wild-growing bushes.",
148
+ "ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืœื• โ€“ in the trees and on the branches and on the leaves.",
149
+ "",
150
+ "ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืืช ื”ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ Maimonides explained, to include the pieces of wood that they cut with a saw at the time when they prepare them for beams, that they commit religious sacrilege with them.",
151
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉืคื•ื™ื™ืŸ (but not with their shavings/planings/chips) โ€“ thin boards that they planed/sawed from the trees when they split them.",
152
+ "ื ื•ื™ื” (sproutings, leaves and flowers) โ€“ leaves that are on the trees of the forest."
153
+ ]
154
+ ],
155
+ [
156
+ [
157
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ if he benefitted from two kinds of Holy Things of the altar at the equivalent of a penny, he has committed religious sacrilege/misappropriation. But they combine also up to an oliveโ€™s bulk because of eating from sacrileges offered with the inappropriate intention or remnants or something impure, or to make one liable above an oliveโ€™s bulk outside the Temple courtyard.",
158
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ for religious sacrilege. But there is no inappropriate intention or remnant with them.",
159
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื” โ€“ but not for another thing, as we have said, that the Holy Things dedicated for the repair of the Temple do not have [the prohibitions] of offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention and remnant and ritual impurity."
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to an oliveโ€™s bulk, to make one liable because of offering them outside the Temple courtyard, and to make one liable because of offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention, and remnant and [ritual] impurity, and for religious sacrilege if he benefitted from all of them the equivalent of a penny.",
163
+ "ื•ื”ืกื•ืœืช โ€“ the meal offering that comes with the burnt offering.",
164
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื™ืŸ โ€“ for the libations, for the burnt offering requires a meal-offering and libations.",
165
+ "ื•ืฉืฉื” ื‘ืชื•ื“ื” โ€“ for the offering of thanksgiving requires bread added to the five things that are associated with the burnt-offering (i.e., meat, fat, fine flour, wine and oil). But all of them combine up to an oliveโ€™s bulk for offerings disqualified by inappropriate intention, and remnant and ritual impurity, but not for religious sacrilege, for the thanksgiving offering and the Lesser Holy Things do not have religious sacrilege, as is taught at the end of the first chapter [of Tractate Meilah, Mishnah 4).",
166
+ "ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ โ€“ which is one one-hundredth of unconsecrated produce, and similarly, the tenth of the tenth of Demai/doubtfully tithed produce (see parallel text found in Tractate Orlah, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1).",
167
+ "ื•ื”ื—ืœื” โ€“ for even it is called Terumah/heave-offering, as it is written (Numbers 15:20): โ€œas the first yield of your baking, you shall set aside a loaf as a gift.โ€",
168
+ "ื•ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื โ€“ they are called Terumah/heave-offering, as the Master stated: (Deuteronomy 12:17): โ€œor of your contributionsโ€/\"ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ื™ื“ืš\" โ€“ these are the first fruits, as it is written regarding them (Deuteronomy 26:4): โ€œThe priest shall take the basket from your hand [and set it down in from of the altar of the LORD your God].โ€ (see Talmud Meilah 15b and Makkot 17a and parallels)",
169
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืืกื•ืจ โ€“ that if [one part of] leaven fell from all of them in order to make leavened bread within the started dough of unconcentrated produce [of ninety-nine parts], it is forbidden.",
170
+ "ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ โ€“ he who eats from all of them inadvertently an oliveโ€™s bulk pays the one-fifth [in addition to the principal]."
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืคื™ื’ื•ืœื™ื โ€“ from burnt-offerings, from sin-offerings, and from guilt-offerings and peace-offerings.",
174
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to consuming from them an oliveโ€™s bulk to becoming liable for extirpation. And similarly, all the remnants.",
175
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ื ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื โ€“ and even the carrion of an unclean animal with the carrion of a pure animal, combine to an oliveโ€™s bulk regarding ritual impurity. But not in regard to flogging, for he is not flogged until he consumes an oliveโ€™s bulk of the carrion of only a pure animal, or an oliveโ€™s bulk from only an impure animal, because they are two categories/denominations, for one who consumes the flesh of an ritually impure animal is not flogged because of carrion other than because of his eating the flesh of an ritually impure animal.",
176
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืจืฆื™ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ for an oliveโ€™s bulk, to make those who consume them liable for flogging, and the eight reptiles that are written in the Torah (Leviticus 11:29-30) combine with each other, to make those who consume them liable for a lentilโ€™s bulk. According to the measure of their ritual impurity, so is the measure of their consumption.",
177
+ "ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ื•ื‘ืฉืจื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื โ€“ for we extend the scope/include them from Scripture as it is written (Leviticus 11:29): โ€œthe following shall be impure for you from among the things that swarm on the earth,โ€ to include he blood of that which swarms that it will defile like its flesh.",
178
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ (all things that are alike in [duration of] uncleanness and in requisite measure)โ€“ as, for example, carrion with carrion, or reptile/creeping animal with reptile/creeping animal.",
179
+ "ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ([in duration of] uncleanness but not in requisite measure) โ€“ as, for example, carrion and reptile as their uncleanness is similar, and both of them there are ritually unclean until evening, but not their requisite measure, [since] for carrion, the measure of its uncleanness is an olives bulk, whereas for reptiles, its measure is a lentilโ€™s bulk.",
180
+ "ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื™ื• ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• โ€“ as for example, a carrion and a dead person, for both of them defile in an oliveโ€™s bulk. But not in its defilement, for whereas defilement with a dead person is seven [days], and defilement with a carrion is only until the evening.",
181
+ "ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• โ€“ as for example, a dead person and a reptile, for defilement with a dead person is seven days, but defilement with a reptile is only until the evening. But with its requisite measure also, they are not equal/equivalent, for the measure of defilement with the dead is an oliveโ€™s bulk, and the measure of a reptile is as a lentilโ€™s bulk.",
182
+ "ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ since they are separate entities."
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช (two categories) โ€“ two separate negative commandments.",
186
+ "ื‘ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื (the lesser of the two of them)- that is to say, it combines for [ritual] defilement even with the lesser requisite measurement, as for example, that it would combine for less than the equivalent of a lentilโ€™s bulk of a creeping reptile to complete the equivalent of an oliveโ€™s bulk of a carrion, and all the more so, that it would not combine to the requisite greater measurement. And similar, half of an oliveโ€™s bulk of a dead corpse does not combine to a half of an oliveโ€™s bulk of carrion to become impure, even for the impurity until evening.",
187
+ "ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืื‘ โ€“ this is the offspring of a first degree of uncleanness.",
188
+ "ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื•ืœื“ ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื” โ€“ this is the offspring of second degree of uncleanness.",
189
+ "ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” โ€“ to the equivalent of an eggโ€™s bulk, which is the measurement of impurity for foodstuffs.",
190
+ "ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื โ€“ to become third-degree [of uncleanness] in the manner that the second [degree of uncleanness] becomes third [degree of uncleanness], which is the lesser of the two of them. But it does not combine to that which would become second [degree of uncleanness] like it makes the first [degree of uncleanness] become second [degree of uncleanness], for if so, it was like the greater/more stringent of the two of them."
191
+ ],
192
+ [
193
+ "ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” โ€“ a person (i.e., a Kohen) who consumes ritually impure foods at the volume of half-a-loaf [of bread] which is an egg and a half [in volume] according to the words of Maimonides, and two eggsโ€™ [bulk] according to the words of my Rabbis/Teachers, his body is made invalid from eating heave-offering/Terumah and invalidates the Terumah through his contact until he immerses [in a Mikveh].",
194
+ "ื‘ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื™ืจื•ื‘ (see also Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2) โ€“ A person who wants to walk more than two-thousand cubits on Shabbat makes a joining of borders/ ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื—ื•ืžื™ืŸ and places the food for two [Sabbath] meals in the place where he desires that he will establish his Eruv, and he walks from the place of his Eruv and beyond [another] two-thousand cubits. And this is six eggs according to Maimonides and eight eggs according to my Rabbis/Teachers.",
195
+ "ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืœื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ for food does not defile with less than an egg, as it is written (Leviticus 11:34): โ€œAs to any food that may be eaten, [if shall become impure if it came in contact with water],โ€ that implies a food that is eaten at once, and the Sages estimated that the esophagus does not hold more than the egg of a chicken.",
196
+ "ื‘ื›ื’ืจื•ื’ืจืช ืœื”ื•ืฆืืช ืฉื‘ืช (see also Tractate Shabbat, Chapter 7, Mishnah 4) โ€“ a person who removes foodstuffs on the Sabbath from one domain to another is not liable with less than a dry figโ€™s bulk.",
197
+ "ื‘ื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื (see also Tractate Yoma, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2)โ€“ The Biblical verse changed it and wrote (Leviticus 16:29): \"ืชืขื ื•\" /โ€you shall practice self-denial,โ€ but did not write โ€œืชืื›ืœื• โ€œ/โ€you shall [not] eat,โ€ that implies that the All-Merciful was not stringent other than with self-denial/affliction, and the Sages estimated that with a date a personโ€™s mind is set at ease, ut less than a date, a personโ€™s mind is not set at ease.",
198
+ "ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช โ€“ a person who drinks impure liquids at a volume of a quarter-LOG, his (i.e., the Kohenโ€™s) body is invalidated from consuming heave-offering/Terumah and invalidates Terumah through his contact until he immerses [in a Mikveh]",
199
+ "ื•ื›ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื• (a mouthful, a quantity of liquid filling up oneโ€™s cheek) โ€“ that he drinks a quantity filling up his cheek on Yoom Kippur is liable. Less than this, he is exempt (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 8, Mishnah 2)."
200
+ ],
201
+ [
202
+ "ื”ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ (see also Tractate Orlah, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1) โ€“ that if he consumed half-of-a-measure from this one (i.e., Orlah/fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted) and half-of-a-measure from that one (i.e., Kilei HaKerem/food crops in a vineyard โ€“ which unlike the prohibition of a mixture of seeds, it is prohibited to derive any benefit from the crop grown in the vineyard and all of the produce must be burned โ€“ see Tractate Kilayim), they combine [together to make that person liable] to be flogged [forty times โ€“ actually, forty minus one). Alternatively, Orlah and Kilei HaKerem are mixed together that fell into something permitted, they combine [to become prohibited] with dry produce in one out of two hundred, and with moist produce, if it provides a taste/flavor.",
203
+ "ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ โ€“ since they are two distinctive categories, but if there is in a pot to nullify her taste of the Orlah/fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted, on its own, and the taste of Kilei HaKerem/food crops in a vineyard on its own, everything is permitted. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon.",
204
+ "ื”ื‘ื’ื“ โ€“ which defiles [through the treading of someone with a flux] three handbreadths by three handbreadths.",
205
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืง โ€“ that it defiles [through the treading of someone with a flux or other impurities] four handbreadths by four handbreadths.",
206
+ "ื•ื”ืขื•ืจ โ€“ five handbreadths by five handbreadths.",
207
+ "ื•ื”ืžืคืฅ (poor-manโ€™s mattress) โ€“ six handbreadths by six handbreadths. The cloth/ื‘ื’ื“ combines with the sack/ืฉืง โ€“ that is less than it, to become defiled by four handbreadths by four handbreadths. And similarly, each other combines to that which is a less than it, and all of them combine with each other to defile according to the lesser measurement of defilement, but not the lesser with the greater.",
208
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื˜ืžื ืžื•ืฉื‘ (suitable to be made unclean as that used for sitting) โ€“ that is to say, even though we have stated above (see Mishnah 3 of this chapter) that everything where their measurements are not equivalent they do not combine, here they combine even though their measurements are not equivalent, for since they are equivalent for this things โ€“ each one of them suitable to be made ritually impure as that used for the sitting of the person with a flux, therefore, they combine for the defilement of sitting."
209
+ ]
210
+ ],
211
+ [
212
+ [
213
+ "ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืข\"ืค ืœื ืคื’ื ืžืขืœ (even though he did not cause deterioration) โ€“ it is a dispute between Rabbi Akiva and the Sages is explained in the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 18a) in regard to a garment worn between other [garments] (literally, โ€œmiddle garment), for the garment deteriorates immediately, because he rubs himself against the walls. But they also donโ€™t dispute also regarding the inner garment that is against his skin, for that one also deteriorates immediately on account of sweat, but only regarding the โ€œmiddle garmentโ€ [do they dispute]. Rabbi Akiva holds for since that is a thing that does not deteriorate immediately, even though it does deteriorate after time, it is like something that has no deterioration and they commit religious sacrilege with it, because he benefited from it the equivalent of a penny. But the Rabbis hold for since there is deterioration regardless, we donโ€™t commit religious sacrilege with it until he causes deterioration.",
214
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ โ€“ anything that does not deteriorate, as for example, [if a woman] put a chain around her neck, a golden chain/necklace dedicated to the Temple property, or a ring in her hand or she drank from a golden cup dedicated to the Temple property (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 4). All of these, there is no deterioration in them, but rather, since she benefitted from them the worth of a penny, she has committed religious sacrilege. And how do we estimate benefit with them? We estimate how much a woman wants to give when she lends ornaments as they are to take them to a wedding meal to be honored by them, like that measurement that she pays to the Temple property the principal plus one-fifth when she used them.",
215
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื โ€“ as for example, he wore a shirt or covered himself with a cloak or used an ax to split wood, because they will eventually deteriorate, he did not commit sacrilege until he caused deterioration in them the equivalent value of a penny.",
216
+ "ืชืœืฉ โ€“ [tore] hair.",
217
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช โ€“ we are speaking of a sin-offering of something with a defect that stands to be redeemed and it is something that has a deterioration, therefore, he did not commit sacrilege until he causes deterioration the equivalent value of a penny, but in the pure sinโ€”offering that the pulling of wool and hair out [of the lamb], he didnโ€™t do anything, for as such it is appropriate to be offered now, like it was at the beginning, it would be like the golden cup which is something that has no deterioration, and since he benefitted from it, he has committed religious sacrilege.",
218
+ "ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืชื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืขืœ โ€“ for since it died, it is not redeemable, for we donโ€™t redeem Holy Things to feed them to dogs, and we are speaking about whether it is was a pure sin-offering or a sin-offering with a defect (see Tractate Meilah 19a)."
219
+ ],
220
+ [
221
+ "ื•ืคื’ื ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ โ€“ as, for example, he wore Holy clothing with the benefit of the measurement equivalent to one-half of a penny and deterioration of one-half of a penny, that he tore it and caused deterioration to it like the measurement of one-half of a penny.",
222
+ "ืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ โ€“ that it has in it deterioration but he didnโ€™t cause deterioration.",
223
+ "ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ โ€“ as, for example, he spilled liquid of Holy things but did not benefit.",
224
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ โ€“ on himself, and there will be on the thing that has in it deterioration, for regarding religious sacrilege, it is written (Leviticus 5:15): โ€œ[When a person commits a trespass,] being unwittingly remiss [about any of the LORDโ€™s sacred things],โ€ and with the consuming of heave offering, it is written (Numbers 18:32): โ€œYou will incur no guilt,โ€ just as the sin that is stated regarding the eating of heave-offering one causes deterioration and derives benefit, and just as he caused deterioration and benefited, even the sin offering mentioned In regard to religious sacrilege, it needs to be that he causes deterioration and benefits and in that thing itself that he causes deterioration, he derived benefit and not with another thing (see Talmud Meilah 19b)."
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ "ื‘ืžืงื•ื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ืžื” ื•ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช โ€“ a pure animal/beast, a pure animal/beast that is of the Holy Things of the altar. For these donโ€™t exist for the redemption and are not eligible for deterioration, for even if one person rode on the animal/beast and it became weak or he tore out [hair] from its wool, it is still worthy for sacrifice, but there is sacrilege after another sacrilege in it. And similarly, if one person drank from a golden cup, even if he caused it deterioration and it became worse, because it has the holiness [of the body], and does not refer to redemption, it is still appropriate for [Divine] service and there is in it one sacrilege after another. But the Holy Things of keeping the Temple in repair, as, for the example, the beasts/animals of the Holy Things of Temple repair, there is no religious sacrilege after religious sacrilege, because they are things that are redeemed, but because one person committed sacrilege with it when he removed it to unconsecrated use, furthermore, it lacks religious sacrilege.",
228
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ โ€“ that has no deterioration and is not disqualified, which is every thing that has no redemption, like those that we mentioned, even if he caused deterioration to it, there is sacrilege following sacrilege. But there is a distinction between the first Tanna/teacher and Rabbi [Judah the Prince], regarding the pure Holy things of the Altar that were made in them defects, and he transgressed and slaughtered them prior to redemption. Rabbi [Judah the Prince] states that they should be buried, because they required placement and appraisement and that is not possible because they died Therefore, they should be buried, for since they no longer are capable of being redeemable, there is sacrilege following sacrilege, when someone benefits from them after ritual slaughter (and he adds the issue of the dedication of wood to the altar, for according to him, their law is like a sacrifice). But the Sages say that they should be redeemed (see Talmud Meilah 19b and Tractate Menahot 106b), for they donโ€™t require placement and appraisement, and si the holiness of these monies there is no religious sacrilege following religious sacrilege. And the Halakah is according to the Sages."
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ โ€“ In the Gemara (Tractate Meilah 20a), it establishes it with the treasurer of the that which is consecrated, as they were the stone or beam that were transmitted to his hand from the outset, but when he took them for himself, they still were in the domain of that which is consecrated, for where he carried them in his house, they were in the domain of the consecrated as at first, but if he gave it to his fellow, he removed it from his domain and changed it from that which is consecrated to unconsecrated and he committed religious sacrilege, but his fellow did not commit sacrilege for it had already gone to unconsecrated matters.",
232
+ "ื‘ื ืื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืชื• โ€“ he didnโ€™t build it within the structure of his house in actuality , for if so, he would benefit immediately when he added it to the building of his house. But rather, as for example, when he placed it in the aperture in the roof looking to the ground floor that is not in the building, for now, he has no benefit until he will live underneath it and benefit from it the equivalent of a penny, such as that his produce were placed underneath the aperture in the roof, but rains were dripping upon them, but he closed the mouth of the aperture in the roof with a sanctified stone, since it protected them for the equivalent of a penny, he committed religious sacrilege.",
233
+ "ื ืชื ื” ืœื‘ืœืŸ โ€“ in order that he would permit him to bathe in the bathhouse."
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื• โ€“ he ate one-half a measure and fed his fellow one-half a measure, or he benefitted one-half a measure and caused his fellow to benefit one-half a measure. And similarly, his benefit and the eating of his fellow, such as an amount which is one-half a measurement and his fellow ate half-a measurement or the opposite, all these combine to make him liable for a guilt-offering for sacrilege.",
237
+ "ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” โ€“ as for example, that he ate one-half of a measurement today and one-half of a measurement the next day in one act of forgetfulness, or he ate or benefitted like one-half a measurement today and he friend or caused his fellow to benefit like a half-measurement for the morrow, they combine and even for an extended period of time, and as long as they would be in one act of forgetfulness, as it is written (Leviticus 5:15): โ€œ When a person commits a trespass,โ€ nevertheless, that he will commit a religious trespass, he would be liable for a guilt offering."
238
+ ]
239
+ ],
240
+ [
241
+ [
242
+ "ื”ืฉืœื™ื— โ€“ the owner of the house/householder gave him (i.e., the agent) something that is dedicated to a sacred purpose of monies dedicated to the Temple to remove them in the designation of unconsecrated [things], and the agent performed his agency.",
243
+ "ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ โ€“ for in regards to religious sacrilege, there Is a deputy to an illegal act (i.e., in this case, the responsibility for an illegal act can be shifted to the employer โ€“ as opposed to the normal scenario where it cannot โ€“ see Talmud Kiddushin 42b). But in entire Torah, there is no deputy for an illegal act except for the case of religious sacrilege/misappropriation because it is written concerning it (Numbers 5:6): โ€œand that person realizes his guilt,โ€ the person who acted inadvertently firs , which is the person who sent the individual representing him.",
244
+ "ืชืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื•ืจื—ื™ื โ€“ from that meat that is dedicated to a sacred purpose.",
245
+ "ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ื‘ื“ โ€“ [liver] dedicated to a sacred purpose.",
246
+ "ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ but only/provided that the agent would say, โ€œtake two [pieces],โ€ from my own intention, then the owner of the house committed sacrilege/misappropriation , for the agent did not abrogate his agency even though he added on to the words of the person sending him, therefore, the person sending him misappropriated/committed sacrilege for his agency had been fulfilled, and the agent [himself] misappropriated/committed sacrilege because he added of his own consent/knowledge, and the guests also are liable on the third piece [of meat] that they took from their own consent/knowledge. But if the agent did not say, โ€œtake two [pieces of meat] from my own knowledge,โ€ but rather [said], โ€œtake two [pieces of meat] through the agency of the owner of the house,โ€ the person who sent him committed sacrilege for his words had been fulfilled, but the agent is exempt because he [merely] added upon the agency of the owner of the house and did not abrogate his agency โ€“ but what he had added, he did not add with his own consent.",
247
+ "ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื (chest/case) โ€“ in the Greek language, they call a chest/case a ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื (Genesis 50:26): โ€œand placed in a coffin [in Egypt],โ€ the Aramaic Targum/translation โ€œand they placed him in a chest.โ€",
248
+ "ืืข\"ืค ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื™ ืืœื ืžื–ื” ื›ื•' ืžืขืœ โ€“ because the agent acted according to his statement/word, but matters that are in the heart are not matters (as he had abrogated his agency)."
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ โ€“ who are not capable of carrying out a commission/agency, nevertheless, since his agency was done, the person who sent him committed sacrilege/misappropriation.",
252
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ โ€“ who received the money from the hand of the deaf-mute/ื—ืจืฉ, imbecile/ืฉื•ื˜ื” or the minor/ืงื˜ืŸ, is liable when he spends the monies of sacred property on his possessions.",
253
+ "ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ โ€“ the householder [is reminded] prior to the monies reaching the hand of the storekeeper, and since he remembered, he furthermore is not liable for a sacrifice of sacrilege/misappropriation, for there is no sacrifice of misappropriation/sacrilege for a wanton act.",
254
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ โ€“ and this is the case where the houseowner and the agent were reminded, for here, there is no one who acted inadvertently other than the storekeeper. But if the houseowner is reminded but the agent is not reminded, the agent committed misappropriation because inadvertently erred first.",
255
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื” โ€“ that is to say if the storekeeper knew about this penny that it is holy prior to his spending it or that it became combined with the rest of the pennies that he has, how should he act and be free to use his pennies."
256
+ ],
257
+ [
258
+ "ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื ืžืขืœื• โ€“ the houseowner did not commit sacrilege for his agency was not performed with a penny, but the agent did not commit misappropriation because he did not abrogate his agency of the houseowner with a penny, but for less than a penny, there isnโ€™t an liability for sacrilege.",
259
+ "ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ โ€“ that he abrogated the agency of the houseowner, whether with wicks or with candles, and there is In both of [the expenditure of] a penny."
260
+ ],
261
+ [
262
+ "ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืขืœื• โ€“ as long as that Etrog/citron would be worth two pennies like the houseowner gave him. The houseowner committed sacrilege since the agent purchased for him according to what he said and worth as he gave him, he thusly performed his agency, but the agent committed a misappropriation for he purchased of his own intention a pomegranate with a penny that was not in the agency of the houseowner.",
263
+ "ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื”\"ื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ โ€“ for he (i.e., the houseowner) said to the agent, If you would purchase an Etrog/citron for two pennies like I gave to you, you would bring me a large Etrog/citron worth four pennies, [but] now that you didnโ€™t give other than a penny, you brought me an Etrog/citron worth two pennies which is a small and bad, it is found that you did not perform my agency. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda."
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "ืื ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ tied up with an unusual knot even though it doesnโ€™t have upon it a seal, or knots like the other knots and seals.",
267
+ "ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ for he (i.e., the owner) revealed his intention that it was not appropriate that he should use that which was deposited, for since, he bound them in an unusual knot or placed upon it a seal.",
268
+ "ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ โ€“ it is called (i.e., loose), all the time that it is not tied with an unusual knot but rather it is tied like other ties and lacks a seal upon it.",
269
+ "ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžืขืœ โ€“ for it is like the depositor said to him that he can use them, since they are not bound up, and he had indeed performed his agency, and the depositor also did not commit an act of sacrilege for he did not state explicitly that he (i.e., the money changer) can use them.",
270
+ "ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ โ€“ who sells produce or spices in the store.",
271
+ "ื›ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ if he deposited with him (i.e., the storekeeper) money, even though they are not tied up, he may not use them, therefore if they were monies devoted to a sacred purpose and they were used, he has committed religious sacrilege/misappropriation.",
272
+ "ื›ืฉืœื—ื ื™ โ€“ and he is permitted to use the monies that were deposited with him when they are not bound up, therefore, he did not commit a religious sacrilege."
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ "ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” โ€“ for the needs of his use, he has committed religious sacrilege.",
276
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ he did not commit religious sacrilege ",
277
+ "until he spent all the money that was in the purse for the needs of unconsecrated products. And the Halakah is according to the Sages.",
278
+ "ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื™ืก ื–ื” โ€“ that is to say, do not use up the penny from this purse until there will be in it something consecrated."
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+ [
26
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ืฉื—ื˜ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ืœื ืชื™ืžื ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ื—ื ืงื™ื ื”ื• ื“ืžื• ื•ื”ื•ื• ื›ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืžืชื• ืฉื™ืฆืื• ื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืชื•ืจื”, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืžืชื• ืœื ื—ื–ื• ื›ืœืœ, ืื‘ืœ ื“ืจื•ื ื ื”ื™ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืจืื•ื™ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžื™ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ื ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ืœื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื™ ื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ [ื›ื“ื™ืŸ], ื“ืžืงื‘ืœื” ื•ืื™ืœืš ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื•ื™ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืฉืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
27
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœื™ืœื” ืœืื• ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
28
+ "<b>ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื ื–ืจืง ื‘ื™ื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื•ื. ืืœื ื–ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ื• ืงืชื ื™:",
29
+ "<b>ืื• ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ืจืช, ืื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืคืกื•ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื›ืจืช, ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
30
+ "<b>ื›ืœืœ ืืžืจ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉื•ื‘ ื ืคืกืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืื›ืœืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
31
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื”.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ืื• ืฉื ื˜ืžืื” ืื• ืฉื™ืฆืื” ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขื” ืื—ืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืœื ื”, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”, ื“ืœืื• ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืณ ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื ื—ื–ื• ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
32
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื•ื–ืจืงื• ืืช ื“ืžื”.</b> ืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืช ื“ืžื” ืืขืดืค ืฉื–ืจืงื•ื”ื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ืื• ืฉื–ืจืงื•ื”ื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืขืดืค ืฉืงื‘ืœื•ื”ื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื. ื•ืื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืช ื”ื“ื ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ื—ื–ืจื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืงื‘ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ื”ืจื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืžื•ืขืœืช ื•ืžืชืจืช ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืฉืืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืžื, ืื‘ืœ ื˜ืžื ืฉืงื‘ืœ ืืช ื”ื“ื ื•ื–ืจืงื•, ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืงื‘ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ืฉื”ื˜ืžื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืจืื•ื™ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืฉืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ื›ืฉื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื ืขืฉื” ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื”ืชื™ืจ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืžื™ ืฉืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ืืœื ื”ื˜ืžื ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื.</b> ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื›ื ืก ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื–ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื:",
36
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื–ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื. ื“ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืœื ืžื”ื ื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
37
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ืฆื. ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื›ืฉืจื” ืงื ืงื‘ืขื” ืœืคื’ื•ืœ, ื•ืœื ืคืกื•ืœื”:",
38
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื.</b> ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•. ื“ืงืกื‘ืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื”ื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžืžืขื™ืœื”:",
39
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืื‘ืœ, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืจื, ื›ืžื• ื‘ืืžืช. ื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื”ื ื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฆื ืžืงืฆืช ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื•, ื“ืžื’ื• ื“ืžื”ื ื™ื ืœื”ื”ื•ื ืžืงืฆืช ืฉื‘ืคื ื™ื, ืžื”ื ื™ื ื ืžื™ ืœื”ื”ื•ื ืžืงืฆืช ืฉื™ืฆื ื—ื•ืฅ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:",
40
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืื‘ื“ื”.</b> ื”ืฉืชื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืจืื™ื” ืœืžืื™ ื“ืงืืžืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื:",
41
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช.</b> ืฉื—ื•ื˜ื•ืช ื•ื ืชืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืฉืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ:",
42
+ "<b>ืœื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื”:",
43
+ "<b>ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื”,</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
44
+ "<b>ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”</b> ืฉืœื ื ื–ืจืง ื“ืžื”, ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื–ืจื•ืง ื“ืžื” ืฉืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืฉื™ืจืฆื”:",
45
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื“ืžื” ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืคืกื•ืœื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžื•ืชืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื. ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ืฉืจื” ืฉืœ ืขืฆืžื”, ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืคืกืœื” ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื. ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื” ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื” ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”, ืืœื ื›ืฉืฉื—ื˜ ืฉืชื™ ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื ืจืฆื” ืžื–ื” ื–ื•ืจืง ืจืฆื” ืžื–ื” ื–ื•ืจืง, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ืžื” ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”:"
46
+ ],
47
+ [
48
+ "<b>ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ืฆืื• ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื:",
49
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžืžืขื™ืœื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืžื•ืขืœืช ื ืžื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”:"
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "<b>ืžืขืฉื” ื“ืžื™ื.</b> ื–ื• ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื“ื:",
53
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ, ื“ื›ื‘ืจ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืงืœ, ื“ืžืฉื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื ืืชื™ื ืœื™ื” ืงื•ืœื ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
54
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
55
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ืื ืคื™ื’ืœ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžืืจื‘ืข ืขื‘ื•ื“ื•ืช. ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืงื•ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื ืžื™ ืœื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:",
56
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
57
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ.</b> ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ื‘ืจ ื—ื–ื• ืœื’ื‘ื•ื” ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืœื ืžืžื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
58
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:"
59
+ ]
60
+ ],
61
+ [
62
+ [
63
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืฉื ืžืœืงื” ื ืชื•ืกืคื” ื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื ืคืกืœืช ืื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื” ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืื• ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื ืคืกืœืช ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžื™ื˜ืžืื” ืœื˜ืžื ืื—ืจื™ื, ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
64
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ื“ื”ื–ืื” ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ืงืื™, ื“ื”ื–ืื” ืงื•ื‘ืขืช ืคื’ื•ืœ ื›ืฉื—ืฉื‘ ื‘ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื:",
65
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื™ืฉ [ื‘ื”] ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:"
66
+ ],
67
+ [
68
+ "<b>ืžื™ืฆื” ื“ืžื”.</b> ืžื™ืฆื•ื™ ื“ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืงืื™ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื–ืื” ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื“ื‘ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื•:",
69
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื›ื•ืœื” ื›ืœื™ืœ ื•ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ, ืœืขื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉืจืฃ ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ืชื ื˜ืœ ืžืขืคืจื” ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื’ืณ) ื•ื”ืจื™ื ืืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฉืจ ืชืื›ืœ ื”ืืฉ:"
70
+ ],
71
+ [
72
+ "<b>ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ืชืจ ื›ืœืœ:",
73
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžืŸ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื–ืืช ื“ืžืŸ ืงื•ื‘ืขืชืŸ ืœืคื’ื•ืœ ืœืขื ื•ืฉ ื›ืจืช ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ืื ื—ื™ืฉื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžื—ื ื” ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ื ืฉืจืคื• ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ืŸ:",
74
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืชืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉืจืฃ ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืคื—ืžื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ื™ืชืš, ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•:"
75
+ ],
76
+ [
77
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืœื›ื”ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื–,) ืขื•ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืืฉืจ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืœื• ื™ื”ื™ื”:",
78
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ืฉืจืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื“ื›ืœื™ืœ ื”ื•ื:",
79
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ.</b> ืฉืžืจื™ืžื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืืคืจ ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืžืฉืœื™ื›ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ. ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื”:"
80
+ ],
81
+ [
82
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื“ื”ื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื“ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื ืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
83
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:"
84
+ ],
85
+ [
86
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื.</b> ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฆืจืช:",
87
+ "<b>ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืชื™ืงื•ื ืŸ, ื•ื”ื”ื™ื ืงืจื™ืžื” ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื ื”ื›ืฉืจ ืœื™ืคืกืœ ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ื•ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื ืืคื•ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ื™ื•ืดื˜ ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ืœืžื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ื•ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื• ืœืฉื—ื•ื˜ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื–ื‘ื—, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ื” ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืœื—ื:",
88
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชืŸ:"
89
+ ],
90
+ [
91
+ "<b>ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื.</b> ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืืคื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืขื“ ืœืฉื‘ืช ื”ืื—ืจืช:",
92
+ "<b>ืงืจื‘ื• ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื›ืฉื™ืจื™ื•, ืฉื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืฉืขืช ืกื™ืœื•ืง ื”ืœื—ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืœื‘ื•ื ื”:",
93
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>ื”ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื•.</b> ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื”:",
97
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
98
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ.</b> ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉืจืฃ ื›ื•ืœื• ื•ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•, ื“ื”ื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
99
+ ],
100
+ [
101
+ "<b>ื•ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื.</b> ืžื ื—ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืขื ื”ื–ื‘ื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ื›ืœื™ืœ ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
102
+ "<b>ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื•.</b> ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื” ื‘ืขืœืžื:",
103
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืืœื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืงืจื‘ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ืœืงืžืŸ:",
104
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื•ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉืžื•ืช, ื“ื“ืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ืื• ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื•ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื, ืฉื“ืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื“ื“ืžืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ื”ื•ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื“ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ื ื”ื•ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืžื ื—ื•ืช ื“ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ. ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืงืจื‘ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ. ื“ื”ื›ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ ืœื ื™ืจืฆื”, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืจืฆืืช ื›ืฉืจ ื›ืš ื”ืจืฆืืช ืคืกื•ืœ. ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžืคื™ื’ื•ืœ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ื›ืœ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื:",
105
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ ื”ื ื™ ื”ืงื•ืžืฅ ื•ื”ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ื“ื”ืŸ ืขืฆืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ืื•ืชื ืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ:",
106
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ืžื ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ื•, ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื’ืณ) ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืžื›ืœ ื–ืจืขื›ื ืืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืืฉืจ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื”ืณ ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื ื›ืจืชื”, ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ืžื. ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžื˜ืžื:"
107
+ ]
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ [
111
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื™ื•ืžืชื•.</b> ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื™ื ื”ื• ืžื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื“ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื“ืžืชื•ืช. ื•ื”ื ืš ืชืœืช ืœืขื•ืœื ืžืชื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืคืจื”, ื“ืœืขื•ืœื ืœื ืงืจื‘ื™. ื•ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ืฉื ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืง ื“ืณ ื“ืชืžื•ืจื” ื•ืฉื ืคื™ืจืฉื ื•ื”:"
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื–ื™ืจื•ืชื•.</b> ื•ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœืชื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœื—ื˜ืืชื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœืฉืœืžื™:",
115
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช:",
116
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื›ืœ ืžืขื” ื•ืžืขื” ืžืฆื™ื ืŸ ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื–ื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืคืจื™ืฉ. ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืง ืงืžื, ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื™ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื“ื‘ื ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื“ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืื™ ืงื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื” ืืฉืชื›ื— ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ:",
117
+ "<b>ืžืช.</b> ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื”ืžืขื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืกืชื•ืžื™ื, ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื• ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืืœื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื, ื™ืคืœื• ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
118
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—.</b> ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื:",
119
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ [ืงื ื™ื ืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ] ื”ืืฉื” ืฉืžืชื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื” ืืช ืขื•ืœืชื”, ื“ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื:",
120
+ "<b>ื•ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ ื ื–ื™ืจ:",
121
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื.</b> ื“ื‘ืœื—ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื˜) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœ ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื™ืชื™ื”, ื“ืžื™ืช: "
122
+ ],
123
+ [
124
+ "<b>ื”ื“ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืชื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื–:ื™ืดื) ื•ืื ื™ ื ืชืชื™ื• ืœื›ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื›ืคืจ, ืœื›ืคืจื” ื ืชืชื™ื• ื•ืœื ืœืžืขื™ืœื”:",
125
+ "<b>ื™ืฆื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืชืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”. ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืืœื• ื•ืืœื• ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื™ื ื•ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื ืฉืคื›ื™ื ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”, ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ืืžื”, ืกื™ืœื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ื•ื ืžื›ืจื™ื ืœื’ื ื ื™ื ืœื–ื‘ืœ. ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ืš ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•:",
126
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ื ืงื‘ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ืžืื“. ื•ืื ื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื™ื“ื• ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื“ื• ืœืชื”ื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชืŸ:"
127
+ ],
128
+ [
129
+ "<b>ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”.</b> ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœื”ื ื•ืฉื™ืจื™ ื”ืคืชื™ืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ื—ืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ, ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžื ื™ื— ืฉื ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ. ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืฉื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ื‘ื”ื ื™ ืœื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืžื• ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
130
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืžื™ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ, ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืขืœื™ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื•ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื•ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืฉื•ืŸ, ืืขืดืค ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•, ืืคืดื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ื•ื—ืกืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ, ืฉื•ื‘ ืœื™ื›ื ืœืฉืขืจ ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื• ื“ืžื™ื• ื›ืฉื ืชืขืจืš ื–ื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื–ื” ืžืคืกื™ื“ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื• ืœืืœืชืจ ื›ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื•:",
131
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืžื ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ:",
132
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื•ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืงืจื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžื ื•, ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžื’ื• ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ื ืžื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื• ื”ืื™ ืžื’ื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ:",
133
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžื ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœืงืžืŸ ืžื—ื–ื•, ืื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืžืขื™ืœื” ื”ืฉืชื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื:",
137
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืŸ, ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื—ืกื•ืจื™ ืžื—ืกืจื ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืฃ ื–ื” ืื• ื“ืžื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื”ื ืขื•ืœื”, ื ืขืฉื” ื›ืžื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื“ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ื—ืœื‘:"
138
+ ],
139
+ [
140
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืงืืžืจ:",
141
+ "<b>ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœื ืžื™ื.</b> ื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ืืœื ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ืกื›ื™ื ืžื™ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืžืžื™ ื”ืฉื™ืœื•ื—:",
142
+ "<b>ืืฉืคื” ืžืœืื” ื–ื‘ืœ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื” ืจืื•ื™ ืœื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™ื:",
143
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืžืœื ื™ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
144
+ "<b>ืื™ืœืŸ ืžืœื ืคื™ืจื•ืช.</b> ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
145
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืžืœืื” ืขืฉื‘ื™ื.</b> ืื™ื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
146
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืžื” ืฉื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ:",
147
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช.</b> ืื ื™ืฆืื” ื ืงื‘ื” ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืœื” ื‘ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ืœื ื™ื™ื ืง ืฉื•ื‘ ืžืžื ื”, ืฉื‘ื ื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ื™ื ืžืขืฉืจ, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื—ืœื‘ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืฉืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื:",
148
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื–ื• ืฉื”ืขื‘ื™ืจื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜ ืกืชื, ืœื ื™ื™ื ืง ืžืžื ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื ืฉื”ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ืจืฉืื™ื ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืชืชืขืฉืจ ืฉืื ืชืฆื ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื‘ื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื™ื ืง ื‘ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ื‘ื”ื™ืชืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื•ืœื“ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื ื—ืœื‘ ืืžืŸ. ื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื•ืžื’ื•ืžื’ื ื”ื•ื. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื, ืฉืžื™ ืฉืœื‘ื• ื ื•ื“ื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื ื“ื‘ ื—ืœื‘ ืœื”ื ื™ืง ื‘ืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช ื•ื‘ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœื‘ืŸ ืœื™ื ืง ืžื”ืŸ, ื“ืฉื•ื™ื•ื” ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืŸ ืชืงื ื” ืืœื ืฉืื—ืจื™ื ื™ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ื—ืœื‘ ืœื”ื ื™ืงืŸ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืืกืจื• ืœื™ื ืง ืžื—ืœื‘ ืืžืŸ. ื•ื™ืฉืจ ื”ื•ื:",
149
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื• ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืชื ื• ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืœื ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื“ืžื™ ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช ืžืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื”ื ืงื•ื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืง:",
150
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืคืจื”.</b> ืฉื“ืฉื” ื‘ื›ืจืฉื™ื ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื•ืกื ืคื™ื” ืฉืœื ืชืื›ืœ ืžืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื”:ื“ืณ) ืœื ืชื—ืกื•ื ืฉื•ืจ ื‘ื“ื™ืฉื•, ื‘ื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืจืื•ื™ ืœื• ืœื ืชื—ืกื•ื, ืื‘ืœ ืืชื” ื—ื•ืกื ื‘ื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืจืื•ื™ ืœื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ "<b>ืฉืจืฉื™ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™, ื›ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ื™ื™ืชืจ ืžืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื”, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ื’ื“ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืœื ื’ืจื™ืจื™ ืชื• ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ:",
154
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื”, ื“ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื™ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื’ืจื™ืจื™ ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืจื—ื•ืงื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
155
+ "<b>ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื•ื” ืœื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ื ื•ื‘ืข ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜, ืืœื ืฉื ืžืฉืš ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ืžืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื ื ื•ื‘ืข:",
156
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื•.</b> ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืžืขื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืฉื ื•ื‘ืข ืžืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”:",
157
+ "<b>ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื›ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ื—ื’ ืชื ืŸ ื›ืžืขืฉื”ื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ื›ืš ืžืขืฉื”ื• ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืžืœื ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื—ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื™ืœื•ื—, ื•ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืžื™ื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ, ื“ืœื ืื™ืงื“ืฉื• ืœื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ืœืžืขื™ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื ืชื ื• ืœืฆืœื•ื—ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืœื™ ืžืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
158
+ "<b>ืขืจื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื–ื•ืงืคื™ื ืื•ืชื” ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืœื•ืœื‘ ื•ืขืจื‘ื” [ืžืฉื ื” ื”ืณ]:",
159
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืœื•ืœื‘.</b> ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื–ืงืคื•ื”. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืœืงื˜ื•ื” ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ืงืคื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:"
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืฉื‘ื ืื• ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืžืขืฆื™ื ื•ืงืกืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ:",
163
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ืืฉืจื” ื™ืชื™ื– ื‘ืงื ื”.</b> ื™ืคื™ืœ ื”ืงืŸ ืœืืจืฅ ื‘ืงื ื” ื•ื™ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื•. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื™ืชื™ื–. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื™ืขืœื” ืขืœ ื”ืืฉืจื”, ื“ืื ืขื•ืœื” ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื”ืงืŸ, ื ืžืฆื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืฉืจื”. ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ื•ื”ืืคืจื•ื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ืงืŸ, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœืืžืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ืืฉืจื”:",
164
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืจืฉ.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืขืจ, ื—ื•ืจืฉื:",
165
+ "<b>ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื‘ืขืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ืขื ืคื™ื ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
166
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืืช ื”ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืฉืงื ื• ืขืฆื™ื ืžื™ืขืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืฆื•ืจืš ืงื•ืจื•ืช:",
167
+ "<b>ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืขืฆื™ื ืฉื—ื•ืชื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื’ื™ืจื” ื‘ืขืช ืฉืžืชืงื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืงื•ืจื•ืช, ืฉืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
168
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉืคื•ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ื ืกืจื™ื ื“ืงื•ืช ืฉื ื•ืกืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืžื—ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ:",
169
+ "<b>ื ืžื™ื”.</b> ืขืœื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขืฆื™ ื”ื™ืขืจ:"
170
+ ]
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ [
174
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœ. ื•ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื ืžื™ ืœื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื• ื ื•ืชืจ ืื• ื˜ืžื, ืื• ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื–ื™ืช ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:",
175
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœืžืขื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
176
+ "<b>ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”</b> ืœืžืขื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ, ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื™ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื:"
177
+ ],
178
+ [
179
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœื›ื–ื™ืช.</b> ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
180
+ "<b>ื”ืกื•ืœืช.</b> ื”ืžื ื—ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืขื ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ืœื ืกื›ื™ื. ืฉื”ืขื•ืœื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืžื ื—ื” ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื:",
182
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืฉื” ื‘ืชื•ื“ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืชื•ื“ื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืœื—ื ืžื•ืกืฃ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื›ื–ื™ืช, ืœืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉื”ืชื•ื“ื” ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืง ืงืžื:",
183
+ "<b>ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžืžืื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื“ืžืื™:",
184
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื—ืœื”.</b> ืฉืืฃ ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื˜ืดื•:ื›ืณ) ืจืืฉื™ืช ืขืจื™ืกื•ืชื™ื›ื ื—ืœื” ืชืจื™ืžื• ืชืจื•ืžื”:",
185
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ืืžืจ ืžืจ ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ื™ื“ืš ืืœื• ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื•:ื“ืณ) ื•ืœืงื— ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ื˜ื ื ืžื™ื“ืš:",
186
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืืกื•ืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื ืคืœ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ืฉืื•ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื™ืกื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื ืืกืจืช:",
187
+ "<b>ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื” ืžืฉืœื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ:"
188
+ ],
189
+ [
190
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืคื’ื•ืœื™ื. ืžืขื•ืœื” ืžื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืžืืฉื ื•ืžืฉืœืžื™ื:",
191
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœืื•ื›ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื ื•ืชืจื™ื:",
192
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื ื‘ืœื•ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืขื ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”, ืžืฆื˜ื“ืคื™ื ืœื›ื–ื™ืช ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืžืœืงื•ืช, ืฉืื™ื ื• ืœื•ืงื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžื ื‘ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื” ืœื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืžืื” ืœื‘ื“ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืœื•ืงื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืืœื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”:",
193
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืจืฆื™ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœื›ื–ื™ืช, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืžืœืงื•ืช, ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืฉืจืฆื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”. ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื›ืš ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืื›ื™ืœืชืŸ:",
194
+ "<b>ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ื•ื‘ืฉืจื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื.</b> ื“ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื) ื•ื–ื” ืœื›ื ื”ื˜ืžื ื‘ืฉืจืฅ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฅ ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื˜ืžื ื›ื‘ืฉืจื•:",
195
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ืื• ืฉืจืฅ ื•ืฉืจืฅ:",
196
+ "<b>ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ืฉืจืฅ ื“ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ืฉื•ื”, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื”ื•ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•, ื“ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื” ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช, ื•ืฉืจืฅ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”:",
197
+ "<b>ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ืžืช, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื˜ืžืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช. ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื•, ื“ืื™ืœื• ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืช, ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘:",
198
+ "<b>ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืžืช ื•ืฉืจืฅ, ื“ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืช ื”ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืฉืจืฅ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื ืžื™ ืื™ื ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ, ื“ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืช ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉืจืฅ ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”:",
199
+ "<b>ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ:"
200
+ ],
201
+ [
202
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ:",
203
+ "<b>ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ืœื ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœื˜ื•ืžืื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืงืœ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืขื“ืฉื” ื“ืฉืจืฅ ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืฉืœ ืžืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื˜ืžื ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืืช ืขืจื‘:",
204
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื• ื•ืœื“ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ:",
205
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื•ืœื“.</b> ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื–ื”ื• ื•ืœื“ ืฉื ื™:",
206
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ:",
207
+ "<b>ืœื˜ืžื ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื›ื“ืจืš ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื”ื›ื™ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืฉื ื™ ื›ืžื• ืฉืขื•ืฉื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™, ื“ืืดื› ื”ื™ื” ื›ื—ืžื•ืจ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื:"
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ "<b>ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื”.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก, ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ืฆื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื ืคืกืœืช ื’ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืžื’ืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ:",
211
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื™ืจื•ื‘.</b> ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืœื›ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืืœืคื™ื ืืžื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืขื•ืฉื” ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื—ื•ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื ื™ื— ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืฉื™ืงื ื” ืœื• ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื•, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืžืžืงื•ื ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื• ื•ืœื”ืœืŸ ืืœืคื™ื ืืžื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืฉื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™:",
212
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืœื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื˜ืžื ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื) ืžื›ืœ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืื›ืœ, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืื›ืœ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช, ื•ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ืœื™ืขื” ืžื—ื–ื™ืง ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช:",
213
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื’ืจื•ืจืช ืœื”ื•ืฆืืช ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืจืฉื•ืช ืœืจืฉื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช:",
214
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืฉื™ื ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืชืขื ื•, ื•ืœื ื›ืชื‘ ืœื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืœื ืงืคื™ื“ ืจื—ืžื ื ืืœื ืืขื™ื ื•ื™, ื•ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ืžื™ืชื‘ื ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืื ื™ืฉ, ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ืœื ืžื™ืชื‘ื ื“ืขืชื™ื”:",
215
+ "<b>ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช.</b> ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืžืฉืงื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืžื’ืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ:",
216
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื•.</b> ืฉื”ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ: "
217
+ ],
218
+ [
219
+ "<b>ื”ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžื–ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžื–ื”, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ืช ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื™ื—ื“ ืฉื ืคืœื• ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื™ืชืจ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ืœืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื™ื‘ืฉ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื, ื•ื‘ืœื— ื‘ื ื•ืชืŸ ื˜ืขื:",
220
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื ื™ื ื”ื•. ืืœื ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ื™ืจื” ืœื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ื”ืขืจืœื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื” ื•ื˜ืขื ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ืชืจ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:",
221
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื’ื“.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื˜ืžื ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื”:",
222
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืง.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื˜ืžื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื”:",
223
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขื•ืจ.</b> ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื”:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคืฅ.</b> ืฉืฉื” ืขืœ ืฉืฉื”. ื”ื‘ื’ื“ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืฉืง ืฉืงืœ ื”ื™ืžื ื•, ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืงืœ. ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœื˜ืžื ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื”ืงืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ืงืœ ืขื ื”ื—ืžื•ืจ:",
225
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื˜ืžื ืžื•ืฉื‘.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื“ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ, ื”ื›ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจืŸ ืฉื•ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจ ื–ื” ืฉื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืžื•ืฉื‘ ื”ื–ื‘, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžื•ืฉื‘:"
226
+ ]
227
+ ],
228
+ [
229
+ [
230
+ "<b>ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืคื’ื ืžืขืœ.</b> ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื“ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉื ืžืฆื™ืขืื”. ื“ืœื‘ื•ืฉ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืชื—ื›ืš ื‘ื›ืชืœื™ื. ื•ืœื ืืคืœื™ื’ื• ื ืžื™ ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉ ื“ืœืคื ื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ืฉืจื™ื”, ื“ื”ื”ื•ื ื ืžื™ ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ ืžื—ืžืช ื–ื™ืขื”, ืืœื ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉื ืžืฆื™ืขืื”. ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืกื‘ืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ื“ืœื ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ ืืขืดื’ ื“ืคื’ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื:",
231
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“.</b> ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชื ื” ืงื˜ืœื ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื”, ืจื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืื• ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ื™ื“ื”, ืื• ืฉืชืชื” ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ืš, ืืœื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื™ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœื”. ื•ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืฉืขืจื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืื”, ืื•ืžื“ื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ืืฉื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืฉื™ืฉืื™ืœื•ื” ืชื›ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื›ืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืฉืชื” ืœื”ืชื›ื‘ื“ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื›ืื•ืชื• ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืฉืœืžืช ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื›ืฉื ืฉืชืžืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
232
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื‘ืฉ ื‘ื—ืœื•ืง, ืื• ื›ื™ืกื” ื‘ื˜ืœื™ืช, ืื• ื‘ืงืข ื‘ืงืจื“ื•ื. ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื™ืคื’ื, ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
233
+ "<b>ืชืœืฉ.</b> ืฉืขืจ:",
234
+ "<b>ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืื™ื™ืจื™ ื“ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœื™ืคื“ื•ืช ื•ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื”ื•ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื” ื“ืชืœื™ืฉืช ืฆืžืจ ื•ืฉืขืจ ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื” ืžื™ื“ื™, ืฉื›ืš ื”ื™ื ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื”ื•ื™ื ื›ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ืžืขืœ:",
235
+ "<b>ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืชื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืชื” ืœืื• ื‘ืช ืคื“ื™ื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื. ื•ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื: "
236
+ ],
237
+ [
238
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™.</b> ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ, ืœื‘ืฉ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ื”ื ืืช ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉื•ื” ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืฉืงืจืข ื‘ื• ื•ืคื’ืžื• ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
239
+ "<b>ืฉืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื•ืœื ืคื’ื:",
240
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืคืš ืžืฉืงื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืœื ื ื”ื ื”:",
241
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืขืฆืžื•, ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื. ื“ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืดื•,) ื•ื—ื˜ืื” ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื”, ื•ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ืœืดื‘) ื•ืœื ืชืฉืื• ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ื, ืžื” ื—ื˜ื ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืคื•ื’ื ื•ื ื”ื ื”, ื•ื‘ืžื” ืฉืคื’ื ื ื”ื ื”, ืืฃ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ื’ื ื•ื ื”ื ื” ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ืฉืคื•ื’ื ื ื”ื ื” ื•ืœื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ:"
242
+ ],
243
+ [
244
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืงื•ื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช.</b> ื‘ื”ืžื” ืชืžื™ืžื”, ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชืžื™ืžื”. ื“ื”ื ื™ ืœืื• ืœืคื“ื™ื™ื” ืงื™ื™ืžื™ ื•ืœืื• ื‘ื ื™ ืคื’ื™ืžื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืจื›ื‘ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื›ื—ื™ืฉื” ืื• ืชืœืฉ ืžืŸ ืฆืžืจื”, ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื” ื”ื™ื ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื” ืื—ื“ ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืคื’ืžื• ื•ืคื—ืชื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉ[ืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ] ื”ื•ื ื•ืœืื• ืœืคื“ื™ื” ืงืื™, ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืจื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื™ื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืชื• ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
245
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืคื’ื, ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืคืกืœ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ ื”ื ื™ ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืคื’ืžื• ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืชื ื ืงืžื ืœืจื‘ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ื‘ืขืœื™ ืžื•ืžื™ื ื•ืขื‘ืจ ื•ืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืคื“ื™ื™ื”. ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืขื• ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื” ื•ืœื ืืคืฉืจ ื“ื”ื ืžืชื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื”ื•ื• ืชื• ื‘ื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื™ื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืคื“ื•, ื“ืœื ื‘ืขื• ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื: "
246
+ ],
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+ [
248
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžื•ืงื™ ืœื” ื‘ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืฉื”ืื‘ืŸ ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ื™ ื ื˜ืœืŸ ืœืขืฆืžื• ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื‘ืจืฉื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœ ืœื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื”ื•ื• ื‘ืจืฉื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ื›ื™ ื ืชื ื” ืœื—ื‘ืจื•, ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื” ืžืจืฉื•ืชื• ื•ืฉื™ื ื” ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ ื•ืžืขืœ, ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื™ืฆืื” ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
249
+ "<b>ื‘ื ืื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืชื•.</b> ืœื ื‘ื ืื” ืžืžืฉ, ื“ืื ื›ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื ื”ื ื” ืžื™ื“ ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืชื•. ืืœื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื” ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืจื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื”ื ืื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื“ื•ืจ ืชื—ืชื™ื” ื•ื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืคื™ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ืืจื•ื‘ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื’ืฉืžื™ื ื“ื•ืœืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ืกืชื ืคื™ ืืจื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืื‘ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœ:",
250
+ "<b>ื ืชื ื” ืœื‘ืœืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื ื™ื—ื ื• ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืจื—ืฅ:"
251
+ ],
252
+ [
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+ "<b>ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื•.</b> ืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ืื• ื ื”ื ื” ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ื”ื ื” ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื ืืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื•, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืš ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื, ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ื• ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
254
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืœืžื—ืจ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ืื• ืฉืื›ืœ ืื• ื ื”ื ื” ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ืื• ื”ื”ื ื” ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืœืžื—ืจ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”, ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืดื•) ื›ื™ ืชืžืขื•ืœ ืžืขืœ, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืชืžืขื•ืœ ื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื:"
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ [
259
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืœื™ื—.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืื• ืžืขื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืขืฉื” ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•:",
260
+ "<b>ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ื™ืฉ ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืขื‘ื™ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืขื‘ื™ืจื”, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžืขื™ืœื” ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืณ) ื•ืืฉืžื” ื”ื ืคืฉ ื”ื”ื™ื, ืžื™ ืฉืฉื’ื’ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืžืฉืœื—:",
261
+ "<b>ืชืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื•ืจื—ื™ื.</b> ืžืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
262
+ "<b>ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ื‘ื“.</b> ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
263
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ืžื“ืขืชื™, ืื– ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ, ื“ืœื ืขืงืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืžืฉืœื—, ื”ืœื›ืš ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ ืขืœ ื–ืืช ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืžื“ืขืชื•, ื•ื”ืื•ืจื—ื™ื ื ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉื ื˜ืœื• ืžื“ืขืชื. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืœื ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ืžื“ืขืชื™, ืืœื ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื•, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ืขืงืจ ืืช ื”ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืžื“ืขืชื•:",
264
+ "<b>ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื.</b> ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ื•ืŸ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœืชื™ื‘ื” ื’ืœื•ืกืงื•ืก. ื•ื™ืฉื ื‘ืืจื•ืŸ, ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ืฉื•ื•ืŸ ื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื:",
265
+ "<b>ืืขืดืค ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื™ ืืœื ืžื–ื” ื›ื•ืณ ืžืขืœ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืืžืจื•, ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื‘ืœื‘ ืื™ื ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื: "
266
+ ],
267
+ [
268
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช. ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ:",
269
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™.</b> ืฉืงื‘ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืžื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื—ืคืฆื™ื•:",
270
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื’ื™ืขื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื™ื“ ื—ื ื•ื ื™, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื–ื›ืจ ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ืœื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื” ืืฆืœ ืžื–ื™ื“:",
271
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื ื–ื›ืจื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื—, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืฉื•ื’ื’ ืืœื ื—ื ื•ื ื™. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ื ื–ื›ืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื—, ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื’ื’ ืชื—ืœื”:",
272
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื ื™ื“ืข ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื” ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื›ื‘ืจ ืขื ืฉืืจ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื•, ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื” ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืชื™ื•:"
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื ืžืขืœื•.</b> ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉืœื ืขืงืจ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืœื™ื›ื ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
276
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ.</b> ืฉืขืงืจ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืชื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:"
277
+ ],
278
+ [
279
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืขืœื•.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ื”ื ืื•ืชื• ื”ืืชืจื•ื’ ืฉื•ื” ืฉื ื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘. ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืžืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื ื” ืœื• ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื•ืฉื•ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื•, ื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืงื ื” ืจืžื•ืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžื“ืขืชื• ืฉืœื ื‘ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘:",
280
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืœื™ื” ืœืฉืœื™ื— ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื™ืช ืงื•ื ื” ืืชืจื•ื’ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืชื™ ืœืš ื”ื™ื™ืช ืžื‘ื™ื ืœื™ ืืชืจื•ื’ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื•ื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช, ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉืœื ื ืชืช ืืœื ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื”ื‘ืืช ืœื™ ืืชืจื•ื’ ืฉื•ื” ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื˜ืŸ ื•ืจืข, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืœื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
281
+ ],
282
+ [
283
+ "<b>ืื ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื, ืื• ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืชื•ืžื™ืŸ:",
284
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื’ืœื™ ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืคืงื“, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืงืฉืจืŸ ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืื• ื”ื˜ื™ืœ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื:",
285
+ "<b>ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืงืจื™ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืืœื ืงืฉื•ืจ ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื:",
286
+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ืœื• ื”ืžืคืงื™ื“ ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืขืฉื”, ื•ื”ืžืคืงื™ื“ ื ืžื™ ืœื ืžืขืœ ื“ื”ื ืœื ืืžืจ ืœื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
287
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™.</b> ืฉืžื•ื›ืจ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ืื• ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื ื•ืช:",
288
+ "<b>ื›ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื•ืื ื”ืคืงื™ื“ื• ืืฆืœื• ืžืขื•ืช, ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฆืจื•ืจื™ื, ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื ื”ื™ื• ืžืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขืœ:",
289
+ "<b>ื›ืฉืœื—ื ื™.</b> ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ืฉื”ืคืงื™ื“ื• ืืฆืœื• ื›ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฆืจื•ืจื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžืขืœ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
290
+ ],
291
+ [
292
+ "<b>ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”.</b> ืœืฆื•ืจืš ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื• ืžืขืœ:",
293
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื.</b> ืœื ืžืขืœ:",
294
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ื.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืฉื‘ื›ื™ืก ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
295
+ "<b>ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื™ืก ื–ื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื ืชื›ืœื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžื›ื™ืก ื–ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
296
+ ]
297
+ ]
298
+ ],
299
+ "sectionNames": [
300
+ "Chapter",
301
+ "Mishnah",
302
+ "Comment"
303
+ ]
304
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,300 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Meilah",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Meilah",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ืฉื—ื˜ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ืœื ืชื™ืžื ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ื—ื ืงื™ื ื”ื• ื“ืžื• ื•ื”ื•ื• ื›ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืžืชื• ืฉื™ืฆืื• ื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืชื•ืจื”, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืžืชื• ืœื ื—ื–ื• ื›ืœืœ, ืื‘ืœ ื“ืจื•ื ื ื”ื™ ื“ืื™ื ื• ืจืื•ื™ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžื™ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ื ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ืœื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื™ ื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ [ื›ื“ื™ืŸ], ื“ืžืงื‘ืœื” ื•ืื™ืœืš ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื•ื™ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืฉืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
10
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœื™ืœื” ืœืื• ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
11
+ "<b>ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื ื–ืจืง ื‘ื™ื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื•ื. ืืœื ื–ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื–ื• ืงืชื ื™:",
12
+ "<b>ืื• ืฉืฉื—ื˜ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ืจืช, ืื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืคืกื•ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื›ืจืช, ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
13
+ "<b>ื›ืœืœ ืืžืจ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉื•ื‘ ื ืคืกืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืื›ืœืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
14
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื”.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ืื• ืฉื ื˜ืžืื” ืื• ืฉื™ืฆืื” ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”. ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื” ืœื” ืฉืขื” ืื—ืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืœื ื”, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”, ื“ืœืื• ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืณ ืงืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื”, ื“ื”ื ื—ื–ื• ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
15
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื•ื–ืจืงื• ืืช ื“ืžื”.</b> ืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืช ื“ืžื” ืืขืดืค ืฉื–ืจืงื•ื”ื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื, ืื• ืฉื–ืจืงื•ื”ื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืขืดืค ืฉืงื‘ืœื•ื”ื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื. ื•ืื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืงื‘ืœื• ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืืช ื”ื“ื ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ื—ื–ืจื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืงื‘ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ื”ืจื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืžื•ืขืœืช ื•ืžืชืจืช ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืฉืืจ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืžื, ืื‘ืœ ื˜ืžื ืฉืงื‘ืœ ืืช ื”ื“ื ื•ื–ืจืงื•, ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจื• ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื•ืงื‘ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื“ื ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื–ืจืงื•ื”ื•, ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ืฉื”ื˜ืžื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืจืื•ื™ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืฉืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ื›ืฉื–ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื ืขืฉื” ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื”ืชื™ืจ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืžื™ ืฉืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื ืืœื ื”ื˜ืžื ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
16
+ ],
17
+ [
18
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื.</b> ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ื›ื ืก ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื–ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื:",
19
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื–ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื. ื“ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืœื ืžื”ื ื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
20
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ืฆื. ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื›ืฉืจื” ืงื ืงื‘ืขื” ืœืคื’ื•ืœ, ื•ืœื ืคืกื•ืœื”:",
21
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื.</b> ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•. ื“ืงืกื‘ืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื”ื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ืžืžืขื™ืœื”:",
22
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืื‘ืœ, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืจื, ื›ืžื• ื‘ืืžืช. ื•ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื”ื ื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฆื ืžืงืฆืช ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ืœื ื›ื•ืœื•, ื“ืžื’ื• ื“ืžื”ื ื™ื ืœื”ื”ื•ื ืžืงืฆืช ืฉื‘ืคื ื™ื, ืžื”ื ื™ื ื ืžื™ ืœื”ื”ื•ื ืžืงืฆืช ืฉื™ืฆื ื—ื•ืฅ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:",
23
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ื”ืจื™ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ื•ืื‘ื“ื”.</b> ื”ืฉืชื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืจืื™ื” ืœืžืื™ ื“ืงืืžืจ ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื:",
24
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช.</b> ืฉื—ื•ื˜ื•ืช ื•ื ืชืงื‘ืœ ื“ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ื–ืจืง ื“ืžื” ืฉืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ืŸ:",
25
+ "<b>ืœื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื”:",
26
+ "<b>ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื”,</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
27
+ "<b>ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”</b> ืฉืœื ื ื–ืจืง ื“ืžื”, ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื–ืจื•ืง ื“ืžื” ืฉืœ ืื™ื–ื• ืฉื™ืจืฆื”:",
28
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื“ืžื” ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืคืกื•ืœื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืžื•ืชืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื. ืื™ื ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืคื˜ืจ ื‘ืฉืจื” ืฉืœ ืขืฆืžื”, ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืคืกืœื” ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื. ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื›ืฉื ืฉื“ืžื” ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื” ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”, ืืœื ื›ืฉืฉื—ื˜ ืฉืชื™ ื”ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื ืจืฆื” ืžื–ื” ื–ื•ืจืง ืจืฆื” ืžื–ื” ื–ื•ืจืง, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ืžื” ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื‘ืจืชื”:"
29
+ ],
30
+ [
31
+ "<b>ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ืฆืื• ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื:",
32
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžืžืขื™ืœื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœืืคื•ืงื™ ื‘ืฉืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืžื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืžื•ืขืœืช ื ืžื™ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”:"
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "<b>ืžืขืฉื” ื“ืžื™ื.</b> ื–ื• ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื“ื:",
36
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ, ื“ื›ื‘ืจ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืงืœ, ื“ืžืฉื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื™ื ืืชื™ื ืœื™ื” ืงื•ืœื ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•:",
37
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
38
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ืื ืคื™ื’ืœ ื‘ืื—ืช ืžืืจื‘ืข ืขื‘ื•ื“ื•ืช. ื“ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืงื•ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื ืžื™ ืœื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:",
39
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
40
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ.</b> ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ื‘ืจ ื—ื–ื• ืœื’ื‘ื•ื” ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืœื ืžืžื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
41
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขืœ ื–ื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื•ืœื• ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ:"
42
+ ]
43
+ ],
44
+ [
45
+ [
46
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืฉื ืžืœืงื” ื ืชื•ืกืคื” ื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื ืคืกืœืช ืื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื” ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืื• ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื ืคืกืœืช ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžื™ื˜ืžืื” ืœื˜ืžื ืื—ืจื™ื, ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
47
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ.</b> ื“ื”ื–ืื” ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ืงืื™, ื“ื”ื–ืื” ืงื•ื‘ืขืช ืคื’ื•ืœ ื›ืฉื—ืฉื‘ ื‘ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืื™ืกื•ืจ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื:",
48
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžื” ื™ืฉ [ื‘ื”] ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:"
49
+ ],
50
+ [
51
+ "<b>ืžื™ืฆื” ื“ืžื”.</b> ืžื™ืฆื•ื™ ื“ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืงืื™ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื–ืื” ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื“ื‘ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื ืžืฆื” ื“ืžื•:",
52
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื›ื•ืœื” ื›ืœื™ืœ ื•ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ, ืœืขื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืฉืจืฃ ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ืชื ื˜ืœ ืžืขืคืจื” ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื’ืณ) ื•ื”ืจื™ื ืืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฉืจ ืชืื›ืœ ื”ืืฉ:"
53
+ ],
54
+ [
55
+ "<b>ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ืชืจ ื›ืœืœ:",
56
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื–ื” ื“ืžืŸ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื–ืืช ื“ืžืŸ ืงื•ื‘ืขืชืŸ ืœืคื’ื•ืœ ืœืขื ื•ืฉ ื›ืจืช ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ืื ื—ื™ืฉื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื”ืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžื—ื ื” ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ื ืฉืจืคื• ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ืŸ:",
57
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืชืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉืจืฃ ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืคื—ืžื™ื. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ื™ืชืš, ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•:"
58
+ ],
59
+ [
60
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื–,) ืขื•ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืืฉืจ ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืœื• ื™ื”ื™ื”:",
61
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ืฉืจืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื“ื›ืœื™ืœ ื”ื•ื:",
62
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉืชืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ.</b> ืฉืžืจื™ืžื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืืคืจ ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืžืฉืœื™ื›ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ. ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื”:"
63
+ ],
64
+ [
65
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ.</b> ื“ื”ื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื“ื‘ืฉืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื•ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื ืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
66
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:"
67
+ ],
68
+ [
69
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื.</b> ืฉืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฆืจืช:",
70
+ "<b>ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืชื™ืงื•ื ืŸ, ื•ื”ื”ื™ื ืงืจื™ืžื” ื‘ืชื ื•ืจ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื ื”ื›ืฉืจ ืœื™ืคืกืœ ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ื•ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื ืืคื•ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืคื™ื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ื—ื” ืืช ื”ื™ื•ืดื˜ ื•ื ืื›ืœื•ืช ืœืžื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘. ื•ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื• ืœืฉื—ื•ื˜ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื–ื‘ื—, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงืจืžื• ืคื ื™ื” ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืœื—ื:",
71
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืขืช ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชืŸ:"
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื.</b> ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ื” ืœื™ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืืคื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืขื“ ืœืฉื‘ืช ื”ืื—ืจืช:",
75
+ "<b>ืงืจื‘ื• ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื›ืฉื™ืจื™ื•, ืฉื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืฉืขืช ืกื™ืœื•ืง ื”ืœื—ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืœื‘ื•ื ื”:",
76
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืฉื”ื•ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
77
+ ],
78
+ [
79
+ "<b>ื”ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื•.</b> ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื”:",
80
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
81
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ.</b> ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉืจืฃ ื›ื•ืœื• ื•ื™ืฆื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•, ื“ื”ื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "<b>ื•ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื.</b> ืžื ื—ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืขื ื”ื–ื‘ื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื” ืฉื™ืจื™ื™ื. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ื›ืœื™ืœ ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
85
+ "<b>ืžืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉื•.</b> ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื” ื‘ืขืœืžื:",
86
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื ื•ื”ื’ ืืœื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืงืจื‘ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ืœืงืžืŸ:",
87
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื•ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื•ืืฉืžื•ืช, ื“ื“ืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื. ืื• ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื•ืคืจื™ื ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ื, ืฉื“ืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื“ื“ืžืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ื ื”ื•ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื“ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ื ื”ื•ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืžื ื—ื•ืช ื“ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ื‘ืงื•ืžืฅ. ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืงืจื‘ื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ. ื“ื”ื›ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืคื™ื’ื•ืœ ืœื ื™ืจืฆื”, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืจืฆืืช ื›ืฉืจ ื›ืš ื”ืจืฆืืช ืคืกื•ืœ. ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžืคื™ื’ื•ืœ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ื›ืœ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื:",
88
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ ื”ื ื™ ื”ืงื•ืžืฅ ื•ื”ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ื“ื”ืŸ ืขืฆืžืŸ ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ืื•ืชื ืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ:",
89
+ "<b>ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ืžื ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืœื”ื•, ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื’ืณ) ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืžื›ืœ ื–ืจืขื›ื ืืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืืฉืจ ื™ืงื“ื™ืฉื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื”ืณ ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื ื›ืจืชื”, ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื” ืžืฉื•ื ื˜ืžื. ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžื˜ืžื:"
90
+ ]
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ [
94
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื™ื•ืžืชื•.</b> ื“ื”ื ื™ ื ื™ื ื”ื• ืžื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื“ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื“ืžืชื•ืช. ื•ื”ื ืš ืชืœืช ืœืขื•ืœื ืžืชื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืคืจื”, ื“ืœืขื•ืœื ืœื ืงืจื‘ื™. ื•ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ืฉื ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืง ื“ืณ ื“ืชืžื•ืจื” ื•ืฉื ืคื™ืจืฉื ื•ื”:"
95
+ ],
96
+ [
97
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื–ื™ืจื•ืชื•.</b> ื•ืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœืชื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœื—ื˜ืืชื™ ื•ืืœื• ืœืฉืœืžื™:",
98
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืช:",
99
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื›ืœ ืžืขื” ื•ืžืขื” ืžืฆื™ื ืŸ ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื–ื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ. ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืง ืงืžื, ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื™ื”ื• ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื“ื‘ื ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื“ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืื™ ืงื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื” ืืฉืชื›ื— ื“ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ:",
100
+ "<b>ืžืช.</b> ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื”ืžืขื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืกืชื•ืžื™ื, ืฉืœื ืคื™ืจืฉ ืืœื• ืœื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื” ื•ืืœื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื, ื™ืคืœื• ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
101
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—.</b> ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื:",
102
+ "<b>ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ [ืงื ื™ื ืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ] ื”ืืฉื” ืฉืžืชื” ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ื™ื•ืจืฉื™ื” ืืช ืขื•ืœืชื”, ื“ื“ื•ืจื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืœืžื ื”ื•ื:",
103
+ "<b>ื•ื ืื›ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ ื ื–ื™ืจ:",
104
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื.</b> ื“ื‘ืœื—ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื˜) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœ ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ื–ื™ืจ, ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื™ืชื™ื”, ื“ืžื™ืช: "
105
+ ],
106
+ [
107
+ "<b>ื”ื“ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืชื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื–:ื™ืดื) ื•ืื ื™ ื ืชืชื™ื• ืœื›ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื›ืคืจ, ืœื›ืคืจื” ื ืชืชื™ื• ื•ืœื ืœืžืขื™ืœื”:",
108
+ "<b>ื™ืฆื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืชืจ ื–ืจื™ืงื”. ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืืœื• ื•ืืœื• ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื™ื ื•ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื ืฉืคื›ื™ื ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”, ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ืืžื”, ืกื™ืœื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ ื•ื ืžื›ืจื™ื ืœื’ื ื ื™ื ืœื–ื‘ืœ. ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ืš ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•:",
109
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ื ืงื‘ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ืขืžื•ืงื™ื ืžืื“. ื•ืื ื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื™ื“ื• ื•ืงื‘ืœ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืจื“ื• ืœืชื”ื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชืŸ:"
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "<b>ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”.</b> ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœื”ื ื•ืฉื™ืจื™ ื”ืคืชื™ืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ื—ืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ, ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžื ื™ื— ืฉื ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ. ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืฉื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ื‘ื”ื ื™ ืœื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืžื• ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
113
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืžื™ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ, ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืขืœื™ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื•ื‘ื ืื—ืจ ื•ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืฉื•ืŸ, ืืขืดืค ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืžืฆื•ืชื•, ืืคืดื” ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ื•ื—ืกืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ, ืฉื•ื‘ ืœื™ื›ื ืœืฉืขืจ ื›ืžื” ื”ื™ื• ื“ืžื™ื• ื›ืฉื ืชืขืจืš ื–ื”, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื–ื” ืžืคืกื™ื“ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื• ืœืืœืชืจ ื›ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื•:",
114
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืžื ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ:",
115
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื•ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืงืจื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžื ื•, ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžื’ื• ื“ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ื ืžื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื• ื”ืื™ ืžื’ื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ, ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ื–ืžืŸ:",
116
+ "<b>ืชื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžื ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœืงืžืŸ ืžื—ื–ื•, ืื™ืช ื‘ื”ื• ืžืขื™ืœื” ื”ืฉืชื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
117
+ ],
118
+ [
119
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื:",
120
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ื“ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืŸ, ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื—ืกื•ืจื™ ืžื—ืกืจื ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืชื ื™, ื‘ืžื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืฃ ื–ื” ืื• ื“ืžื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื”ื ืขื•ืœื”, ื ืขืฉื” ื›ืžื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื“ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ื—ืœื‘:"
121
+ ],
122
+ [
123
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืงืืžืจ:",
124
+ "<b>ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœื ืžื™ื.</b> ื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ืืœื ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ืกื›ื™ื ืžื™ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืžืžื™ ื”ืฉื™ืœื•ื—:",
125
+ "<b>ืืฉืคื” ืžืœืื” ื–ื‘ืœ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืคื” ืจืื•ื™ ืœื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™ื:",
126
+ "<b>ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืžืœื ื™ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
127
+ "<b>ืื™ืœืŸ ืžืœื ืคื™ืจื•ืช.</b> ืจืื•ื™ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
128
+ "<b>ืฉื“ื” ืžืœืื” ืขืฉื‘ื™ื.</b> ืื™ื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
129
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื” ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืžื” ืฉื”ืฉื‘ื™ื— ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ:",
130
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช.</b> ืื ื™ืฆืื” ื ืงื‘ื” ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜, ื•ื”ื™ื” ืœื” ื‘ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ืœื ื™ื™ื ืง ืฉื•ื‘ ืžืžื ื”, ืฉื‘ื ื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ื”ื™ื ืžืขืฉืจ, ื•ื ืžืฆื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื—ืœื‘ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืฉืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื:",
131
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื ื›ืŸ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื–ื• ืฉื”ืขื‘ื™ืจื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜ ืกืชื, ืœื ื™ื™ื ืง ืžืžื ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื ืฉื”ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ืจืฉืื™ื ืœื”ืชื ื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืชืชืขืฉืจ ืฉืื ืชืฆื ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื‘ื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื™ื ืง ื‘ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ื‘ื”ื™ืชืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื‘ื•ืœื“ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื ื—ืœื‘ ืืžืŸ. ื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื•ืžื’ื•ืžื’ื ื”ื•ื. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ื•ืื—ืจื™ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ื™ื, ืฉืžื™ ืฉืœื‘ื• ื ื•ื“ื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื ื“ื‘ ื—ืœื‘ ืœื”ื ื™ืง ื‘ืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ืฉืจืช ื•ื‘ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœื‘ืŸ ืœื™ื ืง ืžื”ืŸ, ื“ืฉื•ื™ื•ื” ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืŸ ืชืงื ื” ืืœื ืฉืื—ืจื™ื ื™ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ื—ืœื‘ ืœื”ื ื™ืงืŸ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืืกืจื• ืœื™ื ืง ืžื—ืœื‘ ืืžืŸ. ื•ื™ืฉืจ ื”ื•ื:",
132
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื• ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืชื ื• ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืžืœืื›ื” ื‘ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืืœื ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื“ืžื™ ืžื–ื•ื ื•ืช ืžืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื”ื ืงื•ื ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืง:",
133
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ืคืจื”.</b> ืฉื“ืฉื” ื‘ื›ืจืฉื™ื ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื—ื•ืกื ืคื™ื” ืฉืœื ืชืื›ืœ ืžืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื”:ื“ืณ) ืœื ืชื—ืกื•ื ืฉื•ืจ ื‘ื“ื™ืฉื•, ื‘ื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืจืื•ื™ ืœื• ืœื ืชื—ืกื•ื, ืื‘ืœ ืืชื” ื—ื•ืกื ื‘ื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืจืื•ื™ ืœื•, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "<b>ืฉืจืฉื™ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ ืื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืงืื™. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™, ื›ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ื™ื™ืชืจ ืžืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื”, ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ื’ื“ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ืœื ื’ืจื™ืจื™ ืชื• ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ:",
137
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœืงืจืงืข ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื”, ื“ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื™ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ืœื ื’ืจื™ืจื™ ื‘ืชืจ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืจื—ื•ืงื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืฉืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
138
+ "<b>ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื•ื” ืœื™, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ื ื•ื‘ืข ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜, ืืœื ืฉื ืžืฉืš ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื, ื“ืžืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื ื ื•ื‘ืข:",
139
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื•.</b> ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืžืขื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืฉื ื•ื‘ืข ืžืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื“ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื”:",
140
+ "<b>ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ื›ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ื’ื‘ื™ ื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ื—ื’ ืชื ืŸ ื›ืžืขืฉื”ื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ื›ืš ืžืขืฉื”ื• ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืžืœื ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื—ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืื™ื ื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื™ืœื•ื—, ื•ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืžื™ื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ, ื“ืœื ืื™ืงื“ืฉื• ืœื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ืžื™ื ืœืžืขื™ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื ืชื ื• ืœืฆืœื•ื—ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืœื™ ืžืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
141
+ "<b>ืขืจื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื–ื•ืงืคื™ื ืื•ืชื” ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืœื•ืœื‘ ื•ืขืจื‘ื” [ืžืฉื ื” ื”ืณ]:",
142
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืžื ื• ื‘ืœื•ืœื‘.</b> ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื–ืงืคื•ื”. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืœืงื˜ื•ื” ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ืงืคื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:"
143
+ ],
144
+ [
145
+ "<b>ืงืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืฉื‘ื ืื• ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืžืขืฆื™ื ื•ืงืกืžื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืžืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ:",
146
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ืืฉืจื” ื™ืชื™ื– ื‘ืงื ื”.</b> ื™ืคื™ืœ ื”ืงืŸ ืœืืจืฅ ื‘ืงื ื” ื•ื™ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื•. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื™ืชื™ื–. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื™ืขืœื” ืขืœ ื”ืืฉืจื”, ื“ืื ืขื•ืœื” ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื”ืงืŸ, ื ืžืฆื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืืฉืจื”. ื•ื”ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ื•ื”ืืคืจื•ื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ืงืŸ, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœืืžืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ืืฉืจื”:",
147
+ "<b>ื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืจืฉ.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืขืจ, ื—ื•ืจืฉื:",
148
+ "<b>ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืœื•.</b> ื‘ืขืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ืขื ืคื™ื ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
149
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืืช ื”ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืฉืงื ื• ืขืฆื™ื ืžื™ืขืจ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืฆื•ืจืš ืงื•ืจื•ืช:",
150
+ "<b>ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืจืžื‘ืดื ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืขืฆื™ื ืฉื—ื•ืชื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื’ื™ืจื” ื‘ืขืช ืฉืžืชืงื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืงื•ืจื•ืช, ืฉืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
151
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉืคื•ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ื ืกืจื™ื ื“ืงื•ืช ืฉื ื•ืกืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืžื—ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ:",
152
+ "<b>ื ืžื™ื”.</b> ืขืœื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขืฆื™ ื”ื™ืขืจ:"
153
+ ]
154
+ ],
155
+ [
156
+ [
157
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืžืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœ. ื•ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื ืžื™ ืœื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ืคื’ื•ืœ ืื• ื ื•ืชืจ ืื• ื˜ืžื, ืื• ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืžืขืœื” ื›ื–ื™ืช ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:",
158
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœืžืขื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
159
+ "<b>ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”</b> ืœืžืขื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ, ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื™ืช ื‘ื”ื™ ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื:"
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœื›ื–ื™ืช.</b> ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ืžืขื™ืœื” ืื ื ื”ื ื” ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
163
+ "<b>ื”ืกื•ืœืช.</b> ื”ืžื ื—ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืขื ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
164
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื™ืŸ.</b> ืœื ืกื›ื™ื. ืฉื”ืขื•ืœื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืžื ื—ื” ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื:",
165
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืฉื” ื‘ืชื•ื“ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืชื•ื“ื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืœื—ื ืžื•ืกืฃ ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื›ื–ื™ืช, ืœืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉื”ืชื•ื“ื” ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืœื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื”ื™ ืคืจืง ืงืžื:",
166
+ "<b>ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžืžืื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžืช ืžืขืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื“ืžืื™:",
167
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื—ืœื”.</b> ืฉืืฃ ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื˜ืดื•:ื›ืณ) ืจืืฉื™ืช ืขืจื™ืกื•ืชื™ื›ื ื—ืœื” ืชืจื™ืžื• ืชืจื•ืžื”:",
168
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ืืžืจ ืžืจ ื•ืชืจื•ืžืช ื™ื“ืš ืืœื• ื‘ื™ื›ื•ืจื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื•:ื“ืณ) ื•ืœืงื— ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ื˜ื ื ืžื™ื“ืš:",
169
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœืืกื•ืจ.</b> ืฉืื ื ืคืœ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ืฉืื•ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื™ืกื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื ืืกืจืช:",
170
+ "<b>ื•ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื›ื•ืœืŸ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื” ืžืฉืœื ืืช ื”ื—ื•ืžืฉ:"
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืคื’ื•ืœื™ื. ืžืขื•ืœื” ืžื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืžืืฉื ื•ืžืฉืœืžื™ื:",
174
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœืื•ื›ืœ ืžื”ืŸ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืจืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื ื•ืชืจื™ื:",
175
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื ื‘ืœื•ืช ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืขื ื ื‘ื™ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื”, ืžืฆื˜ื“ืคื™ื ืœื›ื–ื™ืช ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืœืžืœืงื•ืช, ืฉืื™ื ื• ืœื•ืงื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžื ื‘ืœืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื” ืœื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืžืื” ืœื‘ื“ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืœื•ืงื” ืžืฉื•ื ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืืœื ืžืฉื•ื ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”:",
176
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืฉืจืฆื™ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœื›ื–ื™ืช, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ืžืœืงื•ืช, ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืฉืจืฆื™ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”, ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื”ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”. ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ื›ืš ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืื›ื™ืœืชืŸ:",
177
+ "<b>ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ื•ื‘ืฉืจื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื.</b> ื“ืžืจื‘ื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื) ื•ื–ื” ืœื›ื ื”ื˜ืžื ื‘ืฉืจืฅ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฅ ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื“ื ื”ืฉืจืฅ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื˜ืžื ื›ื‘ืฉืจื•:",
178
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ืื• ืฉืจืฅ ื•ืฉืจืฅ:",
179
+ "<b>ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ืฉืจืฅ ื“ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ืฉื•ื”, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ื”ื•ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืชืŸ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•, ื“ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืชื” ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช, ื•ืฉืจืฅ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”:",
180
+ "<b>ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ื•ืžืช, ื“ืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื˜ืžืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช. ื•ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื•, ื“ืื™ืœื• ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืช, ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘:",
181
+ "<b>ืœื ื˜ื•ืžืืชื• ื•ืœื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื•.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืžืช ื•ืฉืจืฅ, ื“ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžืช ื”ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ืขื”, ื•ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืฉืจืฅ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘. ื•ื‘ืฉื™ืขื•ืจื• ื ืžื™ ืื™ื ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ, ื“ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืช ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช ื•ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉืจืฅ ื‘ื›ืขื“ืฉื”:",
182
+ "<b>ืืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืžื•ื—ืœืงื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ:"
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ:",
186
+ "<b>ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ืœื ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœื˜ื•ืžืื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืงืœ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืขื“ืฉื” ื“ืฉืจืฅ ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืžื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืฉืœ ืžืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœื—ืฆื™ ื–ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื˜ืžื ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื˜ื•ืžืืช ืขืจื‘:",
187
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื• ื•ืœื“ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ:",
188
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ื•ืœื“.</b> ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื–ื”ื• ื•ืœื“ ืฉื ื™:",
189
+ "<b>ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื”.</b> ืœื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ:",
190
+ "<b>ืœื˜ืžื ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื›ื“ืจืš ื”ืฉื ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืฉืœื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืงืœ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื”ื›ื™ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืฉื ื™ ื›ืžื• ืฉืขื•ืฉื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™, ื“ืืดื› ื”ื™ื” ื›ื—ืžื•ืจ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ื:"
191
+ ],
192
+ [
193
+ "<b>ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื”.</b> ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจืก, ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ืฆื” ื•ืžื—ืฆื” ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™, ื ืคืกืœืช ื’ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืžื’ืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ:",
194
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ืœืขื™ืจื•ื‘.</b> ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืœื›ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืืœืคื™ื ืืžื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืขื•ืฉื” ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื—ื•ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžื ื™ื— ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืกืขื•ื“ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืฉื™ืงื ื” ืœื• ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื•, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืžืžืงื•ื ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื• ื•ืœื”ืœืŸ ืืœืคื™ื ืืžื”. ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืฉื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื™ื ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื•ืชื™:",
195
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืœื˜ืžื ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœ ืžื˜ืžื ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื‘ื™ืฆื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื) ืžื›ืœ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืื›ืœ, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืื›ืœ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช, ื•ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ืœื™ืขื” ืžื—ื–ื™ืง ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช:",
196
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื’ืจื•ืจืช ืœื”ื•ืฆืืช ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืจืฉื•ืช ืœืจืฉื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื’ืจื•ื’ืจื•ืช:",
197
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืฉื™ื ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืชืขื ื•, ื•ืœื ื›ืชื‘ ืœื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืœื ืงืคื™ื“ ืจื—ืžื ื ืืœื ืืขื™ื ื•ื™, ื•ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ืžื™ืชื‘ื ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืื ื™ืฉ, ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช ืœื ืžื™ืชื‘ื ื“ืขืชื™ื”:",
198
+ "<b>ืœืคืกื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื” ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช.</b> ื”ืฉื•ืชื” ืžืฉืงื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื ืคืกืœื” ื’ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ืคื•ืกืœ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืžื’ืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ:",
199
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื•.</b> ืฉื”ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืžืœื•ื ืœื•ื’ืžื™ื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘. ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจ: "
200
+ ],
201
+ [
202
+ "<b>ื”ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžื–ื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžื–ื”, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœืœืงื•ืช ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืžืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื™ื—ื“ ืฉื ืคืœื• ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื™ืชืจ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ืœืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื™ื‘ืฉ ื‘ืžืืชื™ื, ื•ื‘ืœื— ื‘ื ื•ืชืŸ ื˜ืขื:",
203
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื ื™ื ื”ื•. ืืœื ืื ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ื™ืจื” ืœื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ื”ืขืจืœื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื” ื•ื˜ืขื ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ืชืจ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:",
204
+ "<b>ื”ื‘ื’ื“.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื˜ืžื ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื”:",
205
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืง.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื˜ืžื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื”:",
206
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืขื•ืจ.</b> ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื”:",
207
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืคืฅ.</b> ืฉืฉื” ืขืœ ืฉืฉื”. ื”ื‘ื’ื“ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืฉืง ืฉืงืœ ื”ื™ืžื ื•, ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื˜ืจืฃ ืœืงืœ. ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื–ื” ืขื ื–ื” ืœื˜ืžื ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื˜ื•ืžืื” ื”ืงืœื”, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ืงืœ ืขื ื”ื—ืžื•ืจ:",
208
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื˜ืžื ืžื•ืฉื‘.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื“ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ, ื”ื›ื ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจืŸ ืฉื•ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจ ื–ื” ืฉื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื˜ืžื ื‘ืžื•ืฉื‘ ื”ื–ื‘, ื”ืœื›ืš ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื˜ื•ืžืืช ืžื•ืฉื‘:"
209
+ ]
210
+ ],
211
+ [
212
+ [
213
+ "<b>ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืืขืดืค ืฉืœื ืคื’ื ืžืขืœ.</b> ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื“ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉื ืžืฆื™ืขืื”. ื“ืœื‘ื•ืฉ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืชื—ื›ืš ื‘ื›ืชืœื™ื. ื•ืœื ืืคืœื™ื’ื• ื ืžื™ ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉ ื“ืœืคื ื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ืฉืจื™ื”, ื“ื”ื”ื•ื ื ืžื™ ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ ืžื—ืžืช ื–ื™ืขื”, ืืœื ื‘ืœื‘ื•ืฉื ืžืฆื™ืขืื”. ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืกื‘ืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจ ื“ืœื ืคื’ื™ื ืœืืœืชืจ ืืขืดื’ ื“ืคื’ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืขืœื™ื ื‘ื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื:",
214
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“.</b> ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืชื ื” ืงื˜ืœื ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื”, ืจื‘ื™ื“ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืื• ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ื™ื“ื”, ืื• ืฉืชืชื” ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ื”ื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ืš, ืืœื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื™ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœื”. ื•ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืฉืขืจื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืื”, ืื•ืžื“ื™ืŸ ื›ืžื” ืืฉื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ืชืŸ ืฉื™ืฉืื™ืœื•ื” ืชื›ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื›ืžื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืฉืชื” ืœื”ืชื›ื‘ื“ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื›ืื•ืชื• ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืฉืœืžืช ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืงืจืŸ ื•ื—ื•ืžืฉ ื›ืฉื ืฉืชืžืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
215
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœื‘ืฉ ื‘ื—ืœื•ืง, ืื• ื›ื™ืกื” ื‘ื˜ืœื™ืช, ืื• ื‘ืงืข ื‘ืงืจื“ื•ื. ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื™ืคื’ื, ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
216
+ "<b>ืชืœืฉ.</b> ืฉืขืจ:",
217
+ "<b>ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืื™ื™ืจื™ ื“ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœื™ืคื“ื•ืช ื•ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื”ื•ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื” ื“ืชืœื™ืฉืช ืฆืžืจ ื•ืฉืขืจ ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื” ืžื™ื“ื™, ืฉื›ืš ื”ื™ื ืจืื•ื™ื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื”ื•ื™ื ื›ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืžื ื” ืžืขืœ:",
218
+ "<b>ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืชื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื” ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืชื” ืœืื• ื‘ืช ืคื“ื™ื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื. ื•ืžื™ื™ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื: "
219
+ ],
220
+ [
221
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™.</b> ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ, ืœื‘ืฉ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ื”ื ืืช ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉื•ื” ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืฉืงืจืข ื‘ื• ื•ืคื’ืžื• ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืฆื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:",
222
+ "<b>ืฉืฉื ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื ื•ืœื ืคื’ื:",
223
+ "<b>ื•ืคื’ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืคืš ืžืฉืงื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืœื ื ื”ื ื”:",
224
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื•ื™ืคื’ื•ื ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“.</b> ื‘ืขืฆืžื•, ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืคื’ื. ื“ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืดื•,) ื•ื—ื˜ืื” ื‘ืฉื’ื’ื”, ื•ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ืœืดื‘) ื•ืœื ืชืฉืื• ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื˜ื, ืžื” ื—ื˜ื ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืื•ื›ืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืคื•ื’ื ื•ื ื”ื ื”, ื•ื‘ืžื” ืฉืคื’ื ื ื”ื ื”, ืืฃ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืืžื•ืจ ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ื’ื ื•ื ื”ื ื” ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ืฉืคื•ื’ื ื ื”ื ื” ื•ืœื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ:"
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืงื•ื“ืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช.</b> ื‘ื”ืžื” ืชืžื™ืžื”, ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชืžื™ืžื”. ื“ื”ื ื™ ืœืื• ืœืคื“ื™ื™ื” ืงื™ื™ืžื™ ื•ืœืื• ื‘ื ื™ ืคื’ื™ืžื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืจื›ื‘ ืื—ื“ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื›ื—ื™ืฉื” ืื• ืชืœืฉ ืžืŸ ืฆืžืจื”, ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื” ื”ื™ื ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื” ืื—ื“ ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืคื’ืžื• ื•ืคื—ืชื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉ[ืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ] ื”ื•ื ื•ืœืื• ืœืคื“ื™ื” ืงืื™, ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืจื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื™ื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืขืœ ื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืชื• ืœื™ืช ื‘ื” ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
228
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืคื’ื, ืฉืื™ื ื• ื ืคืกืœ, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ ื”ื ื™ ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืคื’ืžื• ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืชื ื ืงืžื ืœืจื‘ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ื‘ืขืœื™ ืžื•ืžื™ื ื•ืขื‘ืจ ื•ืฉื—ื˜ืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ืคื“ื™ื™ื”. ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืขื• ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื” ื•ืœื ืืคืฉืจ ื“ื”ื ืžืชื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื”ื•ื• ืชื• ื‘ื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื™ื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ ื”ื ื”ื ื” ืžื”ืŸ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืคื“ื•, ื“ืœื ื‘ืขื• ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื ื ื™ื ื”ื• ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžื•ืขืœ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืขืœ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื: "
229
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžื•ืงื™ ืœื” ื‘ื’ื–ื‘ืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ืฉื”ืื‘ืŸ ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ื™ ื ื˜ืœืŸ ืœืขืฆืžื• ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื‘ืจืฉื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœ ืœื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื”ื•ื• ื‘ืจืฉื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ื›ื™ ื ืชื ื” ืœื—ื‘ืจื•, ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื” ืžืจืฉื•ืชื• ื•ืฉื™ื ื” ืžื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ ื•ืžืขืœ, ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื™ืฆืื” ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
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+ "<b>ื‘ื ืื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืชื•.</b> ืœื ื‘ื ืื” ืžืžืฉ, ื“ืื ื›ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ื ื”ื ื” ืžื™ื“ ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืชื•. ืืœื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื” ืขืœ ืคื™ ืืจื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื”ื ืื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื“ื•ืจ ืชื—ืชื™ื” ื•ื™ื”ื ื” ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืคื™ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ืืจื•ื‘ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื’ืฉืžื™ื ื“ื•ืœืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ืกืชื ืคื™ ืืจื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืื‘ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžืขืœ:",
233
+ "<b>ื ืชื ื” ืœื‘ืœืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื ื™ื—ื ื• ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืจื—ืฅ:"
234
+ ],
235
+ [
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+ "<b>ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื•.</b> ืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ืื• ื ื”ื ื” ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ื”ื ื” ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื ืืชื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœืช ื—ื‘ืจื•, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืกืš ื”ื•ื ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ, ืื• ืื™ืคื›ื, ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ืœื—ื™ื™ื‘ื• ืืฉื ืžืขื™ืœื•ืช:",
237
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื›ืœ ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืœืžื—ืจ ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ืื• ืฉืื›ืœ ืื• ื ื”ื ื” ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ืื• ื”ื”ื ื” ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื›ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืœืžื—ืจ, ืžืฆื˜ืจืคื™ื ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ืžืจื•ื‘ื”, ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ืขืœื ืื—ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื”ืณ:ื˜ืดื•) ื›ื™ ืชืžืขื•ืœ ืžืขืœ, ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉืชืžืขื•ืœ ื ืชื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืืฉื:"
238
+ ]
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ [
242
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืœื™ื—.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืื• ืžืขื•ืช ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืขืฉื” ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•:",
243
+ "<b>ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื‘ืžืขื™ืœื” ื™ืฉ ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืขื‘ื™ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืขื‘ื™ืจื”, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžืขื™ืœื” ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืณ) ื•ืืฉืžื” ื”ื ืคืฉ ื”ื”ื™ื, ืžื™ ืฉืฉื’ื’ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืžืฉืœื—:",
244
+ "<b>ืชืŸ ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืื•ืจื—ื™ื.</b> ืžืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
245
+ "<b>ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื›ื‘ื“.</b> ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
246
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ืžื“ืขืชื™, ืื– ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขืœ, ื“ืœื ืขืงืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืžืฉืœื—, ื”ืœื›ืš ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ ืขืœ ื–ืืช ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืžื“ืขืชื•, ื•ื”ืื•ืจื—ื™ื ื ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉื ื˜ืœื• ืžื“ืขืชื. ืื‘ืœ ืื ืœื ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ืžื“ืขืชื™, ืืœื ื˜ืœื• ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื•, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ืขืงืจ ืืช ื”ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืžื“ืขืชื•:",
247
+ "<b>ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื.</b> ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ื•ืŸ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœืชื™ื‘ื” ื’ืœื•ืกืงื•ืก. ื•ื™ืฉื ื‘ืืจื•ืŸ, ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ืฉื•ื•ืŸ ื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ื’ืœื•ืกืงืžื:",
248
+ "<b>ืืขืดืค ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื™ ืืœื ืžื–ื” ื›ื•ืณ ืžืขืœ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืืžืจื•, ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื‘ืœื‘ ืื™ื ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื: "
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ.</b> ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื ื™ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช. ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ื”ืžืฉืœื— ืžืขืœ:",
252
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™.</b> ืฉืงื‘ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืžื™ื“ ื—ืจืฉ ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื•ืงื˜ืŸ, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื›ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื—ืคืฆื™ื•:",
253
+ "<b>ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ.</b> ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื’ื™ืขื• ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืœื™ื“ ื—ื ื•ื ื™, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื–ื›ืจ ืฉื•ื‘ ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื” ืืฆืœ ืžื–ื™ื“:",
254
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื—ื™ื™ื‘.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื ื–ื›ืจื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื—, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืฉื•ื’ื’ ืืœื ื—ื ื•ื ื™. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœื ื ื–ื›ืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ื—, ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื’ื’ ืชื—ืœื”:",
255
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื ื™ื“ืข ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื–ื• ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื•ื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื›ื‘ืจ ืขื ืฉืืจ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื•, ื›ื™ืฆื“ ื™ืขืฉื” ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืชื™ื•:"
256
+ ],
257
+ [
258
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืœื ืžืขืœื•.</b> ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืœื ืžืขืœ ืฉืœื ืขืงืจ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ื•ื‘ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืœื™ื›ื ื—ื™ื•ื‘ ืžืขื™ืœื”:",
259
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ.</b> ืฉืขืงืจ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืชื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืคืจื•ื˜ื”:"
260
+ ],
261
+ [
262
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžืขืœื•.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื™ื”ื ืื•ืชื• ื”ืืชืจื•ื’ ืฉื•ื” ืฉื ื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘. ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืžืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืงื ื” ืœื• ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื•ืฉื•ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื•, ื”ืจื™ ื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื•. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ืžืขืœ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืงื ื” ืจืžื•ืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ืžื“ืขืชื• ืฉืœื ื‘ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืช ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘:",
263
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื”ืดื‘ ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืœื™ื” ืœืฉืœื™ื— ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื™ืช ืงื•ื ื” ืืชืจื•ื’ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืชืชื™ ืœืš ื”ื™ื™ืช ืžื‘ื™ื ืœื™ ืืชืจื•ื’ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื•ื” ืืจื‘ืข ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช, ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉืœื ื ืชืช ืืœื ืคืจื•ื˜ื” ื”ื‘ืืช ืœื™ ืืชืจื•ื’ ืฉื•ื” ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื˜ื•ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื˜ืŸ ื•ืจืข, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืœื ืขืฉื™ืช ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "<b>ืื ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื, ืื• ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืฉืจื™ื ื•ื—ืชื•ืžื™ืŸ:",
267
+ "<b>ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื’ืœื™ ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืคืงื“, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืงืฉืจืŸ ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืื• ื”ื˜ื™ืœ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื:",
268
+ "<b>ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืงืจื™ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืงืฉื•ืจื™ื ืงืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ื ื” ืืœื ืงืฉื•ืจ ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืชื:",
269
+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืœื ืžืขืœ.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ืœื• ื”ืžืคืงื™ื“ ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฆืจื•ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœื™ื—ื•ืชื• ืขืฉื”, ื•ื”ืžืคืงื™ื“ ื ืžื™ ืœื ืžืขืœ ื“ื”ื ืœื ืืžืจ ืœื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ:",
270
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื ื•ื ื™.</b> ืฉืžื•ื›ืจ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ืื• ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื ื•ืช:",
271
+ "<b>ื›ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื•ืื ื”ืคืงื™ื“ื• ืืฆืœื• ืžืขื•ืช, ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฆืจื•ืจื™ื, ืœื ื™ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื ื”ื™ื• ืžืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžืขืœ:",
272
+ "<b>ื›ืฉืœื—ื ื™.</b> ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ืžืขื•ืช ืฉื”ืคืงื™ื“ื• ืืฆืœื• ื›ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฆืจื•ืจื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืžืขืœ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ "<b>ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”.</b> ืœืฆื•ืจืš ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื• ืžืขืœ:",
276
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื.</b> ืœื ืžืขืœ:",
277
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ื.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขื•ืช ืฉื‘ื›ื™ืก ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:",
278
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+ " ... 6) Rebbi says: Since it says 'mincha [shel esronim],' it means he specified one [amount]. Perhaps he specified to bring a mincha of one issaron; if he brings 60 issaron in place of [lit. 'in the vessel of] one issaron, it could be an extraneous mincha. Rebbi is of the opinion that since he specified exaclt how big the mincha will be, [he must bring that exact one], therefore he must bring 60 menachot from 1 through 60, one of 1 issaron, one of two issarons, one of three, one of four, until 60. He will find himself bringing in total 1830 issaron of flour, and for certain one of them will fulfill his vow, and it is not a Nedava. The halacha is not according to Rebbi. [If you specified, and forget what you specified, you bring only a 60 issaron mincha.]"
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืžื“ื•ืช",
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+ [
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+ [
23
+ "ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ not because of fear of robbers and/or thieves, but that of the honor and splendor for the Temple, that it should not be without guards, and this guarding, its commandment is the entire night. And these three places that the Kohanim guard correspond to what is written in the Torah (Numbers 3:38): โ€œThose who were to camp before the Tabernacle, in front โ€“ [before the Tent of Meeting, on the east โ€“ were Moses and Aaron and his sons,] attending to the duties of the sanctuary, as a duty on behalf of the Israelites,โ€ as a hint to three watches in three places. For just as that in the Tabernacle, Aaron and his two sons were guarding in three places, even so in the Temple as well.",
24
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ โ€“ two upper chambers were built on the side of the gates of the Temple courtyard, but the House of the Hearth was not upon it, but rather an arch , ARKVELT in the foreign tongue, which was made in the land, such was explained at the beginning of the Tractate Tamid (1:1).",
25
+ "ื•ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืงื•ื โ€“ that in twenty-four places they would need to guard the Temple, as it is written in [First] Chronicles [26:17-18): โ€œAt the east โ€“ six Levites; at the north โ€“ four daily; at the south โ€“ four daily; at the vestibule โ€“ two by two; at the colonnade on the west โ€“ four at the causeway and two at the colonnade,โ€ that makes here twenty-four divisions of duty/watches, three of them were Kohanim as we stated in the opening clause [of the Mishnah], and twenty-one of them were Levites. But even though that Scripture did not state anything other than Levites, Kohanim are also called Levites , as it is written (Ezekiel 44:15): โ€œBut the Levitical priests descended from Zadok [who maintained the service of My Sanctuary when the people of Israel went astray from Me โ€“ they shall approach Me to minister to Me.โ€",
26
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” โ€“ guards at the five gates of the Temple Mount.",
27
+ "",
28
+ "ืžืชื•ื›ื• โ€“ from inside to the walls of the Temple Mount.",
29
+ "ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds that there are only five gates for the Temple courtyards But even according to the one who states further on (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 1, Mishnah and Tractate Tamid 27a), he admits that there wasnโ€™t a division of duty/guard other than on five [gates of the Temple courtyard โ€“ that the House of the Flame and the House of the Hearlth were watched by Kohanim or that the gates that were in the middle of the north and the south didnโ€™t require special guarding, as they were guarded by those at the first and third gates].",
30
+ "ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื” ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ because there is no sitting in the Temple courtyard other than for only the kings of the House of David, and it was not possible for a guard to watch while standing all the night, therefore, the guards were in the corners of the Temple courtyard, and similarly, the guards in the gates of the Temple courtyard would guard from outside, in order that they would be permitted while sitting, and the Scriptural verse (First Chronicles 26:18) esd used as a support (i.e., they leaned their enactment against a Biblical text) โ€“ as it is written: โ€œtwo at the colonnade,โ€ towards the outside, meaning to say, outside the wall of the Temple courtyard."
31
+ ],
32
+ [
33
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ appointed over all of the guards. [The story is told in Tractate Yoma 16a that Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov, the first of two Tannaim of such a name, who was the friend of Rabbi Eliezer the Great/ben Hyrcanus โ€“ was the Tanna who taught Tractate Middot."
34
+ ],
35
+ [
36
+ "ืžืฉืžืฉื™ื ื›ื ื™ืกื” ื•ื™ืฆื™ืื” โ€“ that through them they would enter and leave the Temple Mount.",
37
+ "ืงื™ื ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืžืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ โ€“ the gate of the Temple Mount that is on the western side Kiponos is its name, and of the north Tadi is its name.",
38
+ "ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฆื•ืจื” โ€“ when they (i.e., the exiled Jews in Babylonia) went up from the Diaspora, the Kings of Persia commanded them to draw the form of Shushan the capitol on the gates of the temple, in order that there would be fear of the kingdom, and they drew it in the Eastern Gate.",
39
+ "ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” โ€“ Our Mishnah is [according to] Rabbi Meir who holds that the Red Heifer is not burned other by the High Priest. But it is not Halakha (see Tractate Parah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 1).",
40
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ืžืกืขื“ื™ื” (and all its attendants) โ€“ all of the Kohanim who are assisting and supporting the Kohen who burns it.",
41
+ "ืœื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื” โ€“ to the Mount of Olives which is to the east of Jerusalem, there they would burn the [red] heifer."
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง (the Gate of Kindling) โ€“ because they would bring in through there the wood for the pile of the wood on the altar was brought in that burn on the altar, it is called, the Gate of Kindling.",
45
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ we have the read, for there they wold bring in the firstlings whose slaughtering took place in the south.",
46
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ in the book of Ezekiel (47:1-2): โ€œ[He led me back to the entrance of the Temple, and I found that water was issuing from below the platform of the Temple โ€“ eastward, since the Temple faced east โ€“ but the water was running out at the south of the altar (i.e., southeast), under the south wall of the Temple. Then he led me out by way of the northern gate and led me around to the outside of the outer gate that faces in the direction of the east;] And I found that water was gushing from [under] the south wall,โ€ and that is the south, which is called, โ€œrightโ€ as it is written โ€œnorth and eastwardโ€ (Psalm 89:13). And see Ezekiel in the prophecy that the waters went out from the House of the Holy of Holies thinly like the proboscides of locusts and when they reach this game, they become like the fulness of the mouth of a small jug, and that is why they call them ืžื™ื ืžื”ื›ืคื›ื™ื/waters gushing (see Ezekiel 47:2- โ€œ[Then he led me out by way of the northern gate and led me around to the outside of the outer gate that faces in the direction of the east;] and I found that water was gushing from [under] the south wall.โ€).",
47
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ which is explained in Tractate Yoma (38a and Chapter 3, Mishnah 10- concerning the miracles of Nicanor with regard to the doors โ€“ see the Bartenura commentary there).",
48
+ "ืคื ื—ืก ื”ืžืœื‘ื™ืฉ โ€“ who was appointed to dress the Kohanim at the time of their [Divine] Service, and to strip them of their clothing after the [Divine] Service and to guard the clothing of the priests.",
49
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ in there they would make the meal-offering that the Kohen Gadol would offer on each day, โ€œhalf of it in the morning and half of it in the eveningโ€ (Leviticus 6:13; see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 3),t and because it is stated regarding it (Leviticus 6:14): โ€œshall be prepared with oil on a griddle,โ€ it is called, a sort of cake."
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "ื•ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื”ื™ื” โ€“ two walls, one from this side and another from that side of the gate, they would protrude and go out from beyond the wall of he Temple courtyard to the side of the Temple Mount, and there was an upper chambr built from above on top of the two walls.",
53
+ "ื•ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื—ื™ืœ โ€“ in one of the walls there was an opening that would go out to the place within the fortification of the Temple, which is a place inside from the wall of the Temple Mount from outside the Temple courtyard and is called ื—ื™ืœ/Khel, [as will be described in further detail in Tractate Middot, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3].",
54
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ there they would bring in the Holy of Holies, whose ritual slaughter was in the north.",
55
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ because there were open fires burning there always to warm the Kohanim there because they walk barefoot, it is called, the House of the Hearth. And it was a large house, and in its four corners, there were four small chambers as will be explained further on [in the next Mishnah] (see also Tractate Tamid, Chapter One, Mishnah 1 as well)."
56
+ ],
57
+ [
58
+ "ื›ืงื™ื˜ื•ื ื™ื•ืช (small rooms/recesses) โ€“ like small rooms that open to a large house of kings, which is the reception room.",
59
+ "ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืœ โ€“ as the House of the Hearth, part of it is built within the holy Temple courtyard and part of it on the unconsecrated ground.",
60
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ (ends of flag-stones the pavement/blocks on the ceiling; cut and polished stone block) โ€“ the heads of beams that come out from the wall until the place which is sanctified, in order to know which is sanctified/holy and which is unconsecrated (i.e., north of the room of the hearth) and to consume Holy Food in sanctity.",
61
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ there were there lambs which passed examination for the daily-offerings, as is taught in the Mishnah (see Tractate Arakhin, Chapter 2, Mishnah 5): There should be no less than six examined lambs in the Chamber of the Lambs.โ€",
62
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื โ€“ the House of Garmu would make the shew bread there.",
63
+ "ืฉืฉืงืฆื•ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ โ€“ that they offered upon it (i.e., in the northeastern corner) for Idolatrous worship. But in the Tractates Shekalim (see actually Tractate Yoma 15b as the Bar Ilan project has shown me that it is not found in Shekalim at all) and Tamid (see Chapter 3, Mishnah 3), they call it the Chamber of the Seals.",
64
+ "ื‘ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” โ€“ in that chamber, the Kohen would go down when he observed an emission and he would go with pardon [it must say, that is under] the Temple to the House of Immersion, and there is a fire that warms the Kohen after he immersed and came out and dried off, and it is called the Chamber of the Hearth, because it is open to a large House of the Hearth."
65
+ ],
66
+ [
67
+ "ืื—ื“ ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ โ€“ the opening that is in the north of the House of the Hearth was open to the Khel/the place within the fortification of the Temple, and the one in the south was open to the Temple courtyard.",
68
+ "ืคืฉืคืฉ ืงื˜ืŸ (a small wicket) โ€“ a small gate within the large gate [by which they entered to patrol].",
69
+ "ืฉื‘ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” (to patrol the Temple courtyard) โ€“ that they would enter each morning on the path of the same wicket to examine/search over each of the Temple vessels that were in the Temple courtyard that all of them were in their [appropriate] place. For this is taught in the Mishnah of Tractate Tamid [Chapter 1, Mishnah 3]: โ€œHe took the key and opened the wicket and entered from the House of the Hearth into the Temple courtyard, etc.,โ€ โ€“ these walk on the covered place in front o the house in an easterly direction and those walk on the covered place in front of the house in a westerly direction. They would examine and go until they meet to the place where they make the cakes, they arrived, both sets say โ€œShalom; everything is peaceful/in order,โ€ meaning to say, that all the Temple vessels are in their places in peace/in order.",
70
+ "ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ โ€“ it is the Aramaic translation of โ€œand he searched,โ€ and examined."
71
+ ],
72
+ [
73
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ื™ืคื” โ€“ the building of the House of the Hearth was not an upper chamber, but rather an arch, ARKUVLAT in the foreign language made on the land.",
74
+ "ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ (surrounded by stone pavements between steps in the Temple hall, landing) โ€“ porticos/colonnades of hewn stone around were sunk in the wall and came out from the wall into the House of the Hearth to the side of the ground, and on top of them were other short stones than then that also came out from the wall, and they were similar to steps one on another.",
75
+ "ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ โ€“ the priestly division of duty/guard was divided into seven priestly divisions according to the days of the week, each one working his day, and the elders of the priestly division of that day would sleep there on those stone pavements.",
76
+ "ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” โ€“ young men whose hair of their beards begins to flower, and they were guards.",
77
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ โ€“ that they were not permitted to lie there on beds, but rather onl on the ground, in the manner that the guards of the courtyards of the kings would do.",
78
+ "ื›ืกืชื• โ€“ the language of pillows and cushions."
79
+ ],
80
+ [
81
+ "ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื ืขื™ืœื” โ€“ to lock the gates of the Temple courtyard.",
82
+ "ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ that the Levites were secondary to the Kohanim, as it is stated, (Numbers 18:2): โ€œ[You shall also associate with yourself your kinsmen the tribe of Levi, your ancestral tribe,] to be attached to you and to minister to you, [while you and your sons under your charge are before the Tent of the Pact].โ€ Therefore, in the House of Avtinas and in the House of the Spark, which were upper stories, the Kohanim who guarded were above and the Levites were below. But the House of the Hearth which was not other than an arch on the land, there was a Kohen on the inside and a Levite on the outside.",
83
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase) โ€“ in a cavity/underground places, he walks underneath the Temple (see Talmud Yoma 2a for another interpretation) , for the cavity/underground places was underneath the Temple, and all of the Temple is called ื‘ื™ืจื” /the capitol, as it is written (I Chronicles 29:19): โ€œand to build this Temple for which I have made provision.โ€ But because he had had a nocturnal emission,, he would not walk on the path of the Temple courtyard, but rather on the path in the underground , for we hold that the cavities/underground places were not sanctified.",
84
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœืงื™ื โ€“ in the underground cavities from here and there.",
85
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื—ื™ืœ โ€“ he departs, and does not return to the House of the Hearth because he is a someone who has immersed but must wait until sunset until he is ritually pure. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov, but rather, as it is taught in the beginning of Tractate Tamid. He came and sat with his brethren, the Kohanim in the House of the Hearth until the gates open when he can go on his way, for even though someone who has immersed but must wait until sunset until he is ritually pure, it is forbidden to enter into the Womenโ€™s courtyard, which is the camp of the Levites, for this, they were lenient, because he had been defiled inside."
86
+ ]
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ [
90
+ "ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืฉ ืžืื•ืช ืืžื•ืช โ€“ surrounded by a wall all around (based, according to Ezekiel 42:20 on: โ€œThus he measured it on the four sides: it had a wall completely surrounding it, five hundred [cubits] long and five hundred [cubits] wide to separate the consecrated from the unconsecrated.).",
91
+ "ืจื•ื‘ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื— โ€“ meaning to say, the distance that there is from the wall of the Temple Mount to the wall of the Temple courtyard to the south side, is more than the distance that there is between them from the eastern side. But the distance that there is between them from the eastern side is greater than the distance that is between them to the north side, and the north side is greater than the west."
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ "ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉืžืืœ โ€“ as, for example, those who enter on the path of the gates of Huldah (on the south โ€“ see Tractate Middot, Chapter One, Mishnah Three) which are from the right, makse a circuit on the path of the gate of the Tadi (on the north).",
95
+ "ืฉืื ื™ ืื‘ืœ โ€“ he was asked: โ€œWhat difference is it to you to make a circuit to the left?,โ€ and he states, โ€œI am a mourner.โ€ They say to him: โ€œ He who dwells in this House, may He comfort you.โ€",
96
+ "ืขืฉื™ืชืŸ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ (as if they had treated him too severely/arbitrarily) โ€“ if they say to him, โ€œyes,โ€ it appears as if his fellows have perverted the judgment and excommunicated him not in accordance with the Halakha.",
97
+ "ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ืš ืฉืชืฉืžืข ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืจืš โ€“ for now, he performed justice not in accordance with the law and he requires doing repentance/Teshuva. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ "ืœืคื ื™ื โ€“ from the wall of the Temple Mount (surrounding the inner area containing the Womenโ€™s court and the Temple courtyard).",
101
+ "ืกื•ืจื’ (lattice-work -name of one of the approaches of the Temple fortification) โ€“ a partition made of perforations/holes like straps drawn in a bed stead (i.e., a zig-zag) with ropes, and it is made from long and short boards/planks of wood that are grafted this on top of that crosswise.",
102
+ "ื•ื’ื–ืจื• ื›ื ื’ื“ื ืฉืœืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื•ืช โ€“ when he reaches opposite each and every breach, he prostrates and gives thanks on the destruction of the Greek kingdom.",
103
+ "ืœืคื ื™ื โ€“ from this Soreg was a free place of ten cubits, and it was called the Khel (a place within the fortifications of the Temple)/rampa.",
104
+ "ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฉื โ€“ in order to ascend from there to the Womenโ€™s court.",
105
+ "ืจื•ื ืžืขืœื” โ€“ every step of them was higher than its neighbor by one-half of a cubit. And similarly the first step/ascent was one-half a cubit high off the ground.",
106
+ "ืžthe place of the treading of the foot was one-half cubit.",
107
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืœ ืื•ืœื (except for those of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple) โ€“ except for the steps that are between the hall leading to the interior of the Temple/porch and the altar, for not all of them were like this, as is taught further on in Chapter 3 [Tractate Middot, see Mishnah 6].",
108
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืคืชื— ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื โ€“ as it is taught in the Mishnah further on (Chapter 3, Mishnah 7 of Tractate Middot), that its height was forty cubits and its width twenty.",
109
+ "ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ืŸ ืฉืงื•ืคื•ืช (they had arches/lintels with posts) โ€“ a stone placed on two doorposts that the door is arched/bent upon. And the word ืฉืงืคื•ืช is from the language of ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ/lintel, cross-piece (see Exodus 12:7: โ€œ[They shall take some of the blood] and put it on the two doorposts and the lintel of the houses [in which they are to eat it].โ€)",
110
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื ืก โ€“ like it is explained in [Tractate] Yoma, chapter 3 [38a] (at the top of the page and the accompanying Mishnah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 10).",
111
+ "ืžืฆื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช (because the bronze has the appearance of gold) โ€“ like ืžื–ื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช/glittering like gold, that their appearance was similar to gold, therefore, it was not necessary to make them of gold."
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื โ€“ in all of the buildings of the Temple Mount.",
115
+ "ื”ื™ื• ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื™ื โ€“ very [high] , until all of the entrances/openings that were in them were twenty-cubits tall, alone from what was on the openings.",
116
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ โ€“ this is the lowest of the legs of the Temple Mount (see Ezekiel 40:5: โ€œAlongside the outside of the Temple [area] ran a wall on every side. The rod that the man held was six cubits long, plus one handbreadth for each cubit, and hen he applied it to that structure, it measured one rod deep and one rod high.โ€",
117
+ "ืฉื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื” โ€“ this is the Mount of Olives which faces Jerusalem from the east, and the Kohen is facing to the west and he intends and sees from above the height of the top of the the wall towards the gates that are inside from it the opening of the hall containing the golden altar, when he springles the blood, as is it written (Numbers 19:4): โ€œ[Eleazar the priest shall take some of its blood with his finger] and sprinkle it seven times toward the front of the Tent of Meeting.โ€ But if the wall was high, even though the gates are all corresponding one to another, the gate of the Temple Mount opposite the the Gate of the Womenโ€™s Court, and the Gate of the Womenโ€™s Court opposite the Gate of the large Courtyard, and the Gate of the Large Courtyadr opposite the opening of the Hall containing the golden altar, one would not be able to see the opening of the Hall of the golden altar through the openings, because the Mount continually gets higher and ascends until the the opening of the Hall of the golden altar is [twenty-two] cubits more than the ground of the feet of the Temple Mount, and it is such that the lintel/threshold of the Hall containing the golden altar is higher than the lintel of of the opening of the Temple Mount by two cubits, for the opening of the Temple Mount was not higher than twenty, as is taught above (see Mishnah 3 of this chapter), And it is found that the Kohen who is slaughtering the [red] heifer is not able to see the cavity of the opening of the Hall containing the golden altar through the path of that entrance/opening."
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "ืื•ืจืš โ€“ from the east to the west.",
121
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ โ€“ from the north to the south.",
122
+ "ืงื˜ื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžืงื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ from the language (Genesis 19:28): โ€œ[and, (Abraham) looking down toward Sodom and Gomorrah and all the land of the plain, he saw] the smoke of the land [rising like the smoke of a kiln],โ€ meaning to say, smoke rising, because they didnโ€™t have a roof.",
123
+ "ื•ืžืฉืœื—ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ื•ืจ โ€“ to burn them in fire that is underneath the cavity in the gound laid out with clay/kettle where they cook the peace offerings/sacrifice of well-being, as it is written (Numbers 6:18): โ€œ[and take the locks of his consecrated hair] and put them on the fire that is under the sacrifice of well-being.โ€",
124
+ "And inside for the giving of wood on the altar of the Temple.",
125
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื = for there the lepers immerse on the eighth [day] of their purification which he comes to put his hand inside for the giving of wealth [for the giving of blood and oil] -, and even though he had immersed [in a ritual bath] from the evening.",
126
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืฉื›ื—ืชื™ ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช โ€“ it follows, that the entire first segment [of this Mishnah], Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov said it. And this is proved in the Gemara of [Tractate] Yoma (16a), that an anonymous Mishnah of [Tractate] Middot is Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov (the first).",
127
+ "ื•ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื” โ€“ Maimonides explained, broken through/breached, that it was not surrounded by a partition.",
128
+ "ื›ืฆื•ืฆื˜ืจื โ€“ like a balcony/ื›ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื โ€“ that surrounded the womenโ€™s court (see Tractate Sukkah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 1), that the women who were standing above on the balcony and the men were below to see the Rejoicing of the House of the Water-Drawing, in order that they would not come to frivolity.",
129
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช โ€“ the height of the ground of the Israelite court from the Womenโ€™s Court.",
130
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื˜ืจืจื•ื˜ื•ืช (they werenโ€™t half-closed, round) โ€“ long and filled with corrrners like the path of all the steps, but rather round like a round half-circle."
131
+ ],
132
+ [
133
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ (the tops of the flag-stones in the pavement) โ€“ the tops of the beams that protrude and come out from the wall to distinguish between the Israelite Courtyard and the Priestโ€™s Courtyard.",
134
+ "ืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื (a step) โ€“ in the Israelite Courtyard.",
135
+ "ื•ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืืžื” โ€“ and its length was as the length of he entire Courtyard.",
136
+ "ื•ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ (platform) โ€“ of the Levites is built upon it and is made like a kind of portico/balcony, and the height of the platform is a cubit-and-a-half.",
137
+ "ื•ื‘ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” โ€“ that they ascend upon them to the platform.",
138
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ from the beginning of the Israelite Court until eleven cubits is a free space that was behind the House of the cover of the Holy Ark.",
139
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ โ€“ from north to south.",
140
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืจื™ื โ€“ as he considers them and then moves on. And the one who states that there were seven gates in the Temple courtyard (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) gives the reason for the thirteen prostrations corresponding to the thirteen breaches that the Grecian kings made in the Soreg/one of the approaches of the Temple fortification, as we stated above in our Chapter (see Mishnah 3). And all of our Mishnah is explained in the first chapter [of Tractate Middot]."
141
+ ]
142
+ ],
143
+ [
144
+ [
145
+ "ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” โ€“ he would bring a square frame made from four boards, each board is thirty-two cubits long and the board is one cubit wide, and it is the height of the frame, and he fills it with stones, lime and pitch/tar and molten lead, and it is made into one piece of thirty-two cubits by thirty-two cubits, one cubit high. And this is the foundation/base of the altar.",
146
+ "ืขืœื” ืืžื” ื•ื›ื ืก ืืžื” (it rose by a cubit and drew in by a cubit โ€“ on every side) โ€“ after the foundation rose to the height of a cubit, he brings another frame whose length is the entire board is thirty cubits and a width of the board, that is the height of this frame is five cubits, and places it on the foundation/base, and fills it with stones, and lime and pitch/tar and lead like the first, and it is attached to the base and becomes one piece of thirty [cubits] by thirty cubits standing on the base/foundation. This is called the ืกื•ื‘ื‘/a sort of gallery around the altar for the priest to walk on. It is five cubits higher from the foundation. That is to say, he draws it in by a cubit, which he shortens from the base/foundation a cubit in each direction, and he goes back and a third frame, which is twenty-eight cubits by twenty-eight cubits, three cubits high, and places it in on the SOVEV, and fills it like the first, and this is the place of he the pile of wood on the altar of the Temple which is at the top of the altar. It is found the foundation/base protrudes and goes out from the SOVEV a cubit on each side, and the SOVEV protrudes from the place of the pile of wood on the altar of the Temple one cubit to each side. And afterwards, he brings a frame of one cubit by one cubit which is one cubit high and places it on the corner of the altar and fills it, and this is the corner of the altar, and similarly for the four corners.",
147
+ "ืžืงื•ื ื”ื™ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ so that the Kohanim would not have to walk between the corners, but we leave one cubit free from the place of the corners and inwards for the walking of the feet of the Kohanim.",
148
+ "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” โ€“ in the days of [King] Solomon.",
149
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” โ€“ and they drew it in [by a cubit] and it rose [by a cubit] of he foundation/base and the SOVEV and the place of the corners and the place of the walking of the feet of the Kohanim until there remained the place of the pile of wood on the altar twenty [cubits] by twenty [cubits].",
150
+ "ื•ื›ืฉืขืœื• ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื“' ืืžื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ it is found that its foundation/base is thirty-two [cubits] by thirty-two [cubits], and the place of its pile of wood on the altar is twenty-four [cubits] by twenty-four [cubits].",
151
+ "ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘ โ€“ we have the reading. And this is what I brought in [Tractate] Zevakhim in the Chapter ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื/The Holy of Holies (Chapter 6, Mishnah 1 and Tosafot Tractate Zevakhim 61b s.v. ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืจื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘ ).",
152
+ "ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืžื โ€“ a Greek Gimmel which is similar to our inverted [letter] Nun. But there (i.e., Talmud Zevakhim 61b) it explains that because of the ืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ /a pit by the side of the altar into which the remainder of the libations was poured, which are the holds where the libations go down, they added to draw the altar to the south and to the west. For initially, during the days of [King] Solomon, they expounded, โ€œ[Make for me] an altar of earth [and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your sacrifices of well-being]โ€ (Exodus 20:21), filled up with earth, so that it will not be an empty cavity, and when they would offer libations on the Altar in the southwest corner of the altar, the libations would descend from the altar to the floor and flow gently to the pit that was dug there near the the southwestern corner near the altar, and there was not within the altar. But the members of the Exiles added to the building of the altar util there was that same pit/cistern intercepting/absorbing within the altar. And they opened perforations to the top of the altar opposite it so that the libations could descend there. For they would say that drinking is is like eating, for just as eating is consuming in the altar, that is, the burned sacrifices on the altar, so too the drink, that is, the libations would be absorbed by the altar. And the Biblical verse of โ€œan altar of earthโ€ (Exodus 20:21), is expounded that it would be attached to the ground, so that they would not build it on top of rocks nor on top of cavities/caves.",
153
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ โ€“ this verse is in Ezekiel [Chapter 43, Verse 16] and he would prophesy on the measurements of the Second Temple and for the future times to come.",
154
+ "ื•ืืจื™ืืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” โ€“ measurement of the place of the pile of wood in the altar is stated as twelve.",
155
+ "ืืœ ืืจื‘ืขืช ืจื‘ืขื™ื• (in the four quarters thereof) โ€“ it teaches that from its middle, he measures twelve cubits in each direction, which are twenty four [cubits] by twenty-four [cubits].",
156
+ "ื•ื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื ื—ื•ื’ืจื• ื‘ืืžืฆืข (and a red line goes around it in the middle) โ€“ the red thread was made around the altar in its middle at the end of five cubits of its heigh, which is one cubit below the top part of the SOVEV.",
157
+ "ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื โ€“ the sin offering of cattle and the burnt offering of fowl whose blood is sprinkled above from the red thread.",
158
+ "ืœื“ืžื™ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื โ€“ for all of the rest of the sacrifices whose blood is sprinkled below from the thread.",
159
+ "ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื•ื‘ืžื–ืจื— ืืžื” ืื•ืช โ€“ the entire altar was in the portion of Benjamin, except for one cubit on the surface of the length of the east that he would take hold of from the portion of Judah, but rather that there wasnโ€™t a cubit that was in the east on the surface of all of the east, for when that would reach the northeastern corne, it would end within a cubit of the corner, and similarly, the consumption of the southern cubit would not go over the entire face of the south, for when it would reach the southwester corner, it would end a cubit near the corner. And it was found that three corners of the altar were in the portion of Benjamin, and the only the southeastern corner was in the portion of Judah. And because when Jacob blessed Benjamin (Genesis 49:27): โ€œBenjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he consumes the foe, [And in the evening he divides the spoil],โ€ and we translate into Aramaic: โ€œAnd in his lodging the Holy [Temple] will dwell,โ€ something that is sanctified monetarily will not be other than in the portion of Benjamin, therefore, they did not make the foundation to the altar in the southeastern corner, because that of a tearer was not in his portion (see Talmud Zevakhim 53b), and money, and money would not be given to the tribe in that corner. But when they made the square framework for the base to fill it with stones, and lime and pitch/tar and lead as we stated, they would put wood or every kind of thing in that southeastern corner so that the corner would not fill up, and afterwards they would detach the wood and this corner would remain empty without a foundation. And because of this, it is called, the middle of the Altar SOVEV, because it surrounds and goes around all of the corners, which is not the case with the foundation/base."
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ "ื•ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช โ€“ a cubit below the foundation, there were two perforations.",
163
+ "ืฉื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื ื™ืชืžื™ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ โ€“ as, for examples the remnants of the blood of the inner sin-offerings, which are afrer all of he gifts, he would pour the remnants of the blood on the western foundation.",
164
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ โ€“ the remnants of the blood of the outer [sacrifices (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnayot 1-3).",
165
+ "ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ on the path of those perforations and mix in the water channel that is in the Temple court, an from there leave to the Kidron Valley. And the owners of gardens would purchase them from the treasures to manure the land (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6 and Tractate Taanit, Chaptet 4, Mishnah 1)."
166
+ ],
167
+ [
168
+ "ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื”ืงืจืŸ โ€“ of the southwestern [corner].",
169
+ "ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืช โ€“ to a cavity that is underneath the altar corresponding to the place of the libations (see Tractate Meilah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 3).",
170
+ "ื•ื›ื‘ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืœื“ืจื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ a kind of slanting bridge and it is made sloping for on it they ascend and descend from the altar. For it was not possible to ascend to it on the steps because it states (Exodus 20:23): โ€œDo not ascend My altar by steps, [that your nakedness may not be exposed upon it].โ€",
171
+ "ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ its length was given from south to north, and its width from east to west, sixteen cubits.",
172
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื” (a cavity in the ascent to the altar for deposit of ritually disqualified fowls) โ€“ it is a kind of hollow window. It was one cubit by one cubit. And it stood on the ramp to its western side.",
173
+ "ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ like hallow/ื ื‘ื•ื‘ , in the language of ื ื‘ื•ื‘ ืœื—ื•ืช (Job 11:12): โ€œA hollow man will get understanding, [When a wild ass is born a man].โ€",
174
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ that they will be there until they are brought to [become] left-overs (after the time permitted for it to be eaten; if one consumes it, one is punishable by extirpation. The Sages rendered these leftovers as ritually impure, so that the priests would be meticulous in their removal), and afterwards, they would go out to the House of the Burning."
175
+ ],
176
+ [
177
+ "ืžื‘ืงืขืช ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืจื โ€“ they would bring them [from the valley of Bet HaKerem].",
178
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืชื•ืœื” โ€“ land that was never dug there ever.",
179
+ "ื•ื”ืคื’ื™ืžื” โ€“ invalidates the stones. ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ โ€“ and even if they were not impaired/become defective [through contact] with iron.",
180
+ "ื•ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ with plaster, twice a year.",
181
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ He does not dispute against the first Tanna/teacher, but rather adds to state that on each Friday, they would clean them with a cloth because of the blood.",
182
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืคื™ื โ€“ He (I.e., Rabbi Judah the Patriarch) returns to something the first Tanna/teacher stated, that when they would clean them with plaster twice a year, they would not plaster them with builderโ€™s trowels who were accustomed to plaster with them [which were made of iron]. (See Exodus 20:22: And if you make for Me an altar of stones, do not build it of hewn stones, for by wielding your tool upon them you have profaned them.โ€)."
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "ื•ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ because they would not tie the daily offering as is taught in the Mishnah in Tractate Tamid [Chapter 3, Mishnah 5],Yohanan the High Priest ordained/established that twenty-four rings for the twenty-four priestly divisions, and they would be arranged on the floor made like a bow, and when they would bring in the neck of the cattle at the time of the ritual slaughtering and would insert the head of the ring in the ground. And these were to the north of the north, because the Holy of Holies, their slaughter is in the north.",
186
+ "ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขื•ื“ื™ื ื ื ืกื™ื (eighteen small columns) โ€“ columns of short stone.",
187
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขืจื– โ€“ square pieces of cedar wood were on the [small] columns.",
188
+ "ื•ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช (hooks) โ€“ like kinds of forks; in the foreign tongue, INTZINISH.",
189
+ "ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ืŸ โ€“ in those square blocks of cedar wood, and they would suspend the cattle upon them.",
190
+ "ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื (three rows) โ€“ of hooks one above the other, were on each piece of wood, to suspend/hang a large animal or a small one.",
191
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ โ€“ that on them they would rinse the innards, because the marble cools off and makes cold and preserves the meat so that it doesnโ€™t spoil."
192
+ ],
193
+ [
194
+ "This is our reading. The height of each step was one-half of a cubit and the depth of each step was a cubit (see also Tractate Middot, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3), a cubit and [another] cubit and the terrace was four cubits. Rabbi Yehuda states that the higher was a cubit and [another] cubit, and the terrace was five. Such is what my teacher/Rabbi Baruch wrote when he found exact older versions, and this is its explanation. ืจื•ื โ€“ the height of the step is one-half of a cubit. Like it was for all of them.",
195
+ "ื•ืฉืœื—ื” โ€“ that is, it pulled the width above, for this is the foothold which was a cubit/ And a second step and a third, each one, the depth of each step was a cubit; and this is the โ€œcubit, cubitโ€ as it is taught.",
196
+ "ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ (the terrace/landing was three cubits) โ€“ the fourth step was three cubits wide. And the terrace/landing that is taught, this is a row of the floor , like surrounding landings/terraces of stone, on the fourth terrace/landing that is in the Temple Courtyard. Because the floor was wide without a step, and because of this, it (i.e., the Mishnah) did not say that the depth of each step was three cubits, but rather that the landing was three cubits, meaning the row of the floor.",
197
+ "ื•ืืžื” ืืžื” โ€“ meaning to say, the fifth and sixth steps, each one [of the steps] had a depth of one cubit.",
198
+ "ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ โ€“ and the seventh step was three cubits wide.",
199
+ "ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข โ€“ the Explanation: the highest step which is the twelfth after the four steps that were a cubit each, the highest step was four cubits wide until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple. It was found that all the steps are nineteen cubits from the first until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple. And three cubits wide of the floor, part of which was from the altar until the beginning of the steps, there are twenty-two cubits between the hall leading to the interior of the Temple and the altar.",
200
+ "ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple, for he (i.e.., Rabbi Yehuda) held that at the end of two cubits of the altar begins the steps."
201
+ ],
202
+ [
203
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืืžืœืชืจืื•ืช (five main-beams of the ceiling/projecting outside the house) โ€“ painted and tiled/cemented beams.",
204
+ "ืฉืœ ืžื™ืœืช โ€“ of trees that grow on them gall-nut (i.e., a species of oak tree, while Kahati calls it an ash tree, which Jastrow rejects), as we state in [Tractate] Gittin [19a], we are concerned lest it (i.e., the Jewish bill of divorce/Get) was written in a solution of gall-nuts (for a tanned ink will not take on a tanned hide)",
205
+ "ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” โ€“ the lowest beam lies on the lintel of the opening to the width of the opening which is twenty-cubits wide, and the beam overhangs on the opening a cubit from this side ad a cubit from that side, and the second beam that is above it overhangs on he first a cubit from this side and a cubit from that side, so that its length is twenty-four [cubits]. And the third is twenty-six cubits, and the fourth is twenty-eight cubits, and the fifth is thirty cubits.",
206
+ "ื•ื ื“ื‘ืš (a course of stones/layer) โ€“ a row, like (Ezra 6:4): โ€œwith a course of unused timer for each three courses of hewn stone.โ€",
207
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช (between every two beams) โ€“ these five beams do not touch each other, but rather a row of a structure of stones was between this [beam] and that [beam]."
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ "ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ืขื˜ื• (so that the walls would not bulge)- so that the walls would not bend/incline to fall from the weight of their height, and these [cedar] beams would continue from this wall to that wall support the two walls (of the hall containing the golden altar and the hall leading to the interior of the Temple).",
211
+ "ื•ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื˜ืจื•ืช โ€“ in the windows of the hall containing the golden altar (i.e., Hekhal).",
212
+ "ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ โ€“ [donating] gold to the hall containing the golden altar (i.e., Hekhal), and he wants that the gold that he donated will be placed in the Heikhal because it was entirely covered in gold., he made from that gold that he donates in the image of a single berry or a leaf or a cluster [of grapes] and hangs it on it.",
213
+ "ื•ื ืžื ื• ืขืœื™ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ because of the heaviness of the gold was great that was there, three-hundred Kohanim were needed to carry it and to remove it from place to place. And this is one of the places tha,t the Sages spoke of in the language of exaggeration in rhetorical speech (see Talmud Hullin 90b), and not exactly three-hundred Kohanim, but Rabbi Eliezer Bโ€™Rabbi Tzadok did not intend other than to inform that there was a lot of gold that was donated there."
214
+ ]
215
+ ],
216
+ [
217
+ [
218
+ "ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ื โ€“ in the thickness of the wall that is towards the inside.",
219
+ "ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ in the thickness towards the outside, for the thickness of the wall of the hall leading to the golden altar (Hekhal) was six cubts, and at the end of the outer cubit of the thickness of the wall, there were the outer doors, one to the right of the opening and one to the left, each of these doors was five cubits wide, and when they were locked, the would touch each other and close the width of the cavity of the opening whose width was ten cubits, and when they were opened towards the inside, they cover five cubits of the thickness of the walls. But two other doors were like these measurements which were fixed at the end of the thickness of the walls towards the inner side, and when they were opened, they cover five cubits from here and five cubits from there from the width of the wall of the sanctuary/Heikhal inside, and there was no wall plastered with gold like in the rest of the Temple, because it was not visible.",
220
+ "ืืฆื˜ื‘ืจืžื™ื˜ื” (pivots, pins at top and bottom of a door turning in sockets) โ€“ boards of joints attached on the handles of the links and they are opened, and when he desires, they are bent and folded one on top of the other. Such were all of these doors, whether towards the inside or towards the outside, which were attached through these links, and at the end, one-half a cubit of the thickness of the wall they were fixed, between the doors that are inside and those that are outside, and five cubits of the thickness of the wall interrupt between the outer doors to the inner doors. But each door was five cubits attached from the two boards; each board was two-and one-half cubits, and when the outer door opened towards the inside, its half was bent and folded one on top of the other, and covers from the thickness of the wall two-and half cubits, and similarly, the door that is fixed on the inside, when it is opened to the outer side, it also was bent and folded and covers the two-and -one-half cubits that remained from the thickness of the wall.",
221
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ so we see that each and every door was divided into two."
222
+ ],
223
+ [
224
+ "ื•ืฉืชื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ two small openings, one from the right of the large gate of the Hekhal and one from its left, slightly distant from the gate. The one that is from the south, it is written (Ezekiel 44:2 โ€“ regarding the outer gate of the Sanctuary that faced eastward that was shut): โ€œ[And the LORD said to me:] This gate is to be kept shut and not to be opened! [No one shall enter by it because the LORD, the God of Israel, has entered by it; therefore it shall remain shut],โ€ of the future, for undefined, such it was in the Jerusalem Temple.",
225
+ "ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื โ€“ and this is one small chamber that is open to the Hekhal, and from the compartment back of the Holy of Holies, he enters into the Hekhal, and walks in the open space of the Hekhal until the large gate that is at the end of the thickness of the wall from the inside, and he opens it and comes to the second gate that is at the end of the thickness of the wall from the outside, and stands inside and opens it.",
226
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš โ€“ he holds that from the compartment back of the Holy of Holies he would not enter into the Hekhal, but from the compartment, he would walk along the thickness of the wall until he finds himself standing between the two gates, and he opens the doors of the outer gate from the inside and the doors or the inner gate from the outside."
227
+ ],
228
+ [
229
+ "ืชืื™ื โ€“ chambers/compartments.",
230
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ โ€“ further on in our chapter (see Mishnah 7), when it considers that from the north to the south is seventy cubits, it teaches that the wall of the winding staircase leading โ€˜to a well] under the Temple (see also the fifth Mishnah of this chapter as well as Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 1), that the winding staircase was five [cubits] and the winding staircase was three [cubits], the wall of the compartment was five [cubits] and the compartment/chamber was six [cubits]. And corresponding to them we consider the south. And this is not to say that the thickness of the wall of the winding staircase and the thickness of the wall of the compartment/chamber and the thickness of the wall of the of the Hekhal that is to the north side was that, but rather, the thickness of the wall with the empty cavity that is between it and the second wall he is counting, but the five [cubits] of the wall of the winding staircase and the three [cubits] of the winding staircase, and the five [cubits] of the wall of the chamber /compartment and the six [cubits] of the chamber/compartment and the six [cubits] of the wall of the Hekhal, in each one of them, the five [cubits] was the one chamber which is a compartment, hence there are five chambers in the north. And opposite them [a similar number] in the south. And on these five, they would build five others, and another five on top of the, hence, fifteen compartments to the north and fifteen compartments to the south. And similarly, in the west which we consider further on in our chapter (see Mishnah 7 once again) that the wall of the Heikhal was six [cubits] and the compartment was six [cubits] and the wall of the compartment was five [cubits], in each one of them there was a there was a chamber, for the wall was not six [cubits] thick other than the wall with the chamber/compartment that was in it that was six [cubits], for the one compartment that was outside of it was six [cubits] and the wall of the the other compartment that is outside of them with the compartment within it was five [cubits], hence three chambers. And three other chambers were built on top of these three, and two [chambers] on top of them, that makes the eight compartments for the west [side].",
231
+ "ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืคืฉืคืฉ โ€“ for the compartment that has in it the northern wickets that are in that compartment that one enters into the Hekhal. But the anonymous Mishnah is according to the Rabbis who stated above (Mishnah 2) that one enters the compartment and from the compartment to the Heikhal, and not like Rabbi Yehuda who stated (in Mishnah 2 of this chapter) that he would walk along the thickness of the wall."
232
+ ],
233
+ [
234
+ "ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื” ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ from outside the wall of the winding staircase which is the outer wall of the Holy [of Holies], there were extensions/wings of the building, which are balconies surrounding the Temple from three directions โ€“ west, north and south, and these extensions/wings of the building were at the bottom, second story and third decks (see Genesis 6:16 โ€“ and the construction of Noahโ€™s ark) . The lowest (i.e., bottom) wing/extension was five cubits wide, and the paved level space/terrace that was on it, which is the ceiling that was over the lowest, which is the floor of the lowest/bottom deck , six [cubits] by a cubit wide, because the wall of the winding staircase would go and become narrower towards the top, for when it reached to the paved level space between steps in the Temple/the landing/terrace, that is on top of the lowest deck, it would enter inwards by one cubit, and on that cubit that protrudes, they would place the beams of the extension/wing of the building, it was found that the lowest extension/wing was wider one cubit more from the bottom, that is, that one cubit that enters the wall inside. And similarly, when he reaches the landing/terrace that is upon the middle [wing], which is the floor of the third [level], the wall would become narrow and enter inwards one cubit, in order that the head of the beam would be placed on that cubit, that the middle wall protrudes and goes outside more than the upper wall, and it is found that the upper extension/wing is one cubit wider from the middle one and two cubits wider than the lowest one. And that is what is stated (I Kings 6:6): โ€œfor he (i.e., Solomon) had provided recesses around the outside of the House so as not to penetrate the walls of the House,โ€ meaning to say that he would lessen and deduct in the thickness of the walls by one cubit from outside in the terrace/landing of the middle floor, and another cubit in the terrace/landing of the highest, in order that there would be room for him to place the heads of the beams of the landing/terrace, in order that he would not have to hold on to the walls of the house to make holes in the wall and to insert there the heads of the beams."
235
+ ],
236
+ [
237
+ "ื•ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase) - like a cavity and a cave.",
238
+ "ืฉื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื™ื ืœื’ื’ื•ืช ื”ืชืื™ื โ€“ and because the one who ascends upon it goes up through the path of a circumference and descends through the path of a circumference, which is called a ืžืกื‘ื”/winding staircase.",
239
+ "ื•ืœื•ืœื™ืŸ (small passageways in the loft which mechanics were lowered in boxes/closed elevators) โ€“ where apertures in the roof looking to the ground floor that they make in the upper stories.",
240
+ "ืžืฉืœืฉืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืื•ืžื ื™ื โ€“ they lower them by rope in chests/boxes, in order that they will not benefit from seeing the House of the Holy of Holies, but rather only repair what is needed and re-ascend."
241
+ ],
242
+ [
243
+ "ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื” โ€“ [the hall containing the golden altar/Hekhal] - one-hundred [cubits] long and one-hundred [cubit] wide [and at a height of one-hundred cubits].",
244
+ "ืื•ื˜ื (substructure/filled with earth, foundation) โ€“ a filled up/obstructed and closed building to be the foundation of the Temple, upon which we place the walls.",
245
+ "ืืžื” ื›ื™ื•ืจ (one cubit for the paneling work โ€“ tablature of the ceiling in the Stemple) โ€“ the lowest beam of the ceiling had the thickness of a cubit, and because it was coated with gold and embroidered with nice embroidery, it is called a ื›ื™ื•ืจ/panel (abacus).",
246
+ "ื•ืืžืชื™ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื” (two cubits โ€“ the receptacle of drippings โ€“ name of the second roof of the Stemple made for protection against an eventual leak in the upper roof) -the upper beams that lean upon the lower beam, their thickness is two cubits, and they are called: โ€œThe House/Receptacle of Dilfa/Drippings, because the boards of the ceiling are attached by them. The [Aramaic] translation of ื‘ืžื—ื‘ืจืช / joining or fastening - is the place of coupling/borders. But one cannot wonder/be amazed how the the lower beam was that everything leaned upon them was only one cubit thick, for the upper beams that do not handle a burden on this was two cubits thick, because the lower beam , since it was wider in thickness by a cubit was strong and healthy and could receive the building that was upon it, but the upper beams that were not wider than a handbreadth or less, need to be of greater thickness. Alternatively the upper beams were two cubits thick in order to distance the ceiling from the lower beam, because it was embroidered with nice embroidery, and if the ceiling was near it, the embroidery would not be seen and recognized so much.",
247
+ "ืชืงืจื” โ€“ planed boards that they put on the beams were one cubit thick.",
248
+ "ืžืขื–ื™ื‘ื” (a concrete of stone chippings/clay โ€“ used for paving floors- pavement covering the ceiling of the lower story and serving as flooring to the upper story) โ€“ he plaster and stones and plaster that they place on the boards.",
249
+ "ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘ (โ€œkeeping off the ravenโ€ โ€“ an arrangement of iron points on the roof the Temple/scarecrow)- a foil/plate of sharp iron similar to a sword and it was a cubit in height and was placed on top of the railing, in order that the birds would not rest upon it, therefore, it was called a โ€œscarecrow,โ€ that keeps back the ravens from there."
250
+ ],
251
+ [
252
+ "ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื โ€“ thickness of the wall of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple to the eastern side was five cubits, and similarly, the wall of the Hekhal (the hall containing the golden altar, its thickness was six [cubits] to the eastern side.",
253
+ "ื•ืชื•ื›ื• (its substructure) โ€“ the cavity of the Hekhal was forty cubits.",
254
+ "ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ (the two cedar-covered partitions โ€“ with a vacant space between โ€“ separating the Holy of Holies from the Holy and occupied the space of one cubit) โ€“ the wall that separates between the Heikhal/the hall with the golden altar and the Holy of Holies is called ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, in that it closes over the Ark and the th Tablets that were given at Sinai. ื˜ืจืง in the Aramaic language is closing in/enclosure like [Tractate Berakhot 28a] ื˜ืจื•ืงื™ ื’ืœื™/close the [college] doors. The [suffix] ืกื™ืŸ is Sinai. And the thickness of this wall was a cubit. But the Sages did not cast the deciding vote if its holiness is like the inner holinesss or like the outer holiness, therefore, during the Second Temple, they made two curtains, one outer and the inner, and between them the space of a cubit, to protect between them the airspace of the place of the wall that was one cubit thick [during the time of the First Temple].",
255
+ "ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ โ€“ we have already explained above that there was no wall of the Hekhal on the western side of a thickness of six cubits, but rather, the thickness of the wall of the Hekhal with the free space that is between it and the second wall that is outside of it was six cubits. And the thickness of the second wall that is called a ืชื/compartment with the the free space that is between it and the fourth outer wall was five cubits. But the three free places that were between four walls were ืชืื™ื/compartments. And upon them were other compartments , as we taught above (see Mishnah 3 of this chapter) that were in the west three on top of three, and two on top of them. And similarly, from the from the north to the south, the wall of the winding staircase was five cubits, etc., all of them with the cavity that is between one wall and another, it is all as I have explained above.",
256
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ โ€“ the wall of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple its thickness is five cubits, and the hall is ten cubits to the north and similarly to the south.",
257
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช โ€“ on account of the knives that they hide there, it is called ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช for in the Roman language, they call the large knives ื—ืœืคื™ื/HALAFIM.",
258
+ "ืฆืจ ืžืื—ื•ืจื™ื• โ€“ to the western side, and wide from before him to the eastern sine. But it was not explained to me how, for there was one-hundred [cubits] by one-hundred [cubits] for what it was worth. \\"
259
+ ]
260
+ ],
261
+ [
262
+ [
263
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ all the circumference of the Temple courtyard , that is within that circumference that the Temple was built to its western side and the courtyard and the and the altar on its eastern side.",
264
+ "ืืจื•ืš ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืข โ€“ from the east to the west.",
265
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ from the north to the south.",
266
+ "ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ โ€“ and it was called the Courtyard of the Israelites, and the place of the treading of the feet of Kohanim was called the Courtyard of the Kohanim.",
267
+ "ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืชื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื โ€“ this is explained at the beginning of chapter three (Mishnah 1).",
268
+ "ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื” โ€“ the thickness of the wall of the hallway leading to the interior of the Temple, and the vacant space of the hall, and the thickness of the wall of the Hekhal and empty/vacant space, and the cubit of the Traksin, and the empty space of the House of the Holy of Holies and the wall of the Hekhal to the west, and the compartment and wall of the compartment, all of it is one-hundred cubits as was explained in the chapter above (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 4, Mishnayot 6 and 7).",
269
+ "ื•ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช โ€“ from the outer wall of the Hekhal to the western side until the western wall of the Temple courtyard there was eleven cubits of empty space with the thickness of the wall, which is called the back wall of the innermost of the Temple/the Holy of Holies."
270
+ ],
271
+ [],
272
+ [
273
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื” (the chamber of Parva, a Persian builder and magician; see also Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnayot 3 and 6) โ€“ a magician whose name was PARVA built this compartment through sorcery, and it is called by his name. Such I have found. But Maimonides wrote that he would dig into the wall in order to see from there how the Kohen would perform the Sacred Service and he was killed there.",
274
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื’ื’ื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื• ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื โ€“ the Kohen Gadol would engage in five [ritual] immersions on Yom Kippur (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnah 3) when he would change from the golden clothing to white clothing and from what clothing to golden clothing. But the coming immersions on account of Yom Kippur, we require in a holy place, as it is written (Leviticus 16:24): โ€œHe shall bathe his body in water in the holy precinct [and put on his vestments; then he shall come out and offer his burnt offering and the burnt offering of the people, making expiation for himself and for the people].โ€ Except for the first immersion that does not come for Yom Kippur, for even the rest of the days of the year, a ritually clean person does not enter the Temple courtyard until he immerses, therefore, the first immersion was on the weekday on top of the Gate of the Water, which is the third gate that is in the south, and there was a spring/fountain of water there in the coming cubit, the spring of Etam, and there, he would perform his first immersion.",
275
+ "ืžืกื™ื‘ื” โ€“ a stone building with a round ascent which goes around to ascend to the roof to the House of Parveh (see above) through the path of a winding staircase."
276
+ ],
277
+ [
278
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื•ืœื” โ€“ on account of the name of the well that those who came up from the Exile dug.",
279
+ "ืื‘ื ืฉืื•ืœ ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ that chamber of wood was the chamber of the High Priest. This is the chamber of the assessors that is taught in the Mishnah the beginning of [Tractate] Yoma (Chapter 1, Mishnah 1): Seven days prior to Yom Kippur, they would separate the High Prieest from his home to the Chamber of Parhedrin/Palhedrin.",
280
+ "ื•ื’ื’ ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื•ื” โ€“ one arched ceiling for all three (i.e., the Chamber of the Wood, The Chamber of the Exile and the Chamber of the Hewn Stones).",
281
+ "ืฉื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ at the sides of the unsanctified area that is within/ Because the Chamber of Hewn Stones was half in the sacred [area] and half in the unconsecrated [area]. But in the half of the sacred [area], it was not possible for the Sanhedrin to sit [and meet], for there was no sitting in the Temple courtyard other than for the kings of the House of David alone, as it is written (Second Samuel 7:18): โ€œThen David came and sat beore the LORD.โ€"
282
+ ]
283
+ ]
284
+ ],
285
+ "sectionNames": [
286
+ "Chapter",
287
+ "Mishnah",
288
+ "Comment"
289
+ ]
290
+ }
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Middot",
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Sefaria Community Translation",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "direction": "ltr",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืžื“ื•ืช",
12
+ "categories": [
13
+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
19
+ [],
20
+ [
21
+ [
22
+ "<b>The Temple Mount was five hundred cubits.</b> It was enclosed by a wall",
23
+ "<b>The greater part of it was on the south; next to that on the east.</b> Meaning, the distance from the wall of the Temple Mount to the wall of the [Temple] Courtyard on the southern side was greater than the distance between those [walls] on the eastern side. And the distance between those [walls] on the eastern side was greater than the distance between them on the northern side. And the northern [side] was greater than the south[ern side]."
24
+ ],
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>Entered by the right and went around to the left.</b> For instance, those entering through the <i>Hulda</i> gates that are on the right, they go around [and exit] through the <i>Taddi</i> gate. <i> Translator's Note: Bartenura appears to be interpreting the terms right and left as idioms for south and north respectively. (See Genesis 14:15) </i>",
27
+ "<b> \"Because I am a mourner\"</b> They ask him, \"What is the matter that you go around to the left?\" And he says, \"Because I am a mourner.\" [So] they say to him, \"The one who dwells in this house shall comfort you.\" etc.",
28
+ "<b>You make it seem as if they treated him unjustly.</b> If they [the people entering the Temple Mount] said this to him, it appears as if his friends warped the law and judged him incorrectly.",
29
+ "<b>He should inspire you to listen to the words of your friends.</b> This implies that he erred and needs repentance. The law follows Rabbi Yose. "
30
+ ],
31
+ [
32
+ "<b>Within.</b> The walls of the Temple Mount.",
33
+ "<b><i>Soreg </i>(Lattice).</b> A barrier made with many holes like a staff braided with cords. It was made from long narrow planks of wood that intersect each other diagonally.",
34
+ "<b>They enacted that thirteen prostrations should be made facing them.</b> As one reaches each breach, he prostrates and gives thanks for the destruction of the Hellenistic Kingdom.",
35
+ "<b>Within</b> The Lattice there was an empty area of ten cubits. It was called the <i>Hel</i>.",
36
+ "<b>There were twelve steps there.</b> To ascend from there to the Womens' Courtyard.",
37
+ "<b>The height of each step.</b> Each step was a half cubit taller than the previous step, and the first step was a half cubit taller than the ground.",
38
+ "<b>Its tread.</b> The measure of the width of the step, which is the place where the foot treads, was a half cubit.",
39
+ "<b> Except for the Entrance Hall.</b> Except for the stairs that were between the Entrance Hall and the Alter for they were not all like that. As it is taught in chapter three.",
40
+ "<b>Except for the door to the Entrance Hall.</b> As it is taught later on in the other chapters, its height was forty cubits and its width twenty. ",
41
+ " <b>They had lintels.</b> A stone [that] is placed upon the two posts that the door rests on. <i>Shekufot</i> has the same root as <i>Mashkof</i>(lintel).",
42
+ "<b>Because a miracle happened with them.</b> As it is explained in Yoma chapter three (Yoma 38a).",
43
+ "<b>Gleamed like gold.</b> As in [the word] <i>Mazhivot</i> (Gleamed like gold), for their appearance was similar to gold. Therefore they did not need to [re]make it out of gold."
44
+ ],
45
+ [
46
+ "<b>All the wall that were there.</b> Regarding all the buildings on the Temple Mount.",
47
+ "<b>They were</b> very<b> high.</b> Since all of their doorways were [already] twenty cubits tall, without [measuring the wall that continued] above the doorways.",
48
+ "<b>Except for the eastern wall.</b> It was the lowest of the ?retaining walls? (lit. feet) of the Temple Mount.",
49
+ "<b>For the priest who burned the heifer would stand on the Mount of Olives (<i>Har Hammishha</i>).</b> It is the Mount of Olives (<i>Har Hazzeitim</i>) that faces Jerusalem from the east. The priest would face west and look beyond the top of the wall [of the Temple Mount] through the gates that are within it to the doorway of the Hall, as he sprinkled the blood. As it is written: <i>\"Sprinkle it toward the front of the tent of meeting\"</i>. (Numbers 19:4) If the wall was [as] tall [as the other walls], even though the gates were in line with each other, [meaning] the Temple Mount gate was directly opposite the Womens' Courtyard gate, and the Womens' Courtyard gate was opposite the Great Courtyard gate, and the Great Courtyard gate was opposite the doorway of the Hall, he would [still] not be able to see the doorway of the Hall through [all of] the gates, since the Mountain's slope increased to a height by which the ground of the doorway of the Hall was twenty two cubits taller than the ground on the foot of the Temple Mount, so the threshold of the Hall was higher than the lintel of the gate of the Temple Mount by two cubits, since the the gate of the Temple Mount was only twenty cubits tall as it was taught above. This means that the priest who slaughtered the heifer would not be able to see the doorway of the Hall through the gate [of the Temple Mount, therefore the eastern wall was shorter in order to allow the priest to see the doorway of the Hall from the Mount of Olives]."
50
+ ]
51
+ ]
52
+ ],
53
+ "sectionNames": [
54
+ "Chapter",
55
+ "Mishnah",
56
+ "Comment"
57
+ ]
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+ }
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1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Middot",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Middot",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ not because of fear of robbers and/or thieves, but that of the honor and splendor for the Temple, that it should not be without guards, and this guarding, its commandment is the entire night. And these three places that the Kohanim guard correspond to what is written in the Torah (Numbers 3:38): โ€œThose who were to camp before the Tabernacle, in front โ€“ [before the Tent of Meeting, on the east โ€“ were Moses and Aaron and his sons,] attending to the duties of the sanctuary, as a duty on behalf of the Israelites,โ€ as a hint to three watches in three places. For just as that in the Tabernacle, Aaron and his two sons were guarding in three places, even so in the Temple as well.",
10
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ โ€“ two upper chambers were built on the side of the gates of the Temple courtyard, but the House of the Hearth was not upon it, but rather an arch , ARKVELT in the foreign tongue, which was made in the land, such was explained at the beginning of the Tractate Tamid (1:1).",
11
+ "ื•ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืงื•ื โ€“ that in twenty-four places they would need to guard the Temple, as it is written in [First] Chronicles [26:17-18): โ€œAt the east โ€“ six Levites; at the north โ€“ four daily; at the south โ€“ four daily; at the vestibule โ€“ two by two; at the colonnade on the west โ€“ four at the causeway and two at the colonnade,โ€ that makes here twenty-four divisions of duty/watches, three of them were Kohanim as we stated in the opening clause [of the Mishnah], and twenty-one of them were Levites. But even though that Scripture did not state anything other than Levites, Kohanim are also called Levites , as it is written (Ezekiel 44:15): โ€œBut the Levitical priests descended from Zadok [who maintained the service of My Sanctuary when the people of Israel went astray from Me โ€“ they shall approach Me to minister to Me.โ€",
12
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” โ€“ guards at the five gates of the Temple Mount.",
13
+ "",
14
+ "ืžืชื•ื›ื• โ€“ from inside to the walls of the Temple Mount.",
15
+ "ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds that there are only five gates for the Temple courtyards But even according to the one who states further on (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 1, Mishnah and Tractate Tamid 27a), he admits that there wasnโ€™t a division of duty/guard other than on five [gates of the Temple courtyard โ€“ that the House of the Flame and the House of the Hearlth were watched by Kohanim or that the gates that were in the middle of the north and the south didnโ€™t require special guarding, as they were guarded by those at the first and third gates].",
16
+ "ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื” ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ because there is no sitting in the Temple courtyard other than for only the kings of the House of David, and it was not possible for a guard to watch while standing all the night, therefore, the guards were in the corners of the Temple courtyard, and similarly, the guards in the gates of the Temple courtyard would guard from outside, in order that they would be permitted while sitting, and the Scriptural verse (First Chronicles 26:18) esd used as a support (i.e., they leaned their enactment against a Biblical text) โ€“ as it is written: โ€œtwo at the colonnade,โ€ towards the outside, meaning to say, outside the wall of the Temple courtyard."
17
+ ],
18
+ [
19
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ appointed over all of the guards. [The story is told in Tractate Yoma 16a that Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov, the first of two Tannaim of such a name, who was the friend of Rabbi Eliezer the Great/ben Hyrcanus โ€“ was the Tanna who taught Tractate Middot."
20
+ ],
21
+ [
22
+ "ืžืฉืžืฉื™ื ื›ื ื™ืกื” ื•ื™ืฆื™ืื” โ€“ that through them they would enter and leave the Temple Mount.",
23
+ "ืงื™ื ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืžืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ โ€“ the gate of the Temple Mount that is on the western side Kiponos is its name, and of the north Tadi is its name.",
24
+ "ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฆื•ืจื” โ€“ when they (i.e., the exiled Jews in Babylonia) went up from the Diaspora, the Kings of Persia commanded them to draw the form of Shushan the capitol on the gates of the temple, in order that there would be fear of the kingdom, and they drew it in the Eastern Gate.",
25
+ "ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” โ€“ Our Mishnah is [according to] Rabbi Meir who holds that the Red Heifer is not burned other by the High Priest. But it is not Halakha (see Tractate Parah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 1).",
26
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ืžืกืขื“ื™ื” (and all its attendants) โ€“ all of the Kohanim who are assisting and supporting the Kohen who burns it.",
27
+ "ืœื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื” โ€“ to the Mount of Olives which is to the east of Jerusalem, there they would burn the [red] heifer."
28
+ ],
29
+ [
30
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง (the Gate of Kindling) โ€“ because they would bring in through there the wood for the pile of the wood on the altar was brought in that burn on the altar, it is called, the Gate of Kindling.",
31
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ we have the read, for there they wold bring in the firstlings whose slaughtering took place in the south.",
32
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ in the book of Ezekiel (47:1-2): โ€œ[He led me back to the entrance of the Temple, and I found that water was issuing from below the platform of the Temple โ€“ eastward, since the Temple faced east โ€“ but the water was running out at the south of the altar (i.e., southeast), under the south wall of the Temple. Then he led me out by way of the northern gate and led me around to the outside of the outer gate that faces in the direction of the east;] And I found that water was gushing from [under] the south wall,โ€ and that is the south, which is called, โ€œrightโ€ as it is written โ€œnorth and eastwardโ€ (Psalm 89:13). And see Ezekiel in the prophecy that the waters went out from the House of the Holy of Holies thinly like the proboscides of locusts and when they reach this game, they become like the fulness of the mouth of a small jug, and that is why they call them ืžื™ื ืžื”ื›ืคื›ื™ื/waters gushing (see Ezekiel 47:2- โ€œ[Then he led me out by way of the northern gate and led me around to the outside of the outer gate that faces in the direction of the east;] and I found that water was gushing from [under] the south wall.โ€).",
33
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ which is explained in Tractate Yoma (38a and Chapter 3, Mishnah 10- concerning the miracles of Nicanor with regard to the doors โ€“ see the Bartenura commentary there).",
34
+ "ืคื ื—ืก ื”ืžืœื‘ื™ืฉ โ€“ who was appointed to dress the Kohanim at the time of their [Divine] Service, and to strip them of their clothing after the [Divine] Service and to guard the clothing of the priests.",
35
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ in there they would make the meal-offering that the Kohen Gadol would offer on each day, โ€œhalf of it in the morning and half of it in the eveningโ€ (Leviticus 6:13; see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 3),t and because it is stated regarding it (Leviticus 6:14): โ€œshall be prepared with oil on a griddle,โ€ it is called, a sort of cake."
36
+ ],
37
+ [
38
+ "ื•ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื”ื™ื” โ€“ two walls, one from this side and another from that side of the gate, they would protrude and go out from beyond the wall of he Temple courtyard to the side of the Temple Mount, and there was an upper chambr built from above on top of the two walls.",
39
+ "ื•ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื—ื™ืœ โ€“ in one of the walls there was an opening that would go out to the place within the fortification of the Temple, which is a place inside from the wall of the Temple Mount from outside the Temple courtyard and is called ื—ื™ืœ/Khel, [as will be described in further detail in Tractate Middot, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3].",
40
+ "ืฉืขืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ there they would bring in the Holy of Holies, whose ritual slaughter was in the north.",
41
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ because there were open fires burning there always to warm the Kohanim there because they walk barefoot, it is called, the House of the Hearth. And it was a large house, and in its four corners, there were four small chambers as will be explained further on [in the next Mishnah] (see also Tractate Tamid, Chapter One, Mishnah 1 as well)."
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "ื›ืงื™ื˜ื•ื ื™ื•ืช (small rooms/recesses) โ€“ like small rooms that open to a large house of kings, which is the reception room.",
45
+ "ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืœ โ€“ as the House of the Hearth, part of it is built within the holy Temple courtyard and part of it on the unconsecrated ground.",
46
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ (ends of flag-stones the pavement/blocks on the ceiling; cut and polished stone block) โ€“ the heads of beams that come out from the wall until the place which is sanctified, in order to know which is sanctified/holy and which is unconsecrated (i.e., north of the room of the hearth) and to consume Holy Food in sanctity.",
47
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ there were there lambs which passed examination for the daily-offerings, as is taught in the Mishnah (see Tractate Arakhin, Chapter 2, Mishnah 5): There should be no less than six examined lambs in the Chamber of the Lambs.โ€",
48
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื โ€“ the House of Garmu would make the shew bread there.",
49
+ "ืฉืฉืงืฆื•ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ โ€“ that they offered upon it (i.e., in the northeastern corner) for Idolatrous worship. But in the Tractates Shekalim (see actually Tractate Yoma 15b as the Bar Ilan project has shown me that it is not found in Shekalim at all) and Tamid (see Chapter 3, Mishnah 3), they call it the Chamber of the Seals.",
50
+ "ื‘ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” โ€“ in that chamber, the Kohen would go down when he observed an emission and he would go with pardon [it must say, that is under] the Temple to the House of Immersion, and there is a fire that warms the Kohen after he immersed and came out and dried off, and it is called the Chamber of the Hearth, because it is open to a large House of the Hearth."
51
+ ],
52
+ [
53
+ "ืื—ื“ ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ โ€“ the opening that is in the north of the House of the Hearth was open to the Khel/the place within the fortification of the Temple, and the one in the south was open to the Temple courtyard.",
54
+ "ืคืฉืคืฉ ืงื˜ืŸ (a small wicket) โ€“ a small gate within the large gate [by which they entered to patrol].",
55
+ "ืฉื‘ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” (to patrol the Temple courtyard) โ€“ that they would enter each morning on the path of the same wicket to examine/search over each of the Temple vessels that were in the Temple courtyard that all of them were in their [appropriate] place. For this is taught in the Mishnah of Tractate Tamid [Chapter 1, Mishnah 3]: โ€œHe took the key and opened the wicket and entered from the House of the Hearth into the Temple courtyard, etc.,โ€ โ€“ these walk on the covered place in front o the house in an easterly direction and those walk on the covered place in front of the house in a westerly direction. They would examine and go until they meet to the place where they make the cakes, they arrived, both sets say โ€œShalom; everything is peaceful/in order,โ€ meaning to say, that all the Temple vessels are in their places in peace/in order.",
56
+ "ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ โ€“ it is the Aramaic translation of โ€œand he searched,โ€ and examined."
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ื™ืคื” โ€“ the building of the House of the Hearth was not an upper chamber, but rather an arch, ARKUVLAT in the foreign language made on the land.",
60
+ "ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ (surrounded by stone pavements between steps in the Temple hall, landing) โ€“ porticos/colonnades of hewn stone around were sunk in the wall and came out from the wall into the House of the Hearth to the side of the ground, and on top of them were other short stones than then that also came out from the wall, and they were similar to steps one on another.",
61
+ "ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ โ€“ the priestly division of duty/guard was divided into seven priestly divisions according to the days of the week, each one working his day, and the elders of the priestly division of that day would sleep there on those stone pavements.",
62
+ "ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” โ€“ young men whose hair of their beards begins to flower, and they were guards.",
63
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ โ€“ that they were not permitted to lie there on beds, but rather onl on the ground, in the manner that the guards of the courtyards of the kings would do.",
64
+ "ื›ืกืชื• โ€“ the language of pillows and cushions."
65
+ ],
66
+ [
67
+ "ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื ืขื™ืœื” โ€“ to lock the gates of the Temple courtyard.",
68
+ "ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ that the Levites were secondary to the Kohanim, as it is stated, (Numbers 18:2): โ€œ[You shall also associate with yourself your kinsmen the tribe of Levi, your ancestral tribe,] to be attached to you and to minister to you, [while you and your sons under your charge are before the Tent of the Pact].โ€ Therefore, in the House of Avtinas and in the House of the Spark, which were upper stories, the Kohanim who guarded were above and the Levites were below. But the House of the Hearth which was not other than an arch on the land, there was a Kohen on the inside and a Levite on the outside.",
69
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase) โ€“ in a cavity/underground places, he walks underneath the Temple (see Talmud Yoma 2a for another interpretation) , for the cavity/underground places was underneath the Temple, and all of the Temple is called ื‘ื™ืจื” /the capitol, as it is written (I Chronicles 29:19): โ€œand to build this Temple for which I have made provision.โ€ But because he had had a nocturnal emission,, he would not walk on the path of the Temple courtyard, but rather on the path in the underground , for we hold that the cavities/underground places were not sanctified.",
70
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ in the underground cavities from here and there.",
71
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื—ื™ืœ โ€“ he departs, and does not return to the House of the Hearth because he is a someone who has immersed but must wait until sunset until he is ritually pure. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov, but rather, as it is taught in the beginning of Tractate Tamid. He came and sat with his brethren, the Kohanim in the House of the Hearth until the gates open when he can go on his way, for even though someone who has immersed but must wait until sunset until he is ritually pure, it is forbidden to enter into the Womenโ€™s courtyard, which is the camp of the Levites, for this, they were lenient, because he had been defiled inside."
72
+ ]
73
+ ],
74
+ [
75
+ [
76
+ "<b>The Temple Mount was five hundred cubits.</b> It was enclosed by a wall",
77
+ "<b>The greater part of it was on the south; next to that on the east.</b> Meaning, the distance from the wall of the Temple Mount to the wall of the [Temple] Courtyard on the southern side was greater than the distance between those [walls] on the eastern side. And the distance between those [walls] on the eastern side was greater than the distance between them on the northern side. And the northern [side] was greater than the south[ern side]."
78
+ ],
79
+ [
80
+ "<b>Entered by the right and went around to the left.</b> For instance, those entering through the <i>Hulda</i> gates that are on the right, they go around [and exit] through the <i>Taddi</i> gate. <i> Translator's Note: Bartenura appears to be interpreting the terms right and left as idioms for south and north respectively. (See Genesis 14:15) </i>",
81
+ "<b> \"Because I am a mourner\"</b> They ask him, \"What is the matter that you go around to the left?\" And he says, \"Because I am a mourner.\" [So] they say to him, \"The one who dwells in this house shall comfort you.\" etc.",
82
+ "<b>You make it seem as if they treated him unjustly.</b> If they [the people entering the Temple Mount] said this to him, it appears as if his friends warped the law and judged him incorrectly.",
83
+ "<b>He should inspire you to listen to the words of your friends.</b> This implies that he erred and needs repentance. The law follows Rabbi Yose. "
84
+ ],
85
+ [
86
+ "<b>Within.</b> The walls of the Temple Mount.",
87
+ "<b><i>Soreg </i>(Lattice).</b> A barrier made with many holes like a staff braided with cords. It was made from long narrow planks of wood that intersect each other diagonally.",
88
+ "<b>They enacted that thirteen prostrations should be made facing them.</b> As one reaches each breach, he prostrates and gives thanks for the destruction of the Hellenistic Kingdom.",
89
+ "<b>Within</b> The Lattice there was an empty area of ten cubits. It was called the <i>Hel</i>.",
90
+ "<b>There were twelve steps there.</b> To ascend from there to the Womens' Courtyard.",
91
+ "<b>The height of each step.</b> Each step was a half cubit taller than the previous step, and the first step was a half cubit taller than the ground.",
92
+ "<b>Its tread.</b> The measure of the width of the step, which is the place where the foot treads, was a half cubit.",
93
+ "<b> Except for the Entrance Hall.</b> Except for the stairs that were between the Entrance Hall and the Alter for they were not all like that. As it is taught in chapter three.",
94
+ "<b>Except for the door to the Entrance Hall.</b> As it is taught later on in the other chapters, its height was forty cubits and its width twenty. ",
95
+ " <b>They had lintels.</b> A stone [that] is placed upon the two posts that the door rests on. <i>Shekufot</i> has the same root as <i>Mashkof</i>(lintel).",
96
+ "<b>Because a miracle happened with them.</b> As it is explained in Yoma chapter three (Yoma 38a).",
97
+ "<b>Gleamed like gold.</b> As in [the word] <i>Mazhivot</i> (Gleamed like gold), for their appearance was similar to gold. Therefore they did not need to [re]make it out of gold."
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ "<b>All the wall that were there.</b> Regarding all the buildings on the Temple Mount.",
101
+ "<b>They were</b> very<b> high.</b> Since all of their doorways were [already] twenty cubits tall, without [measuring the wall that continued] above the doorways.",
102
+ "<b>Except for the eastern wall.</b> It was the lowest of the ?retaining walls? (lit. feet) of the Temple Mount.",
103
+ "<b>For the priest who burned the heifer would stand on the Mount of Olives (<i>Har Hammishha</i>).</b> It is the Mount of Olives (<i>Har Hazzeitim</i>) that faces Jerusalem from the east. The priest would face west and look beyond the top of the wall [of the Temple Mount] through the gates that are within it to the doorway of the Hall, as he sprinkled the blood. As it is written: <i>\"Sprinkle it toward the front of the tent of meeting\"</i>. (Numbers 19:4) If the wall was [as] tall [as the other walls], even though the gates were in line with each other, [meaning] the Temple Mount gate was directly opposite the Womens' Courtyard gate, and the Womens' Courtyard gate was opposite the Great Courtyard gate, and the Great Courtyard gate was opposite the doorway of the Hall, he would [still] not be able to see the doorway of the Hall through [all of] the gates, since the Mountain's slope increased to a height by which the ground of the doorway of the Hall was twenty two cubits taller than the ground on the foot of the Temple Mount, so the threshold of the Hall was higher than the lintel of the gate of the Temple Mount by two cubits, since the the gate of the Temple Mount was only twenty cubits tall as it was taught above. This means that the priest who slaughtered the heifer would not be able to see the doorway of the Hall through the gate [of the Temple Mount, therefore the eastern wall was shorter in order to allow the priest to see the doorway of the Hall from the Mount of Olives]."
104
+ ],
105
+ [
106
+ "ืื•ืจืš โ€“ from the east to the west.",
107
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ โ€“ from the north to the south.",
108
+ "ืงื˜ื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžืงื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ from the language (Genesis 19:28): โ€œ[and, (Abraham) looking down toward Sodom and Gomorrah and all the land of the plain, he saw] the smoke of the land [rising like the smoke of a kiln],โ€ meaning to say, smoke rising, because they didnโ€™t have a roof.",
109
+ "ื•ืžืฉืœื—ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ื•ืจ โ€“ to burn them in fire that is underneath the cavity in the gound laid out with clay/kettle where they cook the peace offerings/sacrifice of well-being, as it is written (Numbers 6:18): โ€œ[and take the locks of his consecrated hair] and put them on the fire that is under the sacrifice of well-being.โ€",
110
+ "And inside for the giving of wood on the altar of the Temple.",
111
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื = for there the lepers immerse on the eighth [day] of their purification which he comes to put his hand inside for the giving of wealth [for the giving of blood and oil] -, and even though he had immersed [in a ritual bath] from the evening.",
112
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืฉื›ื—ืชื™ ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช โ€“ it follows, that the entire first segment [of this Mishnah], Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov said it. And this is proved in the Gemara of [Tractate] Yoma (16a), that an anonymous Mishnah of [Tractate] Middot is Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov (the first).",
113
+ "ื•ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื” โ€“ Maimonides explained, broken through/breached, that it was not surrounded by a partition.",
114
+ "ื›ืฆื•ืฆื˜ืจื โ€“ like a balcony/ื›ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื โ€“ that surrounded the womenโ€™s court (see Tractate Sukkah, Chapter 4, Mishnah 1), that the women who were standing above on the balcony and the men were below to see the Rejoicing of the House of the Water-Drawing, in order that they would not come to frivolity.",
115
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช โ€“ the height of the ground of the Israelite court from the Womenโ€™s Court.",
116
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื˜ืจืจื•ื˜ื•ืช (they werenโ€™t half-closed, round) โ€“ long and filled with corrrners like the path of all the steps, but rather round like a round half-circle."
117
+ ],
118
+ [
119
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ (the tops of the flag-stones in the pavement) โ€“ the tops of the beams that protrude and come out from the wall to distinguish between the Israelite Courtyard and the Priestโ€™s Courtyard.",
120
+ "ืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื (a step) โ€“ in the Israelite Courtyard.",
121
+ "ื•ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืืžื” โ€“ and its length was as the length of he entire Courtyard.",
122
+ "ื•ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ (platform) โ€“ of the Levites is built upon it and is made like a kind of portico/balcony, and the height of the platform is a cubit-and-a-half.",
123
+ "ื•ื‘ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” โ€“ that they ascend upon them to the platform.",
124
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ from the beginning of the Israelite Court until eleven cubits is a free space that was behind the House of the cover of the Holy Ark.",
125
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ โ€“ from north to south.",
126
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืจื™ื โ€“ as he considers them and then moves on. And the one who states that there were seven gates in the Temple courtyard (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) gives the reason for the thirteen prostrations corresponding to the thirteen breaches that the Grecian kings made in the Soreg/one of the approaches of the Temple fortification, as we stated above in our Chapter (see Mishnah 3). And all of our Mishnah is explained in the first chapter [of Tractate Middot]."
127
+ ]
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ [
131
+ "ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” โ€“ he would bring a square frame made from four boards, each board is thirty-two cubits long and the board is one cubit wide, and it is the height of the frame, and he fills it with stones, lime and pitch/tar and molten lead, and it is made into one piece of thirty-two cubits by thirty-two cubits, one cubit high. And this is the foundation/base of the altar.",
132
+ "๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœื” ืืžื” ื•ื›ื ืก ืืžื” (it rose by a cubit and drew in by a cubit โ€“ on every side) โ€“ after the foundation rose to the height of a cubit, he brings another frame whose length is the entire board is thirty cubits and a width of the board, that is the height of this frame is five cubits, and places it on the foundation/base, and fills it with stones, and lime and pitch/tar and lead like the first, and it is attached to the base and becomes one piece of thirty [cubits] by thirty cubits standing on the base/foundation. This is called the ืกื•ื‘ื‘/a sort of gallery around the altar for the priest to walk on. It is five cubits higher from the foundation. That is to say, he draws it in by a cubit, which he shortens from the base/foundation a cubit in each direction, and he goes back and a third frame, which is twenty-eight cubits by twenty-eight cubits, three cubits high, and places it in on the SOVEV, and fills it like the first, and this is the place of he the pile of wood on the altar of the Temple which is at the top of the altar. It is found the foundation/base protrudes and goes out from the SOVEV a cubit on each side, and the SOVEV protrudes from the place of the pile of wood on the altar of the Temple one cubit to each side. And afterwards, he brings a frame of one cubit by one cubit which is one cubit high and places it on the corner of the altar and fills it, and this is the corner of the altar, and similarly for the four corners.",
133
+ "ืžืงื•ื ื”ื™ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ so that the Kohanim would not have to walk between the corners, but we leave one cubit free from the place of the corners and inwards for the walking of the feet of the Kohanim.",
134
+ "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” โ€“ in the days of [King] Solomon.",
135
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” โ€“ and they drew it in [by a cubit] and it rose [by a cubit] of he foundation/base and the SOVEV and the place of the corners and the place of the walking of the feet of the Kohanim until there remained the place of the pile of wood on the altar twenty [cubits] by twenty [cubits].",
136
+ "ื•ื›ืฉืขืœื• ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื“' ืืžื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ it is found that its foundation/base is thirty-two [cubits] by thirty-two [cubits], and the place of its pile of wood on the altar is twenty-four [cubits] by twenty-four [cubits].",
137
+ "ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘ โ€“ we have the reading. And this is what I brought in [Tractate] Zevakhim in the Chapter ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื/The Holy of Holies (Chapter 6, Mishnah 1 and Tosafot Tractate Zevakhim 61b s.v. ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืจื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘ ).",
138
+ "ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืžื โ€“ a Greek Gimmel which is similar to our inverted [letter] Nun. But there (i.e., Talmud Zevakhim 61b) it explains that because of the ืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ /a pit by the side of the altar into which the remainder of the libations was poured, which are the holds where the libations go down, they added to draw the altar to the south and to the west. For initially, during the days of [King] Solomon, they expounded, โ€œ[Make for me] an altar of earth [and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your sacrifices of well-being]โ€ (Exodus 20:21), filled up with earth, so that it will not be an empty cavity, and when they would offer libations on the Altar in the southwest corner of the altar, the libations would descend from the altar to the floor and flow gently to the pit that was dug there near the the southwestern corner near the altar, and there was not within the altar. But the members of the Exiles added to the building of the altar util there was that same pit/cistern intercepting/absorbing within the altar. And they opened perforations to the top of the altar opposite it so that the libations could descend there. For they would say that drinking is is like eating, for just as eating is consuming in the altar, that is, the burned sacrifices on the altar, so too the drink, that is, the libations would be absorbed by the altar. And the Biblical verse of โ€œan altar of earthโ€ (Exodus 20:21), is expounded that it would be attached to the ground, so that they would not build it on top of rocks nor on top of cavities/caves.",
139
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ โ€“ this verse is in Ezekiel [Chapter 43, Verse 16] and he would prophesy on the measurements of the Second Temple and for the future times to come.",
140
+ "ื•ืืจื™ืืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” โ€“ measurement of the place of the pile of wood in the altar is stated as twelve.",
141
+ "ืืœ ืืจื‘ืขืช ืจื‘ืขื™ื• (in the four quarters thereof) โ€“ it teaches that from its middle, he measures twelve cubits in each direction, which are twenty four [cubits] by twenty-four [cubits].",
142
+ "ื•ื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื ื—ื•ื’ืจื• ื‘ืืžืฆืข (and a red line goes around it in the middle) โ€“ the red thread was made around the altar in its middle at the end of five cubits of its heigh, which is one cubit below the top part of the SOVEV.",
143
+ "ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื โ€“ the sin offering of cattle and the burnt offering of fowl whose blood is sprinkled above from the red thread.",
144
+ "ืœื“ืžื™ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื โ€“ for all of the rest of the sacrifices whose blood is sprinkled below from the thread.",
145
+ "ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื•ื‘ืžื–ืจื— ืืžื” ืื•ืช โ€“ the entire altar was in the portion of Benjamin, except for one cubit on the surface of the length of the east that he would take hold of from the portion of Judah, but rather that there wasnโ€™t a cubit that was in the east on the surface of all of the east, for when that would reach the northeastern corne, it would end within a cubit of the corner, and similarly, the consumption of the southern cubit would not go over the entire face of the south, for when it would reach the southwester corner, it would end a cubit near the corner. And it was found that three corners of the altar were in the portion of Benjamin, and the only the southeastern corner was in the portion of Judah. And because when Jacob blessed Benjamin (Genesis 49:27): โ€œBenjamin is a ravenous wolf; In the morning he consumes the foe, [And in the evening he divides the spoil],โ€ and we translate into Aramaic: โ€œAnd in his lodging the Holy [Temple] will dwell,โ€ something that is sanctified monetarily will not be other than in the portion of Benjamin, therefore, they did not make the foundation to the altar in the southeastern corner, because that of a tearer was not in his portion (see Talmud Zevakhim 53b), and money, and money would not be given to the tribe in that corner. But when they made the square framework for the base to fill it with stones, and lime and pitch/tar and lead as we stated, they would put wood or every kind of thing in that southeastern corner so that the corner would not fill up, and afterwards they would detach the wood and this corner would remain empty without a foundation. And because of this, it is called, the middle of the Altar SOVEV, because it surrounds and goes around all of the corners, which is not the case with the foundation/base."
146
+ ],
147
+ [
148
+ "ื•ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช โ€“ a cubit below the foundation, there were two perforations.",
149
+ "ืฉื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื ื™ืชืžื™ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ โ€“ as, for examples the remnants of the blood of the inner sin-offerings, which are afrer all of he gifts, he would pour the remnants of the blood on the western foundation.",
150
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ โ€“ the remnants of the blood of the outer [sacrifices (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnayot 1-3).",
151
+ "ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ on the path of those perforations and mix in the water channel that is in the Temple court, an from there leave to the Kidron Valley. And the owners of gardens would purchase them from the treasures to manure the land (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 5, Mishnah 6 and Tractate Taanit, Chaptet 4, Mishnah 1)."
152
+ ],
153
+ [
154
+ "ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื”ืงืจืŸ โ€“ of the southwestern [corner].",
155
+ "ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืช โ€“ to a cavity that is underneath the altar corresponding to the place of the libations (see Tractate Meilah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 3).",
156
+ "ื•ื›ื‘ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืœื“ืจื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ a kind of slanting bridge and it is made sloping for on it they ascend and descend from the altar. For it was not possible to ascend to it on the steps because it states (Exodus 20:23): โ€œDo not ascend My altar by steps, [that your nakedness may not be exposed upon it].โ€",
157
+ "ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ its length was given from south to north, and its width from east to west, sixteen cubits.",
158
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื” (a cavity in the ascent to the altar for deposit of ritually disqualified fowls) โ€“ it is a kind of hollow window. It was one cubit by one cubit. And it stood on the ramp to its western side.",
159
+ "ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ like hallow/ื ื‘ื•ื‘ , in the language of ื ื‘ื•ื‘ ืœื—ื•ืช (Job 11:12): โ€œA hollow man will get understanding, [When a wild ass is born a man].โ€",
160
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ that they will be there until they are brought to [become] left-overs (after the time permitted for it to be eaten; if one consumes it, one is punishable by extirpation. The Sages rendered these leftovers as ritually impure, so that the priests would be meticulous in their removal), and afterwards, they would go out to the House of the Burning."
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ "ืžื‘ืงืขืช ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืจื โ€“ they would bring them [from the valley of Bet HaKerem].",
164
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืชื•ืœื” โ€“ land that was never dug there ever.",
165
+ "ื•ื”ืคื’ื™ืžื” โ€“ invalidates the stones. ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ โ€“ and even if they were not impaired/become defective [through contact] with iron.",
166
+ "ื•ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ with plaster, twice a year.",
167
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ He does not dispute against the first Tanna/teacher, but rather adds to state that on each Friday, they would clean them with a cloth because of the blood.",
168
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืคื™ื โ€“ He (I.e., Rabbi Judah the Patriarch) returns to something the first Tanna/teacher stated, that when they would clean them with plaster twice a year, they would not plaster them with builderโ€™s trowels who were accustomed to plaster with them [which were made of iron]. (See Exodus 20:22: And if you make for Me an altar of stones, do not build it of hewn stones, for by wielding your tool upon them you have profaned them.โ€)."
169
+ ],
170
+ [
171
+ "ื•ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ because they would not tie the daily offering as is taught in the Mishnah in Tractate Tamid [Chapter 3, Mishnah 5],Yohanan the High Priest ordained/established that twenty-four rings for the twenty-four priestly divisions, and they would be arranged on the floor made like a bow, and when they would bring in the neck of the cattle at the time of the ritual slaughtering and would insert the head of the ring in the ground. And these were to the north of the north, because the Holy of Holies, their slaughter is in the north.",
172
+ "ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขื•ื“ื™ื ื ื ืกื™ื (eighteen small columns) โ€“ columns of short stone.",
173
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขืจื– โ€“ square pieces of cedar wood were on the [small] columns.",
174
+ "ื•ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช (hooks) โ€“ like kinds of forks; in the foreign tongue, INTZINISH.",
175
+ "ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ืŸ โ€“ in those square blocks of cedar wood, and they would suspend the cattle upon them.",
176
+ "ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื (three rows) โ€“ of hooks one above the other, were on each piece of wood, to suspend/hang a large animal or a small one.",
177
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ โ€“ that on them they would rinse the innards, because the marble cools off and makes cold and preserves the meat so that it doesnโ€™t spoil."
178
+ ],
179
+ [
180
+ "This is our reading. The height of each step was one-half of a cubit and the depth of each step was a cubit (see also Tractate Middot, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3), a cubit and [another] cubit and the terrace was four cubits. Rabbi Yehuda states that the higher was a cubit and [another] cubit, and the terrace was five. Such is what my teacher/Rabbi Baruch wrote when he found exact older versions, and this is its explanation. ืจื•ื โ€“ the height of the step is one-half of a cubit. Like it was for all of them.",
181
+ "ื•ืฉืœื—ื” โ€“ that is, it pulled the width above, for this is the foothold which was a cubit/ And a second step and a third, each one, the depth of each step was a cubit; and this is the โ€œcubit, cubitโ€ as it is taught.",
182
+ "ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ (the terrace/landing was three cubits) โ€“ the fourth step was three cubits wide. And the terrace/landing that is taught, this is a row of the floor , like surrounding landings/terraces of stone, on the fourth terrace/landing that is in the Temple Courtyard. Because the floor was wide without a step, and because of this, it (i.e., the Mishnah) did not say that the depth of each step was three cubits, but rather that the landing was three cubits, meaning the row of the floor.",
183
+ "ื•ืืžื” ืืžื” โ€“ meaning to say, the fifth and sixth steps, each one [of the steps] had a depth of one cubit.",
184
+ "ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ โ€“ and the seventh step was three cubits wide.",
185
+ "ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข โ€“ the Explanation: the highest step which is the twelfth after the four steps that were a cubit each, the highest step was four cubits wide until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple. It was found that all the steps are nineteen cubits from the first until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple. And three cubits wide of the floor, part of which was from the altar until the beginning of the steps, there are twenty-two cubits between the hall leading to the interior of the Temple and the altar.",
186
+ "ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ until the hall leading to the interior of the Temple, for he (i.e.., Rabbi Yehuda) held that at the end of two cubits of the altar begins the steps."
187
+ ],
188
+ [
189
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืืžืœืชืจืื•ืช (five main-beams of the ceiling/projecting outside the house) โ€“ painted and tiled/cemented beams.",
190
+ "ืฉืœ ืžื™ืœืช โ€“ of trees that grow on them gall-nut (i.e., a species of oak tree, while Kahati calls it an ash tree, which Jastrow rejects), as we state in [Tractate] Gittin [19a], we are concerned lest it (i.e., the Jewish bill of divorce/Get) was written in a solution of gall-nuts (for a tanned ink will not take on a tanned hide)",
191
+ "ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” โ€“ the lowest beam lies on the lintel of the opening to the width of the opening which is twenty-cubits wide, and the beam overhangs on the opening a cubit from this side ad a cubit from that side, and the second beam that is above it overhangs on he first a cubit from this side and a cubit from that side, so that its length is twenty-four [cubits]. And the third is twenty-six cubits, and the fourth is twenty-eight cubits, and the fifth is thirty cubits.",
192
+ "ื•ื ื“ื‘ืš (a course of stones/layer) โ€“ a row, like (Ezra 6:4): โ€œwith a course of unused timer for each three courses of hewn stone.โ€",
193
+ "ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช (between every two beams) โ€“ these five beams do not touch each other, but rather a row of a structure of stones was between this [beam] and that [beam]."
194
+ ],
195
+ [
196
+ "ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ืขื˜ื• (so that the walls would not bulge)- so that the walls would not bend/incline to fall from the weight of their height, and these [cedar] beams would continue from this wall to that wall support the two walls (of the hall containing the golden altar and the hall leading to the interior of the Temple).",
197
+ "ื•ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื˜ืจื•ืช โ€“ in the windows of the hall containing the golden altar (i.e., Hekhal).",
198
+ "ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘ โ€“ [donating] gold to the hall containing the golden altar (i.e., Hekhal), and he wants that the gold that he donated will be placed in the Heikhal because it was entirely covered in gold., he made from that gold that he donates in the image of a single berry or a leaf or a cluster [of grapes] and hangs it on it.",
199
+ "ื•ื ืžื ื• ืขืœื™ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ because of the heaviness of the gold was great that was there, three-hundred Kohanim were needed to carry it and to remove it from place to place. And this is one of the places tha,t the Sages spoke of in the language of exaggeration in rhetorical speech (see Talmud Hullin 90b), and not exactly three-hundred Kohanim, but Rabbi Eliezer Bโ€™Rabbi Tzadok did not intend other than to inform that there was a lot of gold that was donated there."
200
+ ]
201
+ ],
202
+ [
203
+ [
204
+ "ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ื โ€“ in the thickness of the wall that is towards the inside.",
205
+ "ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ โ€“ in the thickness towards the outside, for the thickness of the wall of the hall leading to the golden altar (Hekhal) was six cubts, and at the end of the outer cubit of the thickness of the wall, there were the outer doors, one to the right of the opening and one to the left, each of these doors was five cubits wide, and when they were locked, the would touch each other and close the width of the cavity of the opening whose width was ten cubits, and when they were opened towards the inside, they cover five cubits of the thickness of the walls. But two other doors were like these measurements which were fixed at the end of the thickness of the walls towards the inner side, and when they were opened, they cover five cubits from here and five cubits from there from the width of the wall of the sanctuary/Heikhal inside, and there was no wall plastered with gold like in the rest of the Temple, because it was not visible.",
206
+ "ืืฆื˜ื‘ืจืžื™ื˜ื” (pivots, pins at top and bottom of a door turning in sockets) โ€“ boards of joints attached on the handles of the links and they are opened, and when he desires, they are bent and folded one on top of the other. Such were all of these doors, whether towards the inside or towards the outside, which were attached through these links, and at the end, one-half a cubit of the thickness of the wall they were fixed, between the doors that are inside and those that are outside, and five cubits of the thickness of the wall interrupt between the outer doors to the inner doors. But each door was five cubits attached from the two boards; each board was two-and one-half cubits, and when the outer door opened towards the inside, its half was bent and folded one on top of the other, and covers from the thickness of the wall two-and half cubits, and similarly, the door that is fixed on the inside, when it is opened to the outer side, it also was bent and folded and covers the two-and -one-half cubits that remained from the thickness of the wall.",
207
+ "ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื โ€“ so we see that each and every door was divided into two."
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ "ื•ืฉืชื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ two small openings, one from the right of the large gate of the Hekhal and one from its left, slightly distant from the gate. The one that is from the south, it is written (Ezekiel 44:2 โ€“ regarding the outer gate of the Sanctuary that faced eastward that was shut): โ€œ[And the LORD said to me:] This gate is to be kept shut and not to be opened! [No one shall enter by it because the LORD, the God of Israel, has entered by it; therefore it shall remain shut],โ€ of the future, for undefined, such it was in the Jerusalem Temple.",
211
+ "ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื โ€“ and this is one small chamber that is open to the Hekhal, and from the compartment back of the Holy of Holies, he enters into the Hekhal, and walks in the open space of the Hekhal until the large gate that is at the end of the thickness of the wall from the inside, and he opens it and comes to the second gate that is at the end of the thickness of the wall from the outside, and stands inside and opens it.",
212
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš โ€“ he holds that from the compartment back of the Holy of Holies he would not enter into the Hekhal, but from the compartment, he would walk along the thickness of the wall until he finds himself standing between the two gates, and he opens the doors of the outer gate from the inside and the doors or the inner gate from the outside."
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ "ืชืื™ื โ€“ chambers/compartments.",
216
+ "ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ โ€“ further on in our chapter (see Mishnah 7), when it considers that from the north to the south is seventy cubits, it teaches that the wall of the winding staircase leading โ€˜to a well] under the Temple (see also the fifth Mishnah of this chapter as well as Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 1), that the winding staircase was five [cubits] and the winding staircase was three [cubits], the wall of the compartment was five [cubits] and the compartment/chamber was six [cubits]. And corresponding to them we consider the south. And this is not to say that the thickness of the wall of the winding staircase and the thickness of the wall of the compartment/chamber and the thickness of the wall of the of the Hekhal that is to the north side was that, but rather, the thickness of the wall with the empty cavity that is between it and the second wall he is counting, but the five [cubits] of the wall of the winding staircase and the three [cubits] of the winding staircase, and the five [cubits] of the wall of the chamber /compartment and the six [cubits] of the chamber/compartment and the six [cubits] of the wall of the Hekhal, in each one of them, the five [cubits] was the one chamber which is a compartment, hence there are five chambers in the north. And opposite them [a similar number] in the south. And on these five, they would build five others, and another five on top of the, hence, fifteen compartments to the north and fifteen compartments to the south. And similarly, in the west which we consider further on in our chapter (see Mishnah 7 once again) that the wall of the Heikhal was six [cubits] and the compartment was six [cubits] and the wall of the compartment was five [cubits], in each one of them there was a there was a chamber, for the wall was not six [cubits] thick other than the wall with the chamber/compartment that was in it that was six [cubits], for the one compartment that was outside of it was six [cubits] and the wall of the the other compartment that is outside of them with the compartment within it was five [cubits], hence three chambers. And three other chambers were built on top of these three, and two [chambers] on top of them, that makes the eight compartments for the west [side].",
217
+ "ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืคืฉืคืฉ โ€“ for the compartment that has in it the northern wickets that are in that compartment that one enters into the Hekhal. But the anonymous Mishnah is according to the Rabbis who stated above (Mishnah 2) that one enters the compartment and from the compartment to the Heikhal, and not like Rabbi Yehuda who stated (in Mishnah 2 of this chapter) that he would walk along the thickness of the wall."
218
+ ],
219
+ [
220
+ "ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื” ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ from outside the wall of the winding staircase which is the outer wall of the Holy [of Holies], there were extensions/wings of the building, which are balconies surrounding the Temple from three directions โ€“ west, north and south, and these extensions/wings of the building were at the bottom, second story and third decks (see Genesis 6:16 โ€“ and the construction of Noahโ€™s ark) . The lowest (i.e., bottom) wing/extension was five cubits wide, and the paved level space/terrace that was on it, which is the ceiling that was over the lowest, which is the floor of the lowest/bottom deck , six [cubits] by a cubit wide, because the wall of the winding staircase would go and become narrower towards the top, for when it reached to the paved level space between steps in the Temple/the landing/terrace, that is on top of the lowest deck, it would enter inwards by one cubit, and on that cubit that protrudes, they would place the beams of the extension/wing of the building, it was found that the lowest extension/wing was wider one cubit more from the bottom, that is, that one cubit that enters the wall inside. And similarly, when he reaches the landing/terrace that is upon the middle [wing], which is the floor of the third [level], the wall would become narrow and enter inwards one cubit, in order that the head of the beam would be placed on that cubit, that the middle wall protrudes and goes outside more than the upper wall, and it is found that the upper extension/wing is one cubit wider from the middle one and two cubits wider than the lowest one. And that is what is stated (I Kings 6:6): โ€œfor he (i.e., Solomon) had provided recesses around the outside of the House so as not to penetrate the walls of the House,โ€ meaning to say that he would lessen and deduct in the thickness of the walls by one cubit from outside in the terrace/landing of the middle floor, and another cubit in the terrace/landing of the highest, in order that there would be room for him to place the heads of the beams of the landing/terrace, in order that he would not have to hold on to the walls of the house to make holes in the wall and to insert there the heads of the beams."
221
+ ],
222
+ [
223
+ "ื•ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase) - like a cavity and a cave.",
224
+ "ืฉื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื™ื ืœื’ื’ื•ืช ื”ืชืื™ื โ€“ and because the one who ascends upon it goes up through the path of a circumference and descends through the path of a circumference, which is called a ืžืกื‘ื”/winding staircase.",
225
+ "ื•ืœื•ืœื™ืŸ (small passageways in the loft which mechanics were lowered in boxes/closed elevators) โ€“ where apertures in the roof looking to the ground floor that they make in the upper stories.",
226
+ "ืžืฉืœืฉืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืื•ืžื ื™ื โ€“ they lower them by rope in chests/boxes, in order that they will not benefit from seeing the House of the Holy of Holies, but rather only repair what is needed and re-ascend."
227
+ ],
228
+ [
229
+ "ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื” โ€“ [the hall containing the golden altar/Hekhal] - one-hundred [cubits] long and one-hundred [cubit] wide [and at a height of one-hundred cubits].",
230
+ "ืื•ื˜ื (substructure/filled with earth, foundation) โ€“ a filled up/obstructed and closed building to be the foundation of the Temple, upon which we place the walls.",
231
+ "ืืžื” ื›ื™ื•ืจ (one cubit for the paneling work โ€“ tablature of the ceiling in the Stemple) โ€“ the lowest beam of the ceiling had the thickness of a cubit, and because it was coated with gold and embroidered with nice embroidery, it is called a ื›ื™ื•ืจ/panel (abacus).",
232
+ "ื•ืืžืชื™ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื” (two cubits โ€“ the receptacle of drippings โ€“ name of the second roof of the Stemple made for protection against an eventual leak in the upper roof) -the upper beams that lean upon the lower beam, their thickness is two cubits, and they are called: โ€œThe House/Receptacle of Dilfa/Drippings, because the boards of the ceiling are attached by them. The [Aramaic] translation of ื‘ืžื—ื‘ืจืช / joining or fastening - is the place of coupling/borders. But one cannot wonder/be amazed how the the lower beam was that everything leaned upon them was only one cubit thick, for the upper beams that do not handle a burden on this was two cubits thick, because the lower beam , since it was wider in thickness by a cubit was strong and healthy and could receive the building that was upon it, but the upper beams that were not wider than a handbreadth or less, need to be of greater thickness. Alternatively the upper beams were two cubits thick in order to distance the ceiling from the lower beam, because it was embroidered with nice embroidery, and if the ceiling was near it, the embroidery would not be seen and recognized so much.",
233
+ "ืชืงืจื” โ€“ planed boards that they put on the beams were one cubit thick.",
234
+ "ืžืขื–ื™ื‘ื” (a concrete of stone chippings/clay โ€“ used for paving floors- pavement covering the ceiling of the lower story and serving as flooring to the upper story) โ€“ he plaster and stones and plaster that they place on the boards.",
235
+ "ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘ (โ€œkeeping off the ravenโ€ โ€“ an arrangement of iron points on the roof the Temple/scarecrow)- a foil/plate of sharp iron similar to a sword and it was a cubit in height and was placed on top of the railing, in order that the birds would not rest upon it, therefore, it was called a โ€œscarecrow,โ€ that keeps back the ravens from there."
236
+ ],
237
+ [
238
+ "ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื โ€“ thickness of the wall of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple to the eastern side was five cubits, and similarly, the wall of the Hekhal (the hall containing the golden altar, its thickness was six [cubits] to the eastern side.",
239
+ "ื•ืชื•ื›ื• (its substructure) โ€“ the cavity of the Hekhal was forty cubits.",
240
+ "ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ (the two cedar-covered partitions โ€“ with a vacant space between โ€“ separating the Holy of Holies from the Holy and occupied the space of one cubit) โ€“ the wall that separates between the Heikhal/the hall with the golden altar and the Holy of Holies is called ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, in that it closes over the Ark and the th Tablets that were given at Sinai. ื˜ืจืง in the Aramaic language is closing in/enclosure like [Tractate Berakhot 28a] ื˜ืจื•ืงื™ ื’ืœื™/close the [college] doors. The [suffix] ืกื™ืŸ is Sinai. And the thickness of this wall was a cubit. But the Sages did not cast the deciding vote if its holiness is like the inner holinesss or like the outer holiness, therefore, during the Second Temple, they made two curtains, one outer and the inner, and between them the space of a cubit, to protect between them the airspace of the place of the wall that was one cubit thick [during the time of the First Temple].",
241
+ "ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ โ€“ we have already explained above that there was no wall of the Hekhal on the western side of a thickness of six cubits, but rather, the thickness of the wall of the Hekhal with the free space that is between it and the second wall that is outside of it was six cubits. And the thickness of the second wall that is called a ืชื/compartment with the the free space that is between it and the fourth outer wall was five cubits. But the three free places that were between four walls were ืชืื™ื/compartments. And upon them were other compartments , as we taught above (see Mishnah 3 of this chapter) that were in the west three on top of three, and two on top of them. And similarly, from the from the north to the south, the wall of the winding staircase was five cubits, etc., all of them with the cavity that is between one wall and another, it is all as I have explained above.",
242
+ "ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ โ€“ the wall of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple its thickness is five cubits, and the hall is ten cubits to the north and similarly to the south.",
243
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช โ€“ on account of the knives that they hide there, it is called ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช for in the Roman language, they call the large knives ื—ืœืคื™ื/HALAFIM.",
244
+ "ืฆืจ ืžืื—ื•ืจื™ื• โ€“ to the western side, and wide from before him to the eastern sine. But it was not explained to me how, for there was one-hundred [cubits] by one-hundred [cubits] for what it was worth. \\"
245
+ ]
246
+ ],
247
+ [
248
+ [
249
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ all the circumference of the Temple courtyard , that is within that circumference that the Temple was built to its western side and the courtyard and the and the altar on its eastern side.",
250
+ "ืืจื•ืš ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืข โ€“ from the east to the west.",
251
+ "ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ โ€“ from the north to the south.",
252
+ "ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ โ€“ and it was called the Courtyard of the Israelites, and the place of the treading of the feet of Kohanim was called the Courtyard of the Kohanim.",
253
+ "ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืชื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื โ€“ this is explained at the beginning of chapter three (Mishnah 1).",
254
+ "ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื” โ€“ the thickness of the wall of the hallway leading to the interior of the Temple, and the vacant space of the hall, and the thickness of the wall of the Hekhal and empty/vacant space, and the cubit of the Traksin, and the empty space of the House of the Holy of Holies and the wall of the Hekhal to the west, and the compartment and wall of the compartment, all of it is one-hundred cubits as was explained in the chapter above (see Tractate Middot, Chapter 4, Mishnayot 6 and 7).",
255
+ "ื•ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช โ€“ from the outer wall of the Hekhal to the western side until the western wall of the Temple courtyard there was eleven cubits of empty space with the thickness of the wall, which is called the back wall of the innermost of the Temple/the Holy of Holies."
256
+ ],
257
+ [],
258
+ [
259
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื” (the chamber of Parva, a Persian builder and magician; see also Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnayot 3 and 6) โ€“ a magician whose name was PARVA built this compartment through sorcery, and it is called by his name. Such I have found. But Maimonides wrote that he would dig into the wall in order to see from there how the Kohen would perform the Sacred Service and he was killed there.",
260
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื’ื’ื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื• ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื โ€“ the Kohen Gadol would engage in five [ritual] immersions on Yom Kippur (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnah 3) when he would change from the golden clothing to white clothing and from what clothing to golden clothing. But the coming immersions on account of Yom Kippur, we require in a holy place, as it is written (Leviticus 16:24): โ€œHe shall bathe his body in water in the holy precinct [and put on his vestments; then he shall come out and offer his burnt offering and the burnt offering of the people, making expiation for himself and for the people].โ€ Except for the first immersion that does not come for Yom Kippur, for even the rest of the days of the year, a ritually clean person does not enter the Temple courtyard until he immerses, therefore, the first immersion was on the weekday on top of the Gate of the Water, which is the third gate that is in the south, and there was a spring/fountain of water there in the coming cubit, the spring of Etam, and there, he would perform his first immersion.",
261
+ "ืžืกื™ื‘ื” โ€“ a stone building with a round ascent which goes around to ascend to the roof to the House of Parveh (see above) through the path of a winding staircase."
262
+ ],
263
+ [
264
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื•ืœื” โ€“ on account of the name of the well that those who came up from the Exile dug.",
265
+ "ืื‘ื ืฉืื•ืœ ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ that chamber of wood was the chamber of the High Priest. This is the chamber of the assessors that is taught in the Mishnah the beginning of [Tractate] Yoma (Chapter 1, Mishnah 1): Seven days prior to Yom Kippur, they would separate the High Prieest from his home to the Chamber of Parhedrin/Palhedrin.",
266
+ "ื•ื’ื’ ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื•ื” โ€“ one arched ceiling for all three (i.e., the Chamber of the Wood, The Chamber of the Exile and the Chamber of the Hewn Stones).",
267
+ "ืฉื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ at the sides of the unsanctified area that is within/ Because the Chamber of Hewn Stones was half in the sacred [area] and half in the unconsecrated [area]. But in the half of the sacred [area], it was not possible for the Sanhedrin to sit [and meet], for there was no sitting in the Temple courtyard other than for the kings of the House of David alone, as it is written (Second Samuel 7:18): โ€œThen David came and sat beore the LORD.โ€"
268
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+ [
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+ [
26
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื.</b> ืœื ืžืคื ื™ ืคื—ื“ ืœืกื˜ื™ื ื•ื’ื ื‘ื™ื, ืืœื ืฉื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื”ื•ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ื•ืฉืžื™ืจื” ื–ื• ืžืฆื•ืชื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืฉื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืชื•ืจื” (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื’ืณ:ืœืดื—) ื•ื”ื—ื•ื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืงื“ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืžืฉืžืจืช ืœืžืฉืžืจืช, ืจืžื– ืœืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ืืฃ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื ื›ืŸ:",
27
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืขืœื™ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื”, ืืจืงื•ื•ืœืดื˜ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ, ื›ืš ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“:",
28
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืงื•ื.</b> ืฉื‘ื›ืดื“ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื [ื ื›ืดื•], ืœืžื–ืจื— ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืฉืฉื”, ืœืฆืคื•ื ื” ืœื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื”, ืœื ื’ื‘ื” ืœื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื”, ื•ืœืืกื•ืคื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื, ืœืคืจื‘ืจ ืœืžืขืจื‘ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœืžืกืœื”, ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคืจื‘ืจ, ื”ืจื™ ื›ืืŸ ื›ืดื“ ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช, ืฉืœืฉื” ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืœื•ื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืงืจื ืœื ืืžืจ ืืœื ืœื•ื™ื, ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ืžื™ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ืžืดื“:ื˜ืดื•) ื•ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ ืฆื“ื•ืง:",
29
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื”.</b> ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
30
+ "<b>ื•ืืจื‘ืขื”.</b> ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื•:",
31
+ "<b>ืžืชื•ื›ื•.</b> ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
32
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืœืขื–ืจื”. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื”ื™ื•, ืžื•ื“ื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉืžืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื”:",
33
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื” ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ืœืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืฉื•ืžืจ ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืžื™ื“ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืคื ื•ืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื”, ื•ืืกืžื›ื•ื” ืืงืจื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคืจื‘ืจ, ื›ืœืคื™ ื‘ืจ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”:\n\n"
34
+ ],
35
+ [
36
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:\n\n"
37
+ ],
38
+ [
39
+ "<b>ืžืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ื›ื ื™ืกื” ื•ื™ืฆื™ืื”.</b> ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืœื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
40
+ "<b>ืงื™ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘.</b> ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื‘ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืงื™ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืฉืžื•, ื•ืฉืœ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื˜ื“ื™ ืฉืžื•:",
41
+ "<b>ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฆื•ืจื”.</b> ื›ืฉืขืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ืฆื•ื• ืœื”ื ืžืœื›ื™ ืคืจืก ืœืฆื™ื™ืจ ืฆื•ืจืช ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืขืœ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืžื•ืจื ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ื•ืฆื™ื™ืจื•ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื–ืจื—:",
42
+ "<b>ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื”.</b> ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ื”ื™ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืคืจื” ืื“ื•ืžื” ื ืฉืจืคืช ืืœื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:",
43
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืžืกืขื“ื™ื”.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ืžืกื™ื™ืขื™ื ื•ืกื•ืขื“ื™ื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืื•ืชื”:",
44
+ "<b>ืœื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ืœื”ืจ ื”ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื• ืฉืœ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื, ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืจืคื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคืจื”:\n\n"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉื ืขืฆื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื›ื” ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื ืงืจื ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง:",
48
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืฉืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื:",
49
+ "<b> ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืกืคืจ ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ (ืžืดื– ื‘ืณ) ื•ื”ื ื” ืžื™ื ืžืคื›ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชืฃ ื”ื™ืžื ื™ืช, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืจื•ื ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื™ืžื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืื” ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื‘ื ื‘ื•ืื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื“ืงื™ื ื›ืงืจื ื™ ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื•ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืขื™ื ืœืฉืขืจ ื–ื” ื ืขืฉื™ื ื›ืžืœื•ื ืคื™ ืคืš ืงื˜ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืจื™ ืœื”ื ืžื™ื ืžืคื›ื™ื:",
50
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ.</b> ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื•ืžื:",
51
+ "<b>ืคื ื—ืก ื”ืžืœื‘ื™ืฉ.</b> ืžืžื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ืœื‘ื™ืฉ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื”ืคืฉื™ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”:",
52
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื”ืžื ื—ื” ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘, ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื” (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื’-ื™ืดื“) ืขืœ ืžื—ื‘ืช ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืชื™ืขืฉื”, ื ืงืจืืช ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ: "
53
+ ],
54
+ [
55
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื”ื™ื”.</b> ืฉื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ืœืฉืขืจ, ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ืœื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืœืฆื“ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืขืœื™ื™ื” ื‘ื ื•ื™ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ื:",
56
+ "<b>ื•ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื—ื™ืœ.</b> ื‘ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื™ืœ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื•ื ืœืคื ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื” ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื—ื™ืœ:",
57
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
58
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉืžื“ื•ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“ ืœื”ืชื—ืžื ืฉื ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื™ื—ืคื™ื, ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื”, ื•ืœืืจื‘ืข ืคื™ื ื•ืชื™ื• ื”ื™ื• ืืจื‘ืข ืœืฉื›ื•ืช ืงื˜ื ื•ืช ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:\n\n"
59
+ ],
60
+ [
61
+ "<b>ื›ืงื™ื˜ื•ื ื•ืช.</b> ื›ื—ื“ืจื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ืžืœื›ื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื˜ืจืงืœื™ืŸ:",
62
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืœ.</b> ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืงืฆืชื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœ:",
63
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ.</b> ืจืืฉื™ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื“ืขืช ืื™ื–ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืื™ื–ื” ื—ื•ืœ ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
64
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื˜ืœืื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื ืœืชืžื™ื“ื™ื, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉืฉื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ื:",
65
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื’ืจืžื• ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ืฉื:",
66
+ "<b>ืฉืฉืงืฆื•ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืงื˜ื™ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉืงืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“ ืงื•ืจื ืœื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช:",
67
+ "<b>ื‘ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”.</b> ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืจืื” ืงืจื™ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” (ืฉืื—ืจ) [ืฆืดืœ ืฉืชื—ืช] ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื•ืฉื ืžื“ื•ืจื” ืฉืžืชื—ืžื ื‘ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื•ืขืœื” ื•ื ืกืชืคื’, ื•ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ:\n\n"
68
+ ],
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ.</b> ื”ืคืชื— ืฉื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ, ื•ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ืžื• ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื•ื— ืœืขื–ืจื”:",
71
+ "<b>ืคืฉืคืฉ ืงื˜ืŸ.</b> ืฉืขืจ ืงื˜ืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
72
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืฉืคืฉ ืœื—ืคืฉ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“ [ืคืจืง ืืณ] ื ื˜ืœ ืืช ื”ืžืคืชื— ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืขื–ืจื” ื•ื›ื•ืณ ืืœื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืืœื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืขืจื‘, ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืžื’ื™ืขื™ื ืœืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืฉื” ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื”ื’ื™ืขื•, ืืœื• ื•ืืœื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœื•ื ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืœื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื”ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื•ื:",
73
+ "<b>ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื•ื™ื—ืคืฉ, ื•ื‘ืœืฉ:\n\n"
74
+ ],
75
+ [
76
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ื™ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื”, ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื” ืืจืงื•ื•ืœืดื˜ ื‘ืœืขืดื– ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
77
+ "<b>ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ.</b> ืืฆื˜ื‘ืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ ื’ื–ื™ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืงืจืงืข, ื•ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ืงืฆืจื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•:",
78
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘.</b> ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ืœืง ืœืฉื‘ืขื” ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืช ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืข, ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื™ื•ืžื•, ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื:",
79
+ "<b>ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื‘ื—ื•ืจื™ื ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื–ืงื ื ืœืคืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:",
80
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืฉื›ื‘ ืฉื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื˜ื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ, ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืฉื•ืžืจื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื:",
81
+ "<b>ื›ืกืชื•.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช:\n\n"
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื ืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืœื ืขื•ืœ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
85
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ื˜ืคืœื™ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื›ืžื” ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื‘ืณ) ื•ื™ืœื•ื• ืขืœื™ืš ื•ื™ืฉืจืชื•ืš. ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ืฆื•ืฅ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช, ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืœื•ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ, ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:",
86
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื”, ืฉืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืจื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื ื›ืดื˜:ื™ืดื˜) ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื“ืจืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉื•:",
87
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ: ",
88
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื—ื™ืœ ื™ื•ืฆื.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘, ืืœื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืชืžื™ื“, ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืืฆืœ ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœื•, ืฉืืขืดื’ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื—ื ื” ืœื•ื™ื”, ืœื–ื” ื”ืงืœื•, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืคื ื™ื:"
89
+ ]
90
+ ],
91
+ [
92
+ [
93
+ "<b>ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช ืืžื”.</b> ืžื•ืงืฃ ื—ื•ืžื” ืกื‘ื™ื‘:",
94
+ "<b>ืจื•ื‘ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืœืฆื“ ื“ืจื•ื, ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—. ื•ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืœืฆื“ ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘:\n\n"
95
+ ],
96
+ [
97
+ "<b>ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉืžืืœ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉืขืจ ื”ื˜ื“ื™:",
98
+ "<b>ืฉืื ื™ ืื‘ืœ.</b> ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืžื” ืœืš ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืœืฉืžืืœ, ื•ืืžืจ ืฉืื ื™ ืื‘ืœ, ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื”ืฉื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื–ื” ื™ื ื—ืžืš ื•ื›ื•ืณ:",
99
+ "<b>ืขืฉื™ืชืŸ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ื”ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื›ืŸ, ื ืจืื” ื›ืืœื• ื—ื‘ืจื™ื• ืขื•ื•ืชื• ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื ื™ื“ื•ื”ื• ืฉืœื ื›ื”ืœื›ื”:",
100
+ "<b>ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ืš ืฉืชืฉืžืข ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืจืš.</b> ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืฉืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืชืฉื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™: "
101
+ ],
102
+ [
103
+ "<b>ืœืคื ื™ื.</b> ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
104
+ "<b>ืกื•ืจื’.</b> ืžื—ื™ืฆื” ื”ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื›ืžื˜ื” ืžืกื•ืจื’ืช ื‘ื—ื‘ืœื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ืžื“ืคื™ ืขืฅ ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ื•ืงืฆืจื™ื ืฉืžืจื›ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื• ื‘ืืœื›ืกื•ืŸ:",
105
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื–ืจื• ื›ื ื’ื“ื ืฉืœืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืœ ืคืจืฆื” ื•ืคืจืฆื”, ืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ืžื•ื“ื” ืขืœ ืื‘ื“ืŸ ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื™ื•ืŸ:",
106
+ "<b>ืœืคื ื™ื.</b> ืžืื•ืชื• ืกื•ืจื’ ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ื—ื™ืœ:",
107
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฉื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขืœื•ืช ืžืฉื ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื:",
108
+ "<b>ืจื•ื ืžืขืœื”.</b> ื›ืœ ืžืขืœื” ืžื”ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžื—ื‘ืจืชื” ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจืงืข ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”:",
109
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœื—ื”.</b> ืžืฉืš ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืžืขืœื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”:",
110
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืœ ืื•ืœื.</b> ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœื ื›ืŸ, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ื’ืณ:",
111
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืคืชื— ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื.</b> ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื” ื•ืจื—ื‘ื• ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
112
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ืŸ ืฉืงื•ืคื•ืช.</b> ืื‘ืŸ ืžื•ื ื—ืช ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ืฉื”ื“ืœืช ืฉื•ืงืฃ ืขืœื™ื•. ื•ืฉืงื•ืคื•ืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ:",
113
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื ืก.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื ืคืจืง ื’ืณ [ื“ืฃ ืœืดื— ืขืดื]:",
114
+ "<b>ืžืฆื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช</b> ื›ืžื• ืžื–ื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืžืจืื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ืžื” ืœื–ื”ื‘ ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื”ื•ืฆืจื›๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืœืขืฉื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘:"
115
+ ],
116
+ [
117
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื ื™ื ื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
118
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื™ื.</b> ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื’ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืืžื”, ืœื‘ื“ ืžืžื” ืฉืขืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื:",
119
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื–ืจื—ื™.</b> ื”ื•ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ืœืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
120
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ื”ื•ื ื”ืจ ื”ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืืฉืจ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืžืงื“ื, ื•ืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ื•ืจื•ืื” ืžืขืœ ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืืช ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ื” ื‘ื“ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื˜:ื“ืณ) ื•ื”ื–ื” ืืœ ื ื•ื›ื— ืคื ื™ ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื”, ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืžื›ื•ื•ื ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื ื–ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื–ื”, ืฉืขืจ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืขืจ ืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื, ื•ืฉืขืจ ืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ืฉืขืจ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืจืื•ืช ืืช ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื”ืจ ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืงืจืงืข ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื” (ืฉืชื™) [ื›ืดื‘ ืืžื•ืช] ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืงืจืงืข ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืืกืงื•ืคืช ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ืคืชื— ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช [ืฉืชื™] ืืžื•ืช ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื— ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืจืื•ืช ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืชื—: "
121
+ ],
122
+ [
123
+ "<b>ืื•ืจืš.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
124
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
125
+ "<b>ืงื˜ื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžืงื•ืจื•ืช.</b> ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื”ื ื” ืขืœื” ืงื™ื˜ื•ืจ ื”ืืจืฅ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื—), ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืขืฉืŸ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืŸ ืชืงืจื”:",
126
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฉืœื—ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ื•ื“.</b> ืœืฉืจืคืŸ ื‘ืืฉ ืฉืชื—ืช ื”ื™ื•ืจื” ืฉืžื‘ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ื” ื”ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืืฉ ืืฉืจ ืชื—ืช ื–ื‘ื— ื”ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
127
+ "<b>ืžืชืœื™ืขื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืžืกื™ืจื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชื•ืœืขืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื”:",
128
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื.</b> ืฉืฉื ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ืœื˜ื”ืจืชืŸ ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืคื ื™ื ืœืžืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ืžื‘ืขืจื‘:",
129
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืฉื›ื—ืชื™ ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช.</b> ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ืจื™ืฉื ื›ื•ืœื” ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืงืืžืจ ืœื”, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื“ืžื“ื•ืช ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ื™ื:",
130
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื”.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ืคืจื•ืฆื”, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืงืคืช ืžื—ื™ืฆื”:",
131
+ "<b>ื›ืฆื•ืฆื˜ืจื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื ื”ืงื™ืคื• ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื ืฉื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ืขืœ ื”ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื ื•ื”ืื ืฉื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืœืจืื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžื—ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื•ืื‘ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ืงืœื•ืช ืจืืฉ:",
132
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช.</b> ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืงืจืงืข ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื:",
133
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืชืจื•ื˜ื•ืช.</b> ืืจื•ื›ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ ื–ื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ื“ืจืš ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช, ืืœื ืขื’ื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื—ืฆื™ ื’ื•ืจืŸ ืขื’ื•ืœื”: "
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ.</b> ืจืืฉื™ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ื•ืœื˜ื™ื ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืขื–ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
137
+ "<b>ืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื.</b> ื‘ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
138
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืืžื”.</b> ื•ืื•ืจื›ื” ื›ืื•ืจืš ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
139
+ "<b>ื•ื“ื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ื ื•ื™ ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืืฆื˜ื‘ื, ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžื” ื•ื—ืฆื™:",
140
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”.</b> ืฉืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
141
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืขื“ [ืื—ืจืจื™] ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช:",
142
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘.</b> ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
143
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืจื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืงื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ. ื•ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืœืขื–ืจื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื˜ืขื ืœืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื•ืช, ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืคืจืฆื•ืช ืฉืคืจืฆื• ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ ื‘ืกื•ืจื’, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื:"
144
+ ]
145
+ ],
146
+ [
147
+ [
148
+ "<b>ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื”.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืžืจื•ื‘ืข ืขืฉื•ื™ ืžืืจื‘ืข ืงืจืฉื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ, ื›ืœ ืงืจืฉ ืืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื•ืช, ื•ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืงืจืฉ ืืžื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื“ืคื•ืก, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ืžื”ื•ืชืš ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืขืฉื” ืžืงืฉื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืžื”. ื•ื–ื”ื• ื™ืกื•ื“:",
149
+ "<b>ืขืœื” ืืžื” ื•ื›ื ืก ืืžื”.</b> ืื—ืจ ืฉืขืœื” ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœื’ื•ื‘ื” ืืžื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืื—ืจ ืฉืื•ืจืš ื›ืœ ืงืจืฉ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืงืจืฉ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืฉืœ ื“ืคื•ืก ื–ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ื›ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื ื“ื‘ืง ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืžืงืฉื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“. ื•ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ืกื•ื‘ื‘. ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื ืก ืืžื”, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชืงืฆืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืจื•ื—. ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืืžื”, ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ื›ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื ืžืฆื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืฆื“, ื•ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ืžืŸ ืžืงื•ื ืžืขืจื›ื” ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืฆื“. ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืืžื” ืขืœ ืืžื” ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืžื” ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•ื™ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืžืžืœืื•, ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืข ื–ื•ื™ื•ืช:",
150
+ "<b>ืžืงื•ื ื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื”ืœืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช, ืืœื ืžื ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืืžื” ืคื ื•ื™ ืžืžืงื•ื ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช ื•ืœืคื ื™ื ืœื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
151
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื”:",
152
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”.</b> ื•ื›ื•ื ืก ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื•ืžืงื•ื ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช ื•ืžืงื•ื ื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
153
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืฉืขืœื• ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื“ืณ ืืžื•ืช ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื ืžืฆื ื™ืกื•ื“ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื, ื•ืžืงื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืชื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข:",
154
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘.</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืœื” ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ืคืจืง ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
155
+ "<b>ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืžื.</b> ื’ื™ืžืœ ื™ื•ื ื™ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื ื•ืดืŸ ื”ืคื•ื›ื” ืฉืœื ื•. ื•ื”ืชื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื, ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ืœืžืฉื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื“ืจื•ื ื•ืœืžืขืจื‘. ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื”, ื“ืจืฉื•, ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื“ืžื”, ืื˜ื•ื ื›ืื“ืžื” ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื•ืœ, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื ืกื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ื• ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœืจืฆืคื” ื•ืฉื•ืชืชื™ื ืœื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื›ืจื•ื™ ืฉื ืืฆืœ ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืกืžื•ืš ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื•ืจ ืงืœื•ื˜ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืคืชื—ื• ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืœืจืืฉ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื ื’ื“ื• ืœื™ืจื“ ืฉื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื. ืฉื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืชื™ื” ื›ืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžื” ืื›ื™ืœื” ืžืชืขื›ืœืช ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื ืฉืจืคื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ืฉืชื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื ืชื‘ืœืข ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืงืจื ื“ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื“ืžื”, ื“ืจืฉื™ ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืื“ืžื”, ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื ื ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื›ื™ืคื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช:",
156
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ.</b> ืžืงืจื ื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ (ืžืดื’) ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื ื‘ื ืขืœ ืžื“ืช ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ื•ืฉืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื:",
157
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื”.</b> ืžื“ื•ืช ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืงืืžืจ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื”:",
158
+ "<b>ืืœ ืืจื‘ืขืช ืจื‘ืขื™ื•.</b> ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืžืืžืฆืขื™ืชื• ืžื•ื“ื“ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข:",
159
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื ื—ื•ื’ืจื• ื‘ืืžืฆืข.</b> ื—ื•ื˜ ืื“ื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื•ื™ ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืืžืฆืขื• ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ื•ื‘ื”ื•, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืžื” ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืขืœื™ื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืกื•ื‘ื‘:",
160
+ "<b>ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืฉื“ืžืŸ ื ื–ืจืง ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื:",
161
+ "<b>ืœื“ืžื™ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืœื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื˜:",
162
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื•ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืืžื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ืื•ืจืš ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืžื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ืื•ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ืชื•ืคืก ืžื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”, ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืืžื” ืฉื‘ืžื–ืจื— ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ืฉื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืงืจืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื›ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืืžื” ืœืงืจืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืืžื” ื”ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืจื•ื, ืฉื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื›ืœื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืงืจืŸ ืืžื”. ื•ื ืžืฆืื• ืฉืœืฉ ืงืจื ื•ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื•ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืจืš ื™ืขืงื‘ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื–ืื‘ ื™ื˜ืจืฃ ื‘ื‘ืงืจ ื™ืื›ืœ ืขื“ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืžืดื˜:ื›ืดื–) ื•ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ืื—ืกื ืชื™ื” ื™ืชื‘ื ื™ ืžืงื“ืฉื, ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื“ืžื™ื ืœื ื™ื”ื ืืœื ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ืขืฉื• ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื˜ื•ืจืฃ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื“ืžื™ื ื ื™ืชื ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืงืจืŸ. ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืžืจื•ื‘ืข ืœื™ืกื•ื“ ืœืžืœืื•ืชื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื™ืžื™ื ืขืฅ ืื• ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ื•ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืชืžืœื ื”ื–ื•ื™ืช ื”ื”ื™ื, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฉื•ืžื˜ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฅ ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืื•ืชื• ืงืจืŸ ืคื ื•ื™ ื‘ืœื™ ื™ืกื•ื“. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ื”ื—ืœืง ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื™ืฃ ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช, ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“:\n\n"
163
+ ],
164
+ [
165
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช.</b> ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ ื ืงื‘ื™ื:",
166
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื ื™ืชื ื™ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช, ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืžืชื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืคืš ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™:",
167
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื“ืจื•ืžื™.</b> ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื™ื•ืช:",
168
+ "<b>ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชืŸ ื ืงื‘ื™ื, ื•ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ืžืฉื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ. ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ ื’ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื–ื‘ืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข:\n\n"
169
+ ],
170
+ [
171
+ "<b>ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื”ืงืจืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช:",
172
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืช.</b> ืœื—ืœืœ ืฉืชื—ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื:",
173
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื‘ืฉ ื”ื™ื”, ืœื“ืจื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ืคืข ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ืžื“ืจื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื• ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœื• ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืณ:ื›ืดื’) ื•ืœื ืชืขืœื” ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—ื™:",
174
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืœ. ื•ืืžื” ืขืœ ืืžื” ื”ื™ื”, ื•ื‘ื›ื‘ืฉ ืขืฆืžื• ืœืžืขืจื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“:",
175
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ื ื‘ื•ื‘ื”, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื•ื‘ ืœื—ื•ืช:",
176
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื™ืฆืื• ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”:\n\n"
177
+ ],
178
+ [
179
+ "<b>ืžื‘ืงืขืช ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืจื.</b> ื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ:",
180
+ "<b>ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืชื•ืœื”.</b> ืงืจืงืข ืฉืœื ื—ืคืจื• ืฉื ืžืขื•ืœื:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืคื’ื™ืžื”.</b> ืคื•ืกืœืช ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื, ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ื ืคื’ืžื• ื‘ื‘ืจื–ืœ:",
182
+ "<b>ื•ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื‘ืกื™ื“, ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื”:",
183
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืืชื ื ืงืžื, ืืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื‘ื›ืœ ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืžืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื“ืžื™ื:",
184
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืคื™ื.</b> ืืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ืžื”ื“ืจ, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืกื™ื“ ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื”, ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ืคื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ื ืื™ื ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืœืกื•ื“ ื‘ื•: "
185
+ ],
186
+ [
187
+ "<b>ื•ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ื ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“, ื”ืชืงื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื—ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ืœืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืจืฆืคื” ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืงืฉืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฆื•ืืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ื ื•ืขืฆื™ื ืจืืฉ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืืจืฅ. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
188
+ "<b>ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ื ืกื™ื.</b> ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ ื ืžื•ื›ื™ืŸ:",
189
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืจื–.</b> ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืžืจื•ื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื:",
190
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžื–ืœื’ื•ืช ืื ืฆื™ื ื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
191
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืจื–, ื•ืชื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
192
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื–ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื–ื• ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ืขืฅ, ืœืชืœื•ืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืื• ืงื˜ื ื”:",
193
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ.</b> ืฉืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืงืจืจ ื•ืžืฆื ืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœื ื™ืกืจื™ื—:\n\n"
194
+ ],
195
+ [
196
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืจื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” ื•ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”, ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ. ื›ืš ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ื™ ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉืžืฆื ื‘ื ื•ืกื—ืื•ืช ื™ืฉื ื•ืช ืžื“ื•ื™ื™ืงื•ืช. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื”, ืจื•ื, ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื”ืžืขืœื”, ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”. ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:",
197
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœื—ื”.</b> ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉืš ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืžืขืœื”, ืฉื–ื”ื• ืžื“ืจืš ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื”ื™ื” ืืžื”. ื•ืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื” ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืžื” ืืžื” ื“ืงืชื ื™:",
198
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ.</b> ืžืขืœื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื“ืงืชื ื™, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ืจืฆืคื”, ื›ืžื• ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ, ืขืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืจืฆืคื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ื‘ืœื ืžืขืœื”, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืœื ืืžืจ ืฉืœื—ื” ืฉืœืฉ, ืืœื ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื•ืจืช ื”ืจืฆืคื”:",
199
+ "<b>ื•ืืžื” ืืžื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืขืœื” ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื•ืฉืฉื™ืช, ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”:",
200
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ.</b> ืžืขืœื” ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช:",
201
+ "<b>ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืืžื”, ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื ืžืฆืื• ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช ืชืฉืข ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืฉืœ ืจืฆืคื” ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื“ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
202
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืœืกื•ืฃ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืชื—ื™ืœื•ืช ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช:\n\n"
203
+ ],
204
+ [
205
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืืžืœืชืจืื•ืช.</b> ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื›ื•ื™ื™ืจื•ืช:",
206
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืžื™ืœืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉื’ื“ืœื™ื ื‘ื• ืขืคืฆื™ื ืฉืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืžื™ืœื™ืŸ. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื˜ื™ืŸ [ื“ืฃ ื™ืดื˜] ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื‘ืžื™ ืžื™ืœื™ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ื•:",
207
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืžื•ืฉื›ื‘ืช ืขืœ ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื”ืคืชื— ืœืจื—ื‘ื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืจื—ื‘ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืืžื”, ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืขื•ื“ืคืช ืขืœ ื”ืคืชื— ืืžื” ืžื–ื” ื•ืืžื” ืžื–ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื. ื•ืงื•ืจื” ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืžื ื” ืขื•ื“ืคืช ืขืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืžื–ื” ื•ืืžื” ืžื–ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื”. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ, ื•ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”, ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœืฉื™ื:",
208
+ "<b>ื•ื ื“ื‘ืš.</b> ืฉื•ืจื”. ื›ืžื• ื ื“ื‘ื›ื™ื ื“ื™ ืื‘ืŸ ื’ืœืœ (ืขื–ืจื ื•ืณ:ื“ืณ):",
209
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื• ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•, ืืœื ืฉื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืœื–ื•:\n\n"
210
+ ],
211
+ [
212
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ืขื˜ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ื• ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืœื™ืคื•ืœ ืžื—ืžืช ื’ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœื•ื ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื ืžืฉื›ื™ื ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื” ืœื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื” ืกื•ืžื›ื™ื ืฉื ื™ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืคืœื•:",
213
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื˜ืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ:",
214
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ ื•ืจื•ืฆื” ืฉื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืขืฆืžื• ืฉื”ืชื ื“ื‘ ื™ืชื ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื›ื•ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืคื” ื–ื”ื‘, ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืื•ืชื• ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืžืชื ื“ื‘ ื›ื“ืžื•ืช ื’ืจื’ื™ืจ ืื• ืขืœื” ืื• ืืฉื›ื•ืœ ื•ืชื•ืœื” ื‘ื”:",
215
+ "<b>ื•ื ืžื ื• ืขืœื™ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืžื›ื•ื‘ื“ ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื”, ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœื˜ืœื˜ืœื” ื•ืœืคื ื•ืชื” ืžืžืงื•ื ืœืžืงื•ื. ื•ื–ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืฉื“ื‘ืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื‘ืื™, ื“ืœืื• ื“ื•ืงื ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฆื“ื•ืง ืืœื ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉื–ื”ื‘ ื”ืจื‘ื” ื”ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ืฉื:"
216
+ ]
217
+ ],
218
+ [
219
+ [
220
+ "<b>ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ.</b> ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ื. ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื›ืœืคื™ ืคื ื™ื:",
221
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉื›ืœืคื™ ื”ื—ื•ืฅ. ืฉืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ืœืกื•ืฃ ืืžื” ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื• ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืœื™ืžื™ืŸ ื”ืคืชื— ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืฉืžืืœื•, ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ืžื”ืŸ ืจื—ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• ื•ืกื•ืชืžื•ืช ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื—ืœืœ ื”ืคืชื— ืฉืจื—ื‘ื• ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื ืžื›ืกื•ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ. ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื›ืžื“ื•ืช ืืœื• ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืกื•ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžืคื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžืคื” ืžืจื•ื—ื‘ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืฉื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื˜ื•ื— ื‘ื–ื”ื‘ ื›ืžื• ืฉืืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื”:",
222
+ "<b>ืืฆื˜ืจืžื™ื˜ื”.</b> ืœื•ื—ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคืจืงื™ื ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ื•ืช, ื•ื”ืŸ ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ื ื›ืคืคื•ืช ื•ื ื›ืคืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•. ื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืœื—ื•ืฅ ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ื•ืช, ื•ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉื‘ืคื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžืคืกื™ืงื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช. ื•ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ืžืฉืชื™ ืœื•ื—ื•ืช, ื›ืœ ืœื•ื— ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื•ืžื—ืฆื”, ื•ื›ืฉื ืคืชื— ื”ื“ืœืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื—ืฆื™ื• ื ื›ืคืฃ ื•ื ื›ืคืœ ื–ื” ืขืœ ื–ื”, ื•ืžื›ืกื” ืžืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืืžืชื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืช ื”ืงื‘ื•ืข ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื›ืฉื ืคืชื— ืœืฆื“ ื—ื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื” ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื ื›ืคืฃ ื•ื ื›ืคืœ ื•ืžื›ืกื” ื”ืืžืชื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจื• ืžืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ:",
223
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื.</b> ืืœืžื ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ื•ื“ืœืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืœื•ืงื” ืœืฉืชื™ื:\n\n"
224
+ ],
225
+ [
226
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืžืืœื•, ืจื—ื•ืงื™ื ืงืฆืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจ. ืื•ืชื• ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืกื’ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื™ืคืชื—, ื‘ืฉืœ ืขืชื™ื“, ื•ืžืกืชืžื ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื:",
227
+ "<b>ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื“ ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื• ื•ื‘ื ืœื• ืืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื•:",
228
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš.</b> ืงืกื‘ืจ ื“ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ, ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ืฉื ืžืฆื ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื, ื•ืคื•ืชื— ืืช ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:\n\n"
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "<b>ืชืื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื›ื•ืช:",
232
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ.</b> ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื›ื™ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื”, ืงื ืชื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ, ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ื”ืชื ืฉืฉ, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ. ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื. ื•ืœืื• ืœืžื™ืžืจื ื“ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืœืฆื“ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื›ืš, ืืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื ื”ื—ืœืœ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ื•ื ืžื•ื ื”, ื•ื‘ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืฉืœ ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืฉืฉ ืฉืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืฉืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื” ืชืื™ื ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ. ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื. ื•ืขืœ ืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื—ืžืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ื, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืชืื™ื ืœืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื“ืจื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ ื•ื”ืชื ืฉืฉ ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื—ืžืฉ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืœืฉื›ื”, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื‘ ืฉืฉ ืืœื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื ื”ืชื ืฉื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ, ื•ื”ืชื [ื”ืื—ืจ] ืฉื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื”ืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื•ืฅ ืœื”ื ืขื ื”ืชื ืฉื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉ ืœืฉื›ื•ืช. ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœืฉื›ื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืืœื• ื”ืฉืœืฉ, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืชืื™ื ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
233
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืคืฉืคืฉ.</b> ืœืชื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ืฉื‘ืื•ืชื• ืชื ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืชื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื“ืœื ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš:\n\n"
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฆื™ืขื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจืื•ืช ืžืงื™ืคื™ื ืืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฉืœืฉ ืจื•ื—ื•ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื“ืจื•ื, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื™ืฆื™ืขื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืชื—ืชื™ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื™ื ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ื. ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืชื—ืชื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื” ื—ืžืฉ ื‘ืืžื” ืจื—ื‘ื”, ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืชืงืจื” ืฉืขืœ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืจืฆืคื” ืฉืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื”, ืฉืฉ ื‘ืืžื” ืจื—ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžื™ืฆืจ ื›ืœืคื™ ืžืขืœื”, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืœืคื ื™ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืขืœ ืื•ืชื” ืืžื” ื”ื‘ื•ืœื˜ืช ื”ื™ื• ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข, ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื” ืืžื” ืฉื ื›ื ืก ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืคื ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืจืฆืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื™ืฆืจ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืคื ื™ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื ื™ื— ืจืืฉ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืขืœ ืื•ืชื” ืืžื”, ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืžื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืžืœื›ื™ื ื ื•ืณ:ื•ืณ) ื›ื™ ืžื’ืจืขื•ืช ื ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื‘ืœืชื™ ืื—ื•ื– ื‘ืงื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžื’ืจืข ื•ืžื—ืกืจ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืืžื” ืื—ืจืช ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืžืงื•ื ืœืฉื•ื ื‘ื”ื ืจืืฉื™ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืฆื˜ืจืš ืœืื—ื•ื– ื‘ืงื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ืœืชื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ืจืืฉื™ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช:\n\n"
237
+ ],
238
+ [
239
+ "<b>ื•ืžืกื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืžืขืจื”:",
240
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื™ื ืœื’ื’ื•ืช ื”ืชืื™ื.</b> ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื“ืจืš ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื“ืจืš ื”ื™ืงืฃ, ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืกื™ื‘ื”:",
241
+ "<b>ื•ืœื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืืจื•ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ืขืœื™ื•ืช:",
242
+ "<b>ืžืฉืœืฉืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืื•ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืžื•ืจื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ื‘ื—ื‘ืœ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื• ื‘ืจืื™ื™ืช ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืืœื ืžืชืงื ื™ืŸ ืžื” ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ:\n\n"
243
+ ],
244
+ [
245
+ "<b>ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื”.</b> ืžืื” ืื•ืจืš ื•ืžืื” ืจื•ื—ื‘:",
246
+ "<b>ืื•ื˜ื.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืื˜ื•ื ื•ืกืชื•ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื:",
247
+ "<b>ืืžื” ื›ื™ื•ืจ.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืชืงืจื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื” ืืžื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื˜ื•ื—ื” ื‘ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจืช ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื ื ืื™ื ื ืงืจืืช ื›ื™ื•ืจ:",
248
+ "<b>ื•ืืžืชื™ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื”.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ื”ื ืฉืขื ื•ืช ืขืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื ืกืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืงืจื” ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ืŸ. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื‘ืžื—ื‘ืจืช, ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืœื•ืคื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืชืžื•ื” ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื™ืชื” ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื›ืœ ื ืฉืขืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขื•ื‘ื™ื” ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืกื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ืžืฉื ื›ืœ ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ืืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื–ืงื” ื•ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืงื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืขืœื™ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจื—ื‘ื•ืช ืืœื ื˜ืคื— ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขื‘ื•ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ื”ื™ื• ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืจื—ื™ืง ื”ืชืงืจื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจืช ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื ื ืื™ื, ื•ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื”ืชืงืจื” ืกืžื•ื›ื” ืœื” ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื” ื ืจืื•ืช ื•ื ื™ื›ืจื•ืช ื›ืœ ื›ืš:",
249
+ "<b>ืชืงืจื”.</b> ื”ื ืกืจื™ื ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืืžื”:",
250
+ "<b>ืžืขื–ื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื”ื˜ื™ื˜ ื•ื”ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื”ืกื™ื“ ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื ืกืจื™ืŸ:",
251
+ "<b>ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘.</b> ื˜ืก ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื–ืœ ื—ื“ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืกื™ื™ืฃ ื•ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ื ื— ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžืขืงื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื ื•ื—ื• ื”ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืขืœื™ื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืงืจื ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘ ืฉืžื›ืœื” ื”ืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ืžืฉื:\n\n"
252
+ ],
253
+ [
254
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื.</b> ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—:",
255
+ "<b>ื•ืชื•ื›ื•.</b> ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื”:",
256
+ "<b>ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉืกื•ื’ืจ ืขืœ ื”ืืจื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื•ื—ื•ืช ืฉื ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ืกื™ื ื™. ื˜ืจืง ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ ืกื’ื™ืจื”, ื›ืžื• ื˜ืจื•ืงื™ ื’ืœื™ [ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื›ืดื— ืขืดื]. ืกื™ืŸ, ืกื™ื ื™. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื”, ืืžื”. ื•ืœื ื”ื›ืจื™ืขื• ื‘ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื• ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื ื™ื ืื• ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื—ื•ืฅ, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืขืฉื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื›ื•ืช, ืื—ืช ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื” ื•ืื—ืช ืคื ื™ืžื™ืช, ื•ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืื•ื™ืจ ืืžื”, ืœืงืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืื•ื™ืจ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืืžื”:",
257
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ.</b> ื›ื‘ืจ ืคื™ืจืฉื ื• ืœืขื™ืœ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ, ืืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ืชื ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืฉืœืฉืช ื”ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืคื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืชืœื™ื ื”ืŸ ื”ืชืื™ื. ื•ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืชืื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื, ื›ืื•ืชื” ืฉืฉื ื™ื ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ื•ืฉื ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ื›ื•ืณ, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื ื”ื—ืœืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœื›ื•ืชืœ, ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืžื• ืฉืคื™ืจืฉืชื™ ืœืขื™ืœ:",
258
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ.</b> ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื”, ื•ื”ืื•ืœื ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช ืœืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
259
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื ืฉื’ื•ื ื–ื™ื ืฉื, ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช, ืฉื›ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื•ืžื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœืกื›ื™ื ื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื—ืœืคื™ื:",
260
+ "<b>ืฆืจ ืžืื—ื•ืจื™ื•.</b> ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ื•ืจื—ื‘ ืžืœืคื ื™ื• ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—. ื•ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ืœื™ ื”ืื™ืš, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื”:"
261
+ ]
262
+ ],
263
+ [
264
+ [
265
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื”ืขื–ืจื”, ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ืื•ืชื• ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื ื‘ื ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื•, ื•ื”ื—ืฆืจ ื•ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื•:",
266
+ "<b>ืื•ืจืš ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืข.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
267
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
268
+ "<b>ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื ืงืจืืช ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืขื–ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
269
+ "<b>ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืชื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื.</b> ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืœืขื™ืœ ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืง ื’ืณ:",
270
+ "<b>ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื”.</b> ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืื•ืœื, ื•ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื, ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื•ื—ืœืœื•, ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, ื•ื—ืœืœ ื‘ื™ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืžืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ืชื ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื, ื”ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื” ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื“ืœืขื™ืœ:",
271
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช.</b> ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืขื“ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืฉืœ ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœืœ ืขื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ืงืจื•ื™ ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช:\n\n"
272
+ ],
273
+ [],
274
+ [
275
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื”. ืื“ื ืžื›ืฉืฃ ืฉืฉืžื• ืคืจื•ื” ื‘ื ื” ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื›ืฉืคื•ืช, ื•ื ืงืจืืช ืขืœ ืฉืžื•. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ื›ืชื‘, ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืงื™ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืจืื•ืช ืžืฉื ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื ื”ืจื’ ืฉื:",
276
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื’ื’ื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื ื” ืžื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ื•ืžื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ืœื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื–ื”ื‘, ื›ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”. ื•ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ื”ื‘ืื•ืช ืžื—ืžืช ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–:ื›ืดื“) ื•ืจื—ืฅ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื• ื‘ืžื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื‘ืื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉืืฃ ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ื˜ื”ื•ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ, ื”ืœื›ืš ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื, ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ื•ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ืš ืฉื ื‘ืืžื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืžืขื™ืŸ ืขื™ื˜ื, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื” ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”:",
277
+ "<b>ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืžืขืœื•ืช ืžื’ื•ืœื’ืœื•ืช ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ื•ืช ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื”:\n\n"
278
+ ],
279
+ [
280
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื•ืœื”.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื›ืจื• ืฉื ืขื•ืœื™ ื’ื•ืœื”:",
281
+ "<b>ืื‘ื ืฉืื•ืœ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืขืฅ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ืช ืคืจื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ื™ื•ืžื, ืฉื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืžืคืจื™ืฉื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื‘ื™ืชื• ืœืœืฉื›ืช ืคืจื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ:",
282
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื’ ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื•ื”.</b> ืงื™ืจื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉืœืฉืชืŸ:",
283
+ "<b>ืฉื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื‘ืฆื“ ื”ื—ื•ืœ ืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœ, ื•ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ืœืฉื‘ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ืœืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืืœ ื‘ ื–ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื™ื‘ื•ื ื”ืžืœืš ื“ื•ื“ ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ:"
284
+ ]
285
+ ]
286
+ ],
287
+ "sectionNames": [
288
+ "Chapter",
289
+ "Mishnah",
290
+ "Comment"
291
+ ]
292
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Middot/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,288 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Middot",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Middot",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื.</b> ืœื ืžืคื ื™ ืคื—ื“ ืœืกื˜ื™ื ื•ื’ื ื‘ื™ื, ืืœื ืฉื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื”ื•ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ื•ืฉืžื™ืจื” ื–ื• ืžืฆื•ืชื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืฉื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืชื•ืจื” (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื’ืณ:ืœืดื—) ื•ื”ื—ื•ื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืงื“ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืžืฉืžืจืช ืœืžืฉืžืจืช, ืจืžื– ืœืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ืืฃ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื ื›ืŸ:",
10
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืขืœื™ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื”, ืืจืงื•ื•ืœืดื˜ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ, ื›ืš ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“:",
11
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืงื•ื.</b> ืฉื‘ื›ืดื“ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื [ื ื›ืดื•], ืœืžื–ืจื— ื”ืœื•ื™ื ืฉืฉื”, ืœืฆืคื•ื ื” ืœื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื”, ืœื ื’ื‘ื” ืœื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื”, ื•ืœืืกื•ืคื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื, ืœืคืจื‘ืจ ืœืžืขืจื‘ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœืžืกืœื”, ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคืจื‘ืจ, ื”ืจื™ ื›ืืŸ ื›ืดื“ ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช, ืฉืœืฉื” ืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืœื•ื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืงืจื ืœื ืืžืจ ืืœื ืœื•ื™ื, ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ืžื™ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ืžืดื“:ื˜ืดื•) ื•ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ื ื™ ืฆื“ื•ืง:",
12
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื”.</b> ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื, ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
13
+ "<b>ื•ืืจื‘ืขื”.</b> ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื•:",
14
+ "<b>ืžืชื•ื›ื•.</b> ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
15
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืœืขื–ืจื”. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื”ื™ื•, ืžื•ื“ื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉืžืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื—ืžืฉื”:",
16
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืคื ื•ืชื™ื” ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ืœืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืฉื•ืžืจ ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื‘ืขืžื™ื“ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืคื ื•ืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื”, ื•ืืกืžื›ื•ื” ืืงืจื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืฉื ื™ื ืœืคืจื‘ืจ, ื›ืœืคื™ ื‘ืจ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”:\n\n"
17
+ ],
18
+ [
19
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:\n\n"
20
+ ],
21
+ [
22
+ "<b>ืžืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ื›ื ื™ืกื” ื•ื™ืฆื™ืื”.</b> ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืœื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
23
+ "<b>ืงื™ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘.</b> ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื‘ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืงื™ืคื•ื ื•ืก ืฉืžื•, ื•ืฉืœ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื˜ื“ื™ ืฉืžื•:",
24
+ "<b>ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืฆื•ืจื”.</b> ื›ืฉืขืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ืฆื•ื• ืœื”ื ืžืœื›ื™ ืคืจืก ืœืฆื™ื™ืจ ืฆื•ืจืช ืฉื•ืฉืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืขืœ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืžื•ืจื ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ื•ืฆื™ื™ืจื•ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื–ืจื—:",
25
+ "<b>ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื”.</b> ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ื”ื™ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืคืจื” ืื“ื•ืžื” ื ืฉืจืคืช ืืœื ื‘ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:",
26
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ืžืกืขื“ื™ื”.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื”ืžืกื™ื™ืขื™ื ื•ืกื•ืขื“ื™ื ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืจืฃ ืื•ืชื”:",
27
+ "<b>ืœื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ืœื”ืจ ื”ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื• ืฉืœ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื, ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืจืคื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคืจื”:\n\n"
28
+ ],
29
+ [
30
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉื ืขืฆื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื›ื” ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื ืงืจื ืฉืขืจ ื”ื“ืœืง:",
31
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืฉืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื:",
32
+ "<b> ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืกืคืจ ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ (ืžืดื– ื‘ืณ) ื•ื”ื ื” ืžื™ื ืžืคื›ื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชืฃ ื”ื™ืžื ื™ืช, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืจื•ื ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื™ืžื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืื” ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื‘ื ื‘ื•ืื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื“ืงื™ื ื›ืงืจื ื™ ื—ื’ื‘ื™ื ื•ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืขื™ื ืœืฉืขืจ ื–ื” ื ืขืฉื™ื ื›ืžืœื•ื ืคื™ ืคืš ืงื˜ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืจื™ ืœื”ื ืžื™ื ืžืคื›ื™ื:",
33
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ.</b> ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื•ืžื:",
34
+ "<b>ืคื ื—ืก ื”ืžืœื‘ื™ืฉ.</b> ืžืžื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ืœื‘ื™ืฉ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื”ืคืฉื™ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ืœืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืจ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”:",
35
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื”ืžื ื—ื” ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘, ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื” (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื’-ื™ืดื“) ืขืœ ืžื—ื‘ืช ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืชื™ืขืฉื”, ื ืงืจืืช ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ: "
36
+ ],
37
+ [
38
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื”ื™ื”.</b> ืฉื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ืœืฉืขืจ, ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ืœื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืœืฆื“ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืขืœื™ื™ื” ื‘ื ื•ื™ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ื:",
39
+ "<b>ื•ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื—ื™ืœ.</b> ื‘ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื— ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื™ืœ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื•ื ืœืคื ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื” ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื—ื™ืœ:",
40
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
41
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉืžื“ื•ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“ ืœื”ืชื—ืžื ืฉื ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื™ื—ืคื™ื, ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื”, ื•ืœืืจื‘ืข ืคื™ื ื•ืชื™ื• ื”ื™ื• ืืจื‘ืข ืœืฉื›ื•ืช ืงื˜ื ื•ืช ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:\n\n"
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "<b>ื›ืงื™ื˜ื•ื ื•ืช.</b> ื›ื—ื“ืจื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ืžืœื›ื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื˜ืจืงืœื™ืŸ:",
45
+ "<b>ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืœ.</b> ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืงืฆืชื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ื•ืžืงืฆืชื• ื‘ื—ื•ืœ:",
46
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ.</b> ืจืืฉื™ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื“ืขืช ืื™ื–ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ืื™ื–ื” ื—ื•ืœ ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
47
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ ืงืจื‘ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื˜ืœืื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืงืจื™ื ืœืชืžื™ื“ื™ื, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ื ืžืฉืฉื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื›ืช ื˜ืœืื™ื:",
48
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืขื•ืฉื™ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื’ืจืžื• ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ืฉื:",
49
+ "<b>ืฉืฉืงืฆื•ื ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืงื˜ื™ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉืงืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“ ืงื•ืจื ืœื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช:",
50
+ "<b>ื‘ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”.</b> ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ืจื“ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืจืื” ืงืจื™ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” (ืฉืื—ืจ) [ืฆืดืœ ืฉืชื—ืช] ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื•ืฉื ืžื“ื•ืจื” ืฉืžืชื—ืžื ื‘ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื•ืขืœื” ื•ื ืกืชืคื’, ื•ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ:\n\n"
51
+ ],
52
+ [
53
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ.</b> ื”ืคืชื— ืฉื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื•ื— ืœื—ื™ืœ, ื•ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ืžื• ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื•ื— ืœืขื–ืจื”:",
54
+ "<b>ืคืฉืคืฉ ืงื˜ืŸ.</b> ืฉืขืจ ืงื˜ืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
55
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ ืืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืฉืคืฉ ืœื—ืคืฉ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“ [ืคืจืง ืืณ] ื ื˜ืœ ืืช ื”ืžืคืชื— ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืขื–ืจื” ื•ื›ื•ืณ ืืœื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืืœื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืขืจื‘, ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืžื’ื™ืขื™ื ืœืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืฉื” ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื”ื’ื™ืขื•, ืืœื• ื•ืืœื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœื•ื ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืœื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื”ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื•ื:",
56
+ "<b>ืœื‘ืœื•ืฉ.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื•ื™ื—ืคืฉ, ื•ื‘ืœืฉ:\n\n"
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ื™ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื”, ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื” ืืจืงื•ื•ืœืดื˜ ื‘ืœืขืดื– ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
60
+ "<b>ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ.</b> ืืฆื˜ื‘ืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ ื’ื–ื™ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืงืจืงืข, ื•ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ืงืฆืจื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•:",
61
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘.</b> ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ืœืง ืœืฉื‘ืขื” ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืช ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืข, ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื™ื•ืžื•, ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื:",
62
+ "<b>ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื‘ื—ื•ืจื™ื ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื–ืงื ื ืœืคืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:",
63
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืฉื›ื‘ ืฉื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื˜ื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ, ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืฉื•ืžืจื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื:",
64
+ "<b>ื›ืกืชื•.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช:\n\n"
65
+ ],
66
+ [
67
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื ืขื™ืœื”.</b> ืœื ืขื•ืœ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
68
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ืฉื”ืœื•ื™ื ื˜ืคืœื™ื ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื›ืžื” ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื‘ืณ) ื•ื™ืœื•ื• ืขืœื™ืš ื•ื™ืฉืจืชื•ืš. ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ืฆื•ืฅ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช, ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืœื•ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื”. ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ, ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœื•ื™ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:",
69
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื”, ืฉืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืจื”, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื ื›ืดื˜:ื™ืดื˜) ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื“ืจืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉื•:",
70
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ: ",
71
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื—ื™ืœ ื™ื•ืฆื.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘, ืืœื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืชืžื™ื“, ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื• ืืฆืœ ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœื•, ืฉืืขืดื’ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื—ื ื” ืœื•ื™ื”, ืœื–ื” ื”ืงืœื•, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื˜ืžื ื‘ืคื ื™ื:"
72
+ ]
73
+ ],
74
+ [
75
+ [
76
+ "<b>ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช ืืžื”.</b> ืžื•ืงืฃ ื—ื•ืžื” ืกื‘ื™ื‘:",
77
+ "<b>ืจื•ื‘ื• ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืœืฆื“ ื“ืจื•ื, ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—. ื•ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื•ื—ืง ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืœืฆื“ ืฆืคื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘:\n\n"
78
+ ],
79
+ [
80
+ "<b>ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉืžืืœ.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉืขืจื™ ื—ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉื”ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฉืขืจ ื”ื˜ื“ื™:",
81
+ "<b>ืฉืื ื™ ืื‘ืœ.</b> ื ืฉืืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืžื” ืœืš ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืœืฉืžืืœ, ื•ืืžืจ ืฉืื ื™ ืื‘ืœ, ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื”ืฉื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื–ื” ื™ื ื—ืžืš ื•ื›ื•ืณ:",
82
+ "<b>ืขืฉื™ืชืŸ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ื”ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื›ืŸ, ื ืจืื” ื›ืืœื• ื—ื‘ืจื™ื• ืขื•ื•ืชื• ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื ื™ื“ื•ื”ื• ืฉืœื ื›ื”ืœื›ื”:",
83
+ "<b>ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ืš ืฉืชืฉืžืข ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื‘ื™ืจืš.</b> ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืžืฉืžืข ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืฉืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืชืฉื•ื‘ื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™: "
84
+ ],
85
+ [
86
+ "<b>ืœืคื ื™ื.</b> ืžื—ื•ืžืช ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
87
+ "<b>ืกื•ืจื’.</b> ืžื—ื™ืฆื” ื”ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื›ืžื˜ื” ืžืกื•ืจื’ืช ื‘ื—ื‘ืœื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ืžื“ืคื™ ืขืฅ ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ื•ืงืฆืจื™ื ืฉืžืจื›ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื• ื‘ืืœื›ืกื•ืŸ:",
88
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื–ืจื• ื›ื ื’ื“ื ืฉืœืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืœ ืคืจืฆื” ื•ืคืจืฆื”, ืžืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ืžื•ื“ื” ืขืœ ืื‘ื“ืŸ ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื™ื•ืŸ:",
89
+ "<b>ืœืคื ื™ื.</b> ืžืื•ืชื• ืกื•ืจื’ ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ื—ื™ืœ:",
90
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฉื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขืœื•ืช ืžืฉื ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื:",
91
+ "<b>ืจื•ื ืžืขืœื”.</b> ื›ืœ ืžืขืœื” ืžื”ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžื—ื‘ืจืชื” ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจืงืข ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”:",
92
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœื—ื”.</b> ืžืฉืš ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืžืขืœื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”:",
93
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืœ ืื•ืœื.</b> ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœื ื›ืŸ, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ื’ืณ:",
94
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืคืชื— ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื.</b> ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื” ื•ืจื—ื‘ื• ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
95
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ืœื”ืŸ ืฉืงื•ืคื•ืช.</b> ืื‘ืŸ ืžื•ื ื—ืช ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ืฉื”ื“ืœืช ืฉื•ืงืฃ ืขืœื™ื•. ื•ืฉืงื•ืคื•ืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ:",
96
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ืŸ ื ืก.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื ืคืจืง ื’ืณ [ื“ืฃ ืœืดื— ืขืดื]:",
97
+ "<b>ืžืฆื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช</b> ื›ืžื• ืžื–ื”ื™ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืžืจืื™ืชืŸ ื“ื•ืžื” ืœื–ื”ื‘ ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืœืขืฉื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘:"
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื.</b> ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื ื™ื ื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
101
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื™ื.</b> ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื’ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืืžื”, ืœื‘ื“ ืžืžื” ืฉืขืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื:",
102
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื–ืจื—ื™.</b> ื”ื•ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ืœืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
103
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืฃ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื”ืจ ื”ืžืฉื—ื”.</b> ื”ื•ื ื”ืจ ื”ื–ื™ืชื™ื ืืฉืจ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืžืงื“ื, ื•ืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ื•ืจื•ืื” ืžืขืœ ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ืืช ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ื” ื‘ื“ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื˜:ื“ืณ) ื•ื”ื–ื” ืืœ ื ื•ื›ื— ืคื ื™ ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื”, ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืžื›ื•ื•ื ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื ื–ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื–ื”, ืฉืขืจ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืขืจ ืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื, ื•ืฉืขืจ ืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ืฉืขืจ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืจืื•ืช ืืช ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื”ืจ ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืขื“ ืฉืงืจืงืข ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื” (ืฉืชื™) [ื›ืดื‘ ืืžื•ืช] ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืงืจืงืข ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืืกืงื•ืคืช ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืžืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ืคืชื— ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช [ืฉืชื™] ืืžื•ืช ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืคืชื— ื”ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ, ื•ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ืืช ื”ืคืจื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืจืื•ืช ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชื• ืคืชื—: "
104
+ ],
105
+ [
106
+ "<b>ืื•ืจืš.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
107
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
108
+ "<b>ืงื˜ื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžืงื•ืจื•ืช.</b> ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื”ื ื” ืขืœื” ืงื™ื˜ื•ืจ ื”ืืจืฅ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื˜:ื›ืดื—), ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืขืฉืŸ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืŸ ืชืงืจื”:",
109
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฉืœื—ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ื•ื“.</b> ืœืฉืจืคืŸ ื‘ืืฉ ืฉืชื—ืช ื”ื™ื•ืจื” ืฉืžื‘ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ื” ื”ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืืฉ ืืฉืจ ืชื—ืช ื–ื‘ื— ื”ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
110
+ "<b>ืžืชืœื™ืขื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฆื™ื.</b> ืžืกื™ืจื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชื•ืœืขืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื”:",
111
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื.</b> ืฉืฉื ื”ืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ืœื˜ื”ืจืชืŸ ื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ื›ื ื™ืก ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืคื ื™ื ืœืžืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ืžื‘ืขืจื‘:",
112
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืฉื›ื—ืชื™ ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช.</b> ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ืจื™ืฉื ื›ื•ืœื” ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืงืืžืจ ืœื”, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื“ืžื“ื•ืช ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ื™ื:",
113
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื”.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืžื‘ืดื, ืคืจื•ืฆื”, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื•ืงืคืช ืžื—ื™ืฆื”:",
114
+ "<b>ื›ืฆื•ืฆื˜ืจื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื ื”ืงื™ืคื• ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื ืฉื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ืขืœ ื”ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจื ื•ื”ืื ืฉื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืœืจืื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžื—ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื•ืื‘ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ืงืœื•ืช ืจืืฉ:",
115
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช.</b> ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืงืจืงืข ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืขื–ืจืช ื ืฉื™ื:",
116
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืชืจื•ื˜ื•ืช.</b> ืืจื•ื›ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ ื–ื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ื“ืจืš ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช, ืืœื ืขื’ื•ืœื•ืช ื›ื—ืฆื™ ื’ื•ืจืŸ ืขื’ื•ืœื”: "
117
+ ],
118
+ [
119
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ืคืกืคืกื™ืŸ.</b> ืจืืฉื™ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ื•ืœื˜ื™ื ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืขื–ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
120
+ "<b>ืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื.</b> ื‘ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
121
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืืžื”.</b> ื•ืื•ืจื›ื” ื›ืื•ืจืš ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
122
+ "<b>ื•ื“ื•ื›ืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ื ื‘ื ื•ื™ ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืืฆื˜ื‘ื, ื•ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื“ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžื” ื•ื—ืฆื™:",
123
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ืฆื™ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”.</b> ืฉืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืœื“ื•ื›ืŸ:",
124
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ืžืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืขื“ [ืื—ืจืจื™] ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืงื•ื ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช:",
125
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘.</b> ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
126
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืจื™ื.</b> ื›ื“ืงื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ. ื•ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืฉืขืจื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืœืขื–ืจื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื˜ืขื ืœืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื™ื•ืช, ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืคืจืฆื•ืช ืฉืคืจืฆื• ืžืœื›ื™ ื™ื•ืŸ ื‘ืกื•ืจื’, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื” ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื:"
127
+ ]
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ [
131
+ "<b>ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื”.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืžืจื•ื‘ืข ืขืฉื•ื™ ืžืืจื‘ืข ืงืจืฉื™ื, ื›ืœ ืงืจืฉ ืืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื•ืช, ื•ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืงืจืฉ ืืžื” ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื“ืคื•ืก, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ืžื”ื•ืชืš ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืขืฉื” ืžืงืฉื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื” ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืžื”. ื•ื–ื”ื• ื™ืกื•ื“:",
132
+ "<b>ืขืœื” ืืžื” ื•ื›ื ืก ืืžื”.</b> ืื—ืจ ืฉืขืœื” ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœื’ื•ื‘ื” ืืžื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืื—ืจ ืฉืื•ืจ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื›ืœ ืงืจืฉ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืงืจืฉ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืฉืœ ื“ืคื•ืก ื–ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ื›ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื ื“ื‘ืง ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ื ืขืฉื” ืžืงืฉื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืืžื” ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“. ื•ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ืกื•ื‘ื‘. ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ื ืก ืืžื”, ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชืงืฆืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืจื•ื—. ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืืžื”, ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ื•ืžืžืœืื• ื›ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื ืžืฆื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืŸ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืฆื“, ื•ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ืžืŸ ืžืงื•ื ืžืขืจื›ื” ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืฆื“. ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžื‘ื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืืžื” ืขืœ ืืžื” ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืืžื” ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•ื™ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืžืžืœืื•, ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœืืจื‘ืข ื–ื•ื™ื•ืช:",
133
+ "<b>ืžืงื•ื ื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื”ืœืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช, ืืœื ืžื ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืืžื” ืคื ื•ื™ ืžืžืงื•ื ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช ื•ืœืคื ื™ื ืœื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
134
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ื™ืœื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื”:",
135
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”.</b> ื•ื›ื•ื ืก ื•ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื•ืžืงื•ื ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช ื•ืžืงื•ื ื”ืœื•ืš ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื ืฉืืจ ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื:",
136
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืฉืขืœื• ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื“ืณ ืืžื•ืช ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื ืžืฆื ื™ืกื•ื“ื• ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื, ื•ืžืงื•ื ืžืขืจื›ืชื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข:",
137
+ "<b>ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื‘.</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืœื” ื‘ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ืคืจืง ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
138
+ "<b>ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืžื.</b> ื’ื™ืžืœ ื™ื•ื ื™ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื ื•ืดืŸ ื”ืคื•ื›ื” ืฉืœื ื•. ื•ื”ืชื ืžืคืจืฉ ื“ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื, ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ืœืžืฉื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื“ืจื•ื ื•ืœืžืขืจื‘. ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ื‘ื™ืžื™ ืฉืœืžื”, ื“ืจืฉื•, ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื“ืžื”, ืื˜ื•ื ื›ืื“ืžื” ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื•ืœ, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื ืกื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ื• ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœืจืฆืคื” ื•ืฉื•ืชืชื™ื ืœื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื›ืจื•ื™ ืฉื ืืฆืœ ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืกืžื•ืš ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ื‘ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื•ืจ ืงืœื•ื˜ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืคืชื—ื• ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืœืจืืฉ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื ื’ื“ื• ืœื™ืจื“ ืฉื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื. ืฉื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืชื™ื” ื›ืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžื” ืื›ื™ืœื” ืžืชืขื›ืœืช ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื ืฉืจืคื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ืฉืชื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื ืชื‘ืœืข ื‘ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืงืจื ื“ืžื–ื‘ื— ืื“ืžื”, ื“ืจืฉื™ ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืื“ืžื”, ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื ื ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื›ื™ืคื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช:",
139
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ.</b> ืžืงืจื ื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ (ืžืดื’) ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชื ื‘ื ืขืœ ืžื“ืช ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ื•ืฉืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื:",
140
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืืจื™ืืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื”.</b> ืžื“ื•ืช ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ืงืืžืจ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื”:",
141
+ "<b>ืืœ ืืจื‘ืขืช ืจื‘ืขื™ื•.</b> ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืžืืžืฆืขื™ืชื• ืžื•ื“ื“ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืœื›ืœ ืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข:",
142
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื ื—ื•ื’ืจื• ื‘ืืžืฆืข.</b> ื—ื•ื˜ ืื“ื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื•ื™ ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืืžืฆืขื• ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ื•ื‘ื”ื•, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืžื” ืื—ืช ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืขืœื™ื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืกื•ื‘ื‘:",
143
+ "<b>ืœื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื.</b> ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ืฉื“ืžืŸ ื ื–ืจืง ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืกื™ืงืจื:",
144
+ "<b>ืœื“ืžื™ื ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืœื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžืŸ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ื˜:",
145
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื•ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืืžื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ืื•ืจืš ื”ื“ืจื•ื ื•ืืžื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ืื•ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ืชื•ืคืก ืžื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”, ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืืžื” ืฉื‘ืžื–ืจื— ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ืฉื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืงืจืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื›ืœื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ืืžื” ืœืงืจืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืืžื” ื”ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืจื•ื, ืฉื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื›ืœื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืงืจืŸ ืืžื”. ื•ื ืžืฆืื• ืฉืœืฉ ืงืจื ื•ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื•ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืš ื™ืขืงื‘ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื–ืื‘ ื™ื˜ืจืฃ ื‘ื‘ืงืจ ื™ืื›ืœ ืขื“ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืžืดื˜:ื›ืดื–) ื•ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ืื—ืกื ืชื™ื” ื™ืชื‘ื ื™ ืžืงื“ืฉื, ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื“ืžื™ื ืœื ื™ื”ื ืืœื ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ืขืฉื• ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ื˜ื•ืจืฃ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื“ืžื™ื ื ื™ืชื ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืงืจืŸ. ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื“ืคื•ืก ืžืจื•ื‘ืข ืœื™ืกื•ื“ ืœืžืœืื•ืชื• ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืกื™ื“ ื•ื–ืคืช ื•ืขื•ืคืจืช ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ, ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื™ืžื™ื ืขืฅ ืื• ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ื•ื™ืช ืฉืœ ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืชืžืœื ื”ื–ื•ื™ืช ื”ื”ื™ื, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฉื•ืžื˜ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฅ ื•ื ืฉืืจ ืื•ืชื• ืงืจืŸ ืคื ื•ื™ ื‘ืœื™ ื™ืกื•ื“. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ื”ื—ืœืง ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืกื•ื‘ื‘, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื™ืฃ ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ืงืจื ื•ืช, ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“:\n\n"
146
+ ],
147
+ [
148
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช.</b> ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ ื ืงื‘ื™ื:",
149
+ "<b>ืฉื”ื“ืžื™ื ื”ื ื™ืชื ื™ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช, ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืžืชื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืคืš ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื™:",
150
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื“ืจื•ืžื™.</b> ืฉื™ื™ืจื™ ื”ื“ื ืฉืœ ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื™ื•ืช:",
151
+ "<b>ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืจืš ืื•ืชืŸ ื ืงื‘ื™ื, ื•ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ืžืฉื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ. ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ ื’ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื’ื–ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื–ื‘ืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข:\n\n"
152
+ ],
153
+ [
154
+ "<b>ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื”ืงืจืŸ.</b> ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช:",
155
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื• ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืช.</b> ืœื—ืœืœ ืฉืชื—ืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื:",
156
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื‘ืฉ ื”ื™ื”, ืœื“ืจื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื’ืฉืจ ืžืฉื•ืคืข ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ืžื“ืจื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื• ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœื• ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืณ:ื›ืดื’) ื•ืœื ืชืขืœื” ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—ื™:",
157
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืœ. ื•ืืžื” ืขืœ ืืžื” ื”ื™ื”, ื•ื‘ื›ื‘ืฉ ืขืฆืžื• ืœืžืขืจื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“:",
158
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ื ื‘ื•ื‘ื”, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ื‘ื•ื‘ ืœื—ื•ืช:",
159
+ "<b>ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืขื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื™ืฆืื• ืœื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉืจื™ืคื”:\n\n"
160
+ ],
161
+ [
162
+ "<b>ืžื‘ืงืขืช ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืจื.</b> ื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ:",
163
+ "<b>ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืชื•ืœื”.</b> ืงืจืงืข ืฉืœื ื—ืคืจื• ืฉื ืžืขื•ืœื:",
164
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืคื’ื™ืžื”.</b> ืคื•ืกืœืช ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื, ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœื ื ืคื’ืžื• ื‘ื‘ืจื–ืœ:",
165
+ "<b>ื•ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื‘ืกื™ื“, ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื”:",
166
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืืชื ื ืงืžื, ืืœื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ื‘ื›ืœ ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืžืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื“ืžื™ื:",
167
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืคื™ื.</b> ืืžืœืชื™ื” ื“ืชื ื ืงืžื ืžื”ื“ืจ, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืœื‘ื ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืกื™ื“ ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืฉื ื”, ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืกื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ืคื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ื ืื™ื ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืœืกื•ื“ ื‘ื•: "
168
+ ],
169
+ [
170
+ "<b>ื•ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ื ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืžื™ื“, ื”ืชืงื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื—ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืข ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ืœืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืจืฆืคื” ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืงืฉืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฆื•ืืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ื ื•ืขืฆื™ื ืจืืฉ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืืจืฅ. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
171
+ "<b>ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ื ืกื™ื.</b> ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ ื ืžื•ื›ื™ืŸ:",
172
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืจื–.</b> ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืžืจื•ื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื:",
173
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžื–ืœื’ื•ืช ืื ืฆื™ื ื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
174
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืืจื–, ื•ืชื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
175
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื–ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื–ื• ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ืขืฅ, ืœืชืœื•ืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืื• ืงื˜ื ื”:",
176
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ.</b> ืฉืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืงืจืจ ื•ืžืฆื ืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืฉืœื ื™ืกืจื™ื—:\n\n"
177
+ ],
178
+ [
179
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื™ ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ืจื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” ื•ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”, ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ. ื›ืš ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ื™ ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉืžืฆื ื‘ื ื•ืกื—ืื•ืช ื™ืฉื ื•ืช ืžื“ื•ื™ื™ืงื•ืช. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื”, ืจื•ื, ื’ื•ื‘ื” ื”ืžืขืœื”, ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื”. ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ:",
180
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœื—ื”.</b> ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉืš ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื”ืžืขืœื”, ืฉื–ื”ื• ืžื“ืจืš ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื”ื™ื” ืืžื”. ื•ืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื” ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืืžื” ืืžื” ื“ืงืชื ื™:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ.</b> ืžืขืœื” ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื“ืงืชื ื™, ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ืจืฆืคื”, ื›ืžื• ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ, ืขืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืจืฆืคื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ื‘ืœื ืžืขืœื”, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืœื ืืžืจ ืฉืœื—ื” ืฉืœืฉ, ืืœื ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื•ืจืช ื”ืจืฆืคื”:",
182
+ "<b>ื•ืืžื” ืืžื”.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืขืœื” ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ื•ืฉืฉื™ืช, ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื—ื” ืืžื”:",
183
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœืฉ.</b> ืžืขืœื” ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื”ื™ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช:",
184
+ "<b>ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืืžื” ื•ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืืจื‘ืข.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ, ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืฉืœ ืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืœืื—ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืืžื”, ื”ืžืขืœื” ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื ืžืฆืื• ื›ืœ ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช ืชืฉืข ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืฉืœ ืจืฆืคื” ื—ืœืงื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื“ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื”ืจื™ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืืžื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
185
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืจื•ื‘ื“ ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืขื“ ื”ืื•ืœื. ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืœืกื•ืฃ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืžืชื—ื™ืœื•ืช ื”ืžืขืœื•ืช:\n\n"
186
+ ],
187
+ [
188
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืืžืœืชืจืื•ืช.</b> ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื›ื•ื™ื™ืจื•ืช:",
189
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืžื™ืœืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉื’ื“ืœื™ื ื‘ื• ืขืคืฆื™ื ืฉืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืžื™ืœื™ืŸ. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื˜ื™ืŸ [ื“ืฃ ื™ืดื˜] ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉืžื ื‘ืžื™ ืžื™ืœื™ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ื•:",
190
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืžื•ืฉื›ื‘ืช ืขืœ ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื”ืคืชื— ืœืจื—ื‘ื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืจื—ื‘ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืืžื”, ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืขื•ื“ืคืช ืขืœ ื”ืคืชื— ืืžื” ืžื–ื” ื•ืืžื” ืžื–ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื. ื•ืงื•ืจื” ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉืœืžืขืœื” ื”ื™ืžื ื” ืขื•ื“ืคืช ืขืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืืžื” ืžื–ื” ื•ืืžื” ืžื–ื”, ื ืžืฆื ืืจื›ื” ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื”. ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืฉ, ื•ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื”, ื•ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœืฉื™ื:",
191
+ "<b>ื•ื ื“ื‘ืš.</b> ืฉื•ืจื”. ื›ืžื• ื ื“ื‘ื›ื™ื ื“ื™ ืื‘ืŸ ื’ืœืœ (ืขื–ืจื ื•ืณ:ื“ืณ):",
192
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ื•ืื—ืช.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืืœื• ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื•, ืืœื ืฉื•ืจื” ืฉืœ ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืœื–ื•:\n\n"
193
+ ],
194
+ [
195
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ืขื˜ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ื• ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืœื™ืคื•ืœ ืžื—ืžืช ื’ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœื•ื ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื ืžืฉื›ื™ื ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื” ืœื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื” ืกื•ืžื›ื™ื ืฉื ื™ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืคืœื•:",
196
+ "<b>ื•ืจื•ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื˜ืจื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ:",
197
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืชื ื“ื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ ื•ืจื•ืฆื” ืฉื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืขืฆืžื• ืฉื”ืชื ื“ื‘ ื™ืชื ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื›ื•ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืคื” ื–ื”ื‘, ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืžืื•ืชื• ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉืžืชื ื“ื‘ ื›ื“ืžื•ืช ื’ืจื’ื™ืจ ืื• ืขืœื” ืื• ืืฉื›ื•ืœ ื•ืชื•ืœื” ื‘ื”:",
198
+ "<b>ื•ื ืžื ื• ืขืœื™ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืžื›ื•ื‘ื“ ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืจื•ื‘ื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื”, ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœื˜ืœื˜ืœื” ื•ืœืคื ื•ืชื” ืžืžืงื•ื ืœืžืงื•ื. ื•ื–ื” ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืฉื“ื‘ืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื‘ืื™, ื“ืœืื• ื“ื•ืงื ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื•ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฆื“ื•ืง ืืœื ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉื–ื”ื‘ ื”ืจื‘ื” ื”ืชื ื“ื‘ื• ืฉื:"
199
+ ]
200
+ ],
201
+ [
202
+ [
203
+ "<b>ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ.</b> ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืคื ื™ื. ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื›ืœืคื™ ืคื ื™ื:",
204
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉื›ืœืคื™ ื”ื—ื•ืฅ. ืฉืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ืœืกื•ืฃ ืืžื” ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื• ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืœื™ืžื™ืŸ ื”ืคืชื— ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืฉืžืืœื•, ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ืžื”ืŸ ืจื—ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื•ืช ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• ื•ืกื•ืชืžื•ืช ืจื•ื—ื‘ ื—ืœืœ ื”ืคืชื— ืฉืจื—ื‘ื• ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื ืžื›ืกื•ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ. ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื›ืžื“ื•ืช ืืœื• ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช ืžื›ืกื•ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžืคื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžืคื” ืžืจื•ื—ื‘ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืฉื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื˜ื•ื— ื‘ื–ื”ื‘ ื›ืžื• ืฉืืจ ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื”:",
205
+ "<b>ืืฆื˜ืจืžื™ื˜ื”.</b> ืœื•ื—ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคืจืงื™ื ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ื•ืช, ื•ื”ืŸ ื ืคืชื—ื•ืช, ื•ื›ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ื ื›ืคืคื•ืช ื•ื ื›ืคืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•. ื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืœื—ื•ืฅ ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ื•ืช, ื•ืœืกื•ืฃ ื—ืฆื™ ืืžื” ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉื‘ืคื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžืคืกื™ืงื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช. ื•ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ืžืฉืชื™ ืœื•ื—ื•ืช, ื›ืœ ืœื•ื— ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื•ืžื—ืฆื”, ื•ื›ืฉื ืคืชื— ื”ื“ืœืช ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื—ืฆื™ื• ื ื›ืคืฃ ื•ื ื›ืคืœ ื–ื” ืขืœ ื–ื”, ื•ืžื›ืกื” ืžืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืืžืชื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืช ื”ืงื‘ื•ืข ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื›ืฉื ืคืชื— ืœืฆื“ ื—ื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื” ืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื ื›ืคืฃ ื•ื ื›ืคืœ ื•ืžื›ืกื” ื”ืืžืชื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™ ืฉื ืฉืืจื• ืžืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ:",
206
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืœื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืชื™ื.</b> ืืœืžื ื›ืœ ื“ืœืช ื•ื“ืœืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืœื•ืงื” ืœืฉืชื™ื:\n\n"
207
+ ],
208
+ [
209
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืžืืœื•, ืจื—ื•ืงื™ื ืงืฆืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจ. ืื•ืชื• ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืกื’ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื™ืคืชื—, ื‘ืฉืœ ืขืชื™ื“, ื•ืžืกืชืžื ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื:",
210
+ "<b>ื•ืคืชื— ืืช ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื“ ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื• ื•ื‘ื ืœื• ืืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื•:",
211
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš.</b> ืงืกื‘ืจ ื“ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ, ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ืฉื ืžืฆื ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื, ื•ืคื•ืชื— ืืช ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ:\n\n"
212
+ ],
213
+ [
214
+ "<b>ืชืื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื›ื•ืช:",
215
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ.</b> ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื›ื™ ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื”, ืงื ืชื ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ, ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื—ืžืฉ, ื•ื”ืชื ืฉืฉ, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ. ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื. ื•ืœืื• ืœืžื™ืžืจื ื“ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืœืฆื“ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื›ืš, ืืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื ื”ื—ืœืœ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ื•ื ืžื•ื ื”, ื•ื‘ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืฉืœ ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื•ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืฉืฉ ืฉืœ ื”ืชื ื•ืฉืฉ ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชื, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื” ืชืื™ื ื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ. ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ื‘ื“ืจื•ื. ื•ืขืœ ืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื—ืžืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ื, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืชืื™ื ืœืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ืœื“ืจื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ ื•ื”ืชื ืฉืฉ ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื—ืžืฉ, ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืœืฉื›ื”, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื‘ ืฉืฉ ืืœื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื ื”ืชื ืฉื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ, ื•ื”ืชื [ื”ืื—ืจ] ืฉื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ื”ืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื•ืฅ ืœื”ื ืขื ื”ืชื ืฉื‘ื• ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืœืฉ ืœืฉื›ื•ืช. ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืœืฉื›ื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืืœื• ื”ืฉืœืฉ, ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืชืื™ื ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
216
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืคืฉืคืฉ.</b> ืœืชื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ืฉื‘ืื•ืชื• ืชื ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืกืชื ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืชื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื“ืœื ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ืขื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš:\n\n"
217
+ ],
218
+ [
219
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฆื™ืขื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื’ื–ื•ื–ื˜ืจืื•ืช ืžืงื™ืคื™ื ืืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืฉืœืฉ ืจื•ื—ื•ืช ืžืขืจื‘ ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื“ืจื•ื, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื™ืฆื™ืขื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืชื—ืชื™ื™ื ืฉื ื™ื™ื ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ื. ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื—ืžืฉ ื‘ืืžื” ืจื—ื‘ื”, ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืชืงืจื” ืฉืขืœ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืจืฆืคื” ืฉืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื”, ืฉืฉ ื‘ืืžื” ืจื—ื‘ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžื™ืฆืจ ื›ืœืคื™ ืžืขืœื”, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืœืคื ื™ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืขืœ ืื•ืชื” ืืžื” ื”ื‘ื•ืœื˜ืช ื”ื™ื• ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข, ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื” ืืžื” ืฉื ื›ื ืก ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืคื ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืจืฆืคื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช, ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื™ืฆืจ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืœืคื ื™ื ืืžื” ืื—ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื ื™ื— ืจืืฉ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืขืœ ืื•ืชื” ืืžื”, ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืœื˜ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื”, ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ื™ืฆื™ืข ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ืืžื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืžืœื›ื™ื ื ื•ืณ:ื•ืณ) ื›ื™ ืžื’ืจืขื•ืช ื ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื‘ืœืชื™ ืื—ื•ื– ื‘ืงื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžื’ืจืข ื•ืžื—ืกืจ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืชื™ื›ื•ื ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืืžื” ืื—ืจืช ื‘ืจื•ื‘ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืžืงื•ื ืœืฉื•ื ื‘ื”ื ืจืืฉื™ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืจื•ื‘ื“, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืฆื˜ืจืš ืœืื—ื•ื– ื‘ืงื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ืœืชื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ืจืืฉื™ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช:\n\n"
220
+ ],
221
+ [
222
+ "<b>ื•ืžืกื‘ื”.</b> ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืžืขืจื”:",
223
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื™ื ืœื’ื’ื•ืช ื”ืชืื™ื.</b> ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื“ืจืš ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื•ื™ื•ืจื“ ื“ืจืš ื”ื™ืงืฃ, ืงืจื•ื™ ืžืกื™ื‘ื”:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ืœื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืืจื•ื‘ื•ืช ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ืขืœื™ื•ืช:",
225
+ "<b>ืžืฉืœืฉืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืื•ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืžื•ืจื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ื‘ื—ื‘ืœ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื• ื‘ืจืื™ื™ืช ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืืœื ืžืชืงื ื™ืŸ ืžื” ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ:\n\n"
226
+ ],
227
+ [
228
+ "<b>ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื”.</b> ืžืื” ืื•ืจืš ื•ืžืื” ืจื•ื—ื‘:",
229
+ "<b>ืื•ื˜ื.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืื˜ื•ื ื•ืกืชื•ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืชืœื™ื:",
230
+ "<b>ืืžื” ื›ื™ื•ืจ.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืชืงืจื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื” ืืžื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื˜ื•ื—ื” ื‘ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจืช ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื ื ืื™ื ื ืงืจืืช ื›ื™ื•ืจ:",
231
+ "<b>ื•ืืžืชื™ื™ื ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื”.</b> ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ื”ื ืฉืขื ื•ืช ืขืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ืœืคื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื ืกืจื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืงืจื” ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ืŸ. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื‘ืžื—ื‘ืจืช, ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืœื•ืคื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืชืžื•ื” ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื™ืชื” ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืฉื”ื›ืœ ื ืฉืขืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขื•ื‘ื™ื” ืืžื” ืื—ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืกื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ืžืฉื ื›ืœ ื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื” ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืจื—ื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื™ ืืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื–ืงื” ื•ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืงื‘ืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืขืœื™ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจื—ื‘ื•ืช ืืœื ื˜ืคื— ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช ืฆืจื™ื›ื•ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขื‘ื•ืช ื™ื•ืชืจ. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ื”ื™ื• ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืืžื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืจื—ื™ืง ื”ืชืงืจื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ืจืช ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื ื ืื™ื, ื•ืื ื”ื™ืชื” ื”ืชืงืจื” ืกืžื•ื›ื” ืœื” ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฆื™ื•ืจื™ื” ื ืจืื•ืช ื•ื ื™ื›ืจื•ืช ื›ืœ ื›ืš:",
232
+ "<b>ืชืงืจื”.</b> ื”ื ืกืจื™ื ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืืžื”:",
233
+ "<b>ืžืขื–ื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื”ื˜ื™ื˜ ื•ื”ืื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื”ืกื™ื“ ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื ืกืจื™ืŸ:",
234
+ "<b>ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘.</b> ื˜ืก ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื–ืœ ื—ื“ ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืกื™ื™ืฃ ื•ื’ื‘ื”ื• ืืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ื ื— ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžืขืงื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื ื•ื—ื• ื”ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืขืœื™ื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืงืจื ื›ืœื” ืขื•ืจื‘ ืฉืžื›ืœื” ื”ืขื•ืจื‘ื™ื ืžืฉื:\n\n"
235
+ ],
236
+ [
237
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื.</b> ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—:",
238
+ "<b>ื•ืชื•ื›ื•.</b> ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ืืžื”:",
239
+ "<b>ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉืกื•ื’ืจ ืขืœ ื”ืืจื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื•ื—ื•ืช ืฉื ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ืกื™ื ื™. ื˜ืจืง ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ ืกื’ื™ืจื”, ื›ืžื• ื˜ืจื•ืงื™ ื’ืœื™ [ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื›ืดื— ืขืดื]. ืกื™ืŸ, ืกื™ื ื™. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื–ื”, ืืžื”. ื•ืœื ื”ื›ืจื™ืขื• ื‘ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื• ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืคื ื™ื ืื• ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื—ื•ืฅ, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืขืฉื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืชื™ ืคืจื•ื›ื•ืช, ืื—ืช ื—ื™ืฆื•ื ื” ื•ืื—ืช ืคื ื™ืžื™ืช, ื•ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืื•ื™ืจ ืืžื”, ืœืงืœื•ื˜ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ ืื•ื™ืจ ืžืงื•ื ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืืžื”:",
240
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉ.</b> ื›ื‘ืจ ืคื™ืจืฉื ื• ืœืขื™ืœ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ, ืืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ืชื ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉืงืจื•ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื ืขื ื”ืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื ื•ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื•ืช. ื•ืฉืœืฉืช ื”ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืคื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืชืœื™ื ื”ืŸ ื”ืชืื™ื. ื•ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืชืื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื, ื›ืื•ืชื” ืฉืฉื ื™ื ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ื•ืฉื ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืžืกื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ื›ื•ืณ, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืขื ื”ื—ืœืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœื›ื•ืชืœ, ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืžื• ืฉืคื™ืจืฉืชื™ ืœืขื™ืœ:",
241
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ.</b> ืฉื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ื™ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืืžื”, ื•ื”ืื•ืœื ืขืฉืจ ืืžื•ืช ืœืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
242
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื ืฉื’ื•ื ื–ื™ื ืฉื, ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื—ืœื™ืคื•ืช, ืฉื›ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื•ืžื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœืกื›ื™ื ื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื—ืœืคื™ื:",
243
+ "<b>ืฆืจ ืžืื—ื•ืจื™ื•.</b> ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ื•ืจื—ื‘ ืžืœืคื ื™ื• ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—. ื•ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ืœื™ ื”ืื™ืš, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืžืื” ืขืœ ืžืื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืฉื•ื”:"
244
+ ]
245
+ ],
246
+ [
247
+ [
248
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื”ืขื–ืจื”, ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ืื•ืชื• ื”ื™ืงืฃ ื ื‘ื ื” ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ื•, ื•ื”ื—ืฆืจ ื•ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื•:",
249
+ "<b>ืื•ืจืš ืžืื” ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืข.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ืจื— ืœืžืขืจื‘:",
250
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืจื•ื—ื‘ ืžืื” ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉ.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืคื•ืŸ ืœื“ืจื•ื:",
251
+ "<b>ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื ืงืจืืช ืขื–ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ืžืงื•ื ื“ืจื™ืกืช ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืขื–ืจืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
252
+ "<b>ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฉืชื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื™ื.</b> ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืœืขื™ืœ ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืง ื’ืณ:",
253
+ "<b>ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื”.</b> ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ืื•ืœื, ื•ื—ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื, ื•ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ, ื•ื—ืœืœื•, ื•ืืžื” ื˜ืจืงืกื™ืŸ, ื•ื—ืœืœ ื‘ื™ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืžืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ืชื ื•ื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ืชื, ื”ื›ืœ ืžืื” ืืžื” ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื“ืœืขื™ืœ:",
254
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช.</b> ืžื›ื•ืชืœ ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืขื“ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืฉืœ ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืื—ืช ืขืฉืจื” ืืžื” ืฉืœ ื—ืœืœ ืขื ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ืงืจื•ื™ ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ืคื•ืจืช:\n\n"
255
+ ],
256
+ [],
257
+ [
258
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื”. ืื“ื ืžื›ืฉืฃ ืฉืฉืžื• ืคืจื•ื” ื‘ื ื” ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื›ืฉืคื•ืช, ื•ื ืงืจืืช ืขืœ ืฉืžื•. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ื›ืชื‘, ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืงื™ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืจืื•ืช ืžืฉื ื”ื™ืืš ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื ื”ืจื’ ืฉื:",
259
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื’ื’ื” ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื ื” ืžื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื–ื”ื‘ ืœื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ื•ืžื‘ื’ื“ื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ืœื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื–ื”ื‘, ื›ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืงื•ื“ืฉืช ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ืขื–ืจื”. ื•ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื•ืช ื”ื‘ืื•ืช ืžื—ืžืช ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–:ื›ืดื“) ื•ืจื—ืฅ ืืช ื‘ืฉืจื• ื‘ืžื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื‘ืื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ื™ืคื•ืจื™ื ืฉืืฃ ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ื˜ื”ื•ืจ ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ, ื”ืœื›ืš ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื™ื, ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ื•ืžืขื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ืš ืฉื ื‘ืืžื” ื”ื‘ืื” ืžืขื™ืŸ ืขื™ื˜ื, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื” ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื˜ื‘ื™ืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”:",
260
+ "<b>ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืžืขืœื•ืช ืžื’ื•ืœื’ืœื•ืช ื•ืกื•ื‘ื‘ื•ืช ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœื’ื’ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจื•ื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืกื™ื‘ื”:\n\n"
261
+ ],
262
+ [
263
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื•ืœื”.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื›ืจื• ืฉื ืขื•ืœื™ ื’ื•ืœื”:",
264
+ "<b>ืื‘ื ืฉืื•ืœ ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ืขืฅ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ืช ืคืจื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ื™ื•ืžื, ืฉื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ืžืคืจื™ืฉื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื‘ื™ืชื• ืœืœืฉื›ืช ืคืจื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ:",
265
+ "<b>ื•ื’ื’ ืฉืœืฉืชืŸ ืฉื•ื”.</b> ืงื™ืจื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ืœืฉืœืฉืชืŸ:",
266
+ "<b>ืฉื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ื‘ืฆื“ ื”ื—ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืœ, ื•ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ืœืฉื‘ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ืœืžืœื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืืœ ื‘ ื–ืณ:ื™ืดื—) ื•ื™ื‘ื•ื ื”ืžืœืš ื“ื•ื“ ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ:"
267
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid",
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+ "versionTitle": "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื™ื“",
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+ "text": [
22
+ [
23
+ [
24
+ "ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ โ€“ because of the honor, and it is greatness to the Temple that it should not be without guards/watchmen, and three places we derive as it is written (Numbers 3:38): โ€œThose who were to camp before the Tabernacle, in front, before the Tent of Meeting, on the east โ€“ were Moses and Aaron and his sons, attending to the duties of the sanctuary, as a duty on behalf of the Israelites...],โ€ those who guard from one watch to another, which is a hint to three divisions of duty for priests [and Levites] in three places, but just as we find in the Tabernacle that the Kohanim, Aaron and his sons were guarding in it in three places, even so too in the Temple.",
25
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช โ€“ [According to the Jerusalem Talmud, Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Halakhah 5, the chamber of the House of Avtinas (see also Tractate Shekalim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1 and Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Mishnah 5 concerning facts about this clan) was in the southern part of the Temple courtyard by the side of the Water Gate โ€“ which was the gate where they would enter on the holiday of Sukkot with a flask of water that was drawn from the Shiloah spring fo the libations on the altar, but according to the Talmud, Tractate Yoma 19a, there were doubts as to where this chamber was โ€“ in the south or in the north, which is the preference of this commentary to the Mishnah] โ€“ that were built on the side of the gates of the Temple courtyard.",
26
+ "ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ (young priests, or possibly โ€œarchersโ€) โ€“ children; the Aramaic Targum/translation is ืจื‘ื™ื /child. Another explanation: ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ/ those who shoot arrows with bows, from the language of {Genesis 21:20): โ€œ[God was with the boy (i.e., Ishmael) and he grew up; he dwelt in the wildeness] and became a bowman.โ€",
27
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ืคื” โ€“ there was nothing over the bulding of the House of the Hearth other than a [round] arch, AREUVLETU in the foreign language, made m the earth.",
28
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ (was surrounded with stone pavements) โ€“ colonnades/porticos surrounding, [made] of hewn stones that were sunk in the wall and came out from the wall into the House of the Hearth/ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ to the side of the ground, and on top of them were other stones, shorter than them that also came out from the wall. And they were similar to steps one on top of the other.",
29
+ "ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ โ€“ the division for duty of priests and Levites/guard that was divided into seven priestโ€™s divisions corresponding to the days of the week, each one serves on his day, and the elders of the priestโ€™s division of that day would sleep there on those paved level spaces between steps in the Temple hall.",
30
+ "ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” (fledgling priests) โ€“ young boys whose hair begins to sprout, and they were guards.",
31
+ "ื›ืกืชื• โ€“ the language of pillows and cushions.",
32
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ โ€“ there were not able to lie down there on the beds but rather on the ground in the manner of those who guard the courtyards of the kings.",
33
+ "ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ corresponding to their heads, but not actually under their heads, because there are the clothes of the Kohen that have in them Kilayim/mixture of linen and wool, as for example, the belt, and it is not permitted to use them other than at the time of [Divine] service.",
34
+ "ื•ืžืชื›ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืขืฆืžืŸ โ€“ in weekday clothing.",
35
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase)- in a cavity/cave that goes underneath the Temple, for the cavity was underneath the Sanctuary, and the entire Sanctuary is called ื‘ื™ืจื” /the chosen Divine residence/the Temple, as it is written (I Chronicles 29:19 โ€“ the verse is slightly misquoted by Rabbi Obadiah of Bertinoro in the printed editions: He writes: ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™ โ€“ whereas the correct quote is:ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™ ): โ€œand to build this temple for which I have made provision.โ€ But because he was one to whom a nocturnal emission/pollution had occurred, he would not walk on the path of the Temple courtyard, but rather on he path of the cavities/caves, for he holds that these cavities were not sanctified.",
36
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ in the cavity/cave from this side and that side.",
37
+ "ื•ืžื“ื•ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื โ€“ hat the Kohen would warm himself in it after he immersed [in a ritual bath].",
38
+ "ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• โ€“ that no person who enter in it ever all the while that his fellow was there.",
39
+ "ืžืฆืื• ื ืขื•ืœ โ€“ this is his sign that there is a person there, and he would not enter.",
40
+ "ื ืกืชืคื’ โ€“ wiped off the water that was on his skin.",
41
+ "ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื• โ€“ in the house of the Hearth.",
42
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื โ€“ he would leave and go outside, because one who has immersed [in a Mikveh] must wait for sunset to be perfectly clean โ€“ see Leviticus 22:7) is sent off outside of the Temple courtyard, as we stated in these matters that every person who had a flux, including one with a nocturnal emission."
43
+ ],
44
+ [
45
+ "ืœืชืจื•ื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ the removal of the ashes from the Altar (see Leviticus 6:3).",
46
+ "ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ โ€“ for no person enters the Temple courtyard to perform Divine service, even if he is ritually pure, until he immerses [in a ritual bath].",
47
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืื™ื–ื• ืฉืขื” ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื (superintendent/deputy/officer) -meaning to say, is there a fixed time for the coming of the superintendent/officer, for it is stated that he (i.e., the Kohen) would get up early and immerse [in a ritual bath] prior to the arrival of the superintendent, but rather, definitely there was no fixed time for his arrival, for all of the times were not equal, for sometimes he would come from the crowing of the cock (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Mishnah 8), etc., but therefore, whomever wanted to remove the ashes would wake up whenever he could, and afterwards, the superintendent would come and he would knock on them, to those who were in the House of the Hearth, and they would open it for him.",
48
+ "ืžืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ โ€“ there are those who interpret It as the calling of the rooster, and there are those who interpret that [an individual] would customarily call [to the Kohanim] near the rising of the sun [saying: โ€œArise Kohanim to your Divine serviceโ€].",
49
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1) โ€“ all of those to whom they would give a white [slip of paper] to remove the ashes from the Altar, would immerse prior to the superintendentโ€™s coming and afterwards they would take a lottery between them, and the one to which the lottery comes (i.e., the one who wins) goes up and removes the ashes. And the order of the lottery and its actions is explained in Tractate Yoma, Chapter 2."
50
+ ],
51
+ [
52
+ "ืคืฉืคืฉ (wicket) โ€“ small opening that is within the body of the lare opening, and through it they wouold enter from the House of the Hearth to the Temple courtyard.",
53
+ "ืืœื• โ€“ they would walk in the parlor/covered place in front of the house in the Temple courtyard in the eastern direction. For the parlors/recesses were around the Temple courtyard from the inside, with pillars going out beyond the walls of the Temple courtyard, and from the pillars until the walls of the Temple courtyard, there was overhanging boughs/twigs on top of them and they are called in the foreign language PRITIKAN (i.e., Porticos), and from the pillars towards the outside it was without overhanging boughs/twigs, and he Altar was in a place without overhanging boughs. And they were divided into two divisions/parties, in order that they would check and see all of the sacred vessels, that all of them will be in their places in peace. And they would walk on the parlors that were made in the northern direction, these walk on it on the eastern half and those walk on it on the half of he western side until they come in contact with each other in the place where they make the cakes of the meal of offering of the High Priest, who would bring each day half of it in the morning and half of It in the evening (see Leviticus 6:13-14 and Tractate Menahot, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5), and this was near the Nicanor Gate, and there they would say โ€œShalomโ€ to each other, everything is โ€œpeace/Shalom,โ€ meaning to say, we found all of the utensils in peace and no utensil was missing."
54
+ ],
55
+ [
56
+ "ื”ื–ื”ืจ ืฉืœ ืชื’ืข ื‘ื›ืœื™ โ€“ in the coal-pan which is a sacred vessel, for a person is not permitted to draw close to the Altar nor to any [Divine] Service until he sanctifies his hands and his feet.",
57
+ "ื‘ืžืงืฆื•ืข (corner) โ€“ in the corner-piece.",
58
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ โ€“ this was the name of the High Priest who made the wheel work (a machine for sinking the wash basin (the laver for the Kohanim in the Temple courtyard) into the well (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnah 10 and Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 8). It was a revolving wheel that through it the wash basin was sunk into the cistern, so that their waters would not be invalidated/unfit for use by being kept overnight, because anything that was sanctified in a sacred vessel is invalidated/unfit for use by being kept overnight, but when the wash basin was sunk into the cistern, its waters were not invalidated. But Maimonides states, that the wheel work which is a utensil surrounding the wash basin, that was not sanctified in the Temple vessel, and there they would leave the water at night in order that it not become sanctified and would be invalidated overnight.",
59
+ "ืžื”ืื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช (the thoroughly lighted coals in the center) โ€“ the coals that are in the center of the fire that were well consumed/burned up to be ashes.",
60
+ "ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฆืคื” (he heaped up the cinders on the pavement) โ€“ because it is written (Leviticus 6:3): \"ื•ืฉืžื•\" /โ€[and he shall take up the ashes to which the ffire has reduced the burnt offering on the altar] and place them beside the altar,โ€ and we expound [Tractate Temurah 34a], โ€œand place themโ€ โ€“ all of it, and โ€œplace themโ€ โ€“ so that it should not scatter."
61
+ ]
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ [
65
+ "ืจืื•ื”ื• ืื—ื™ื• โ€“ to him that removed the ashes on the altar.",
66
+ "ืฉื™ืจื“ โ€“ from the a;tar amd [it the coals on the eastern side.",
67
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจืฆื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืงื“ืฉื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื โ€“ in order to perform the Divine Service.",
68
+ "ืกื•ื ืงื™ื (press them) โ€“ remove them, from the language of shaking and moving about. And similarly, like a stuffed goat {Tractate Pesahim 3b], a goat that is tired as a result of the shaking and the goring that they gore one another, even here, they stuff/choke from the movements and they turn them over in the water pipes to the sides of the altar.",
69
+ "ื‘ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ (on the circuit by the ramp) โ€“ meaning to say on the ramp, that is opposite the circuit (i.e., a sort of gallery around the altar for the Kohen to walk on)."
70
+ ],
71
+ [
72
+ "ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคืจ โ€“ afer they had piled up [the ato th sides or to surround the limbs and fat-pieces that had not been consumed, they would pull the ashes with trowels that were in their hands and bring them up to the pile (i.e., the place on the altar where the ashes were piled up, like a kind of large pile of ashes that was in the center of the altar heaped up and made like an apple.",
73
+ "ืคืขืžื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ an exaggeration is taught, for never did they leave three hundred Kor to be upon it.",
74
+ "ื•ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• โ€“ they would not removethe ashes outside, even thogh it was a great deal on the altar.",
75
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ so that it would appear that there were man sacrifices on the altar.",
76
+ "ืžื™ืžื™ื• ืœื ื ืชืขืฆืœ โ€“ meaning to say, that which was so many ashes, not on account of the laziness of the Kohanim, but rather as an ornament and to demonstrate that many sacrifices were offeed on the altar."
77
+ ],
78
+ [
79
+ "ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ืจื™ืŸ (heaping up pieces of wood) โ€“ two long and planed wood they would put into the length of the pile of wood in the altar, as it is written (Leviticus 6:5): โ€œevery morning the priest shall feed wood to it,โ€ which teaches that it requires two pieces of wood (e.g., the word ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ in the verse is in the plural).",
80
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื” โ€“ as it is taught (in this Mishnah): โ€œthey began heaping up pieces of woodโ€ plainly/undefined, and it doesnโ€™t explain from what species of tree were these pieces of wood. And it responds, affirmatively, meaning to say, that everything is valid except for olives and [grape] vines, which ae prohibited because of the cultivation of the land of Israel because they are laden with fruit/produce. But there are those who state the reason because they ae made into ashes immediately.",
81
+ "ืžื•ืจื‘ื™ื•ืช (boughs) โ€“ branches of fig-trees, and especially bad fig-trees, that donโ€™t produce fruit.",
82
+ "ืขืฅ ืฉืžืŸ โ€“ that makes the oil of the balsam tree. But I heard that it is a tree that they call PINO in the foreign language, and TZINUBOR in Arabic. But even though it is an eatable tree, there is no need like that of the vine and the olive, therefore, they did not forbid it because of the of the settlement of the land of Israel, in the manner that they forbade the vine and the olive."
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” โ€“ because there is another pile of wood on the altar in the Temple, they called this the large pile of wood. There were three piles of wood on the altar every day, the first was the large pile of wood where they would burn on it the daily [morning] offering/ืชืžื™ื“; and the second was a lesser pile than it which was called the pile of wood of the incense, that they take from it coals with a coal-pan for the incense which they offer in the morning and at twilight, and third is not used a all other than for the establishment of the fire, as it is written (Leviticus 6:5): โ€œThe fire on the altar shall be kept burning, [not to go out],โ€ this is the pile for the establishment of the fire.",
86
+ "ื•ื—ื–ื™ืชื” ืžื–ืจื—ื” โ€“ its appearance which is the opening and the window of he pile of wood on the altar, to the eastern side of the altar.",
87
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ื’ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ the insides were long until they would touch the โ€œappleโ€/place on the altar where the ashes were piled up.",
88
+ "ืืช ื”ืืœื™ืชื (wood of the fig tree, used as kindling wood on the altar) โ€“ they insert dried branches/twigs used for fuel and thin chips between the big pieces to kindle the fire. And the word ืืœื™ืชื is the language of tail/fat-tail, named for the tails of the fire-brands."
89
+ ],
90
+ [
91
+ "ื‘ืจืจื• ืžืฉื โ€“ from between the place of he wood.",
92
+ "ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื (an amount of five Seah of cinders) โ€“ in that pile on the altar of incense like five Seah of burning coals, that from them he would take coals out with a pan (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 4, Mishnah 4) for the needs of the incense.",
93
+ "ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ โ€“ like by mere estimate/sight (ื‘ืื•ืžื“).",
94
+ "ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืื™ื โ€“ because they need more burning coal for the two dishes/censers of frankincense of the show-bread [on the table of the Sanctuary], that they would offer up as incense from one Shabbat to the next.",
95
+ "ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืžืขืจื›ื” โ€“ and they would be burned there on the sides of the large pile of wood on the altar.",
96
+ "ื•ื‘ืื• ืœื”ื ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช โ€“ to perform the lotteries."
97
+ ]
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ [
101
+ "ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื• โ€“ take an allotment [by counting out a certain number on the raised fingers of those among whom a decision is to be made]. This is the lottery that is explained in chapter 2 of [Tractate] Yoma [Mishnah 2].",
102
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื•ื—ื˜ โ€“ even though ritual slaughtering is ritually permitted by a non-Kohen (literally, โ€œforeignerโ€), for it is the beginning of the Divine Service of the daily offering and is beloved to them, for if they donโ€™t take an allotment, they will come to quarrel about it and they will come to danger (i.e., loss of life).",
103
+ "ืžื™ ื–ื•ืจืง โ€“ who receives the blood, he is the one who sprinkles, for the essence of the sacrifice is the sprinkling, and for that reason, it (i.e., the Mishnah) took it.",
104
+ "ืžื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ โ€“ the person who clears the ashes from the inner court is he one who offers the incense. And since the removal of the ashes is the beginning of the Divine Service of incense, it (i.e., the Mishnah) took it. And similarly, the removal of ashes from the Menorah/candelabrum is the beginning of the kindling [of the Menorah]. And the removal of the ashes of the inner altar and the Menorah would precede the slaughtering of the daily offering. But that it (i.e., the Mishnah) mentions in the order of the allotment โ€“ the slaughtering and sprinkling at the opening clause is beause they are the essence of the Divine Service.",
105
+ "ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ โ€“ the tail.",
106
+ "ื”ื—ื–ื” โ€“ all [the permitted fat] that sees the ground.",
107
+ "ื•ื”ื’ืจื” โ€“ the place where it ruminates/chews the cud, is [in] the neck, and through it, the windpipe is attached with the liver and the heart.",
108
+ "ื–ื›ื” ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” โ€“ he who won the allotment sprinkles the blood and the one nearest him slaughters. But even though the slaughtering precedes the reception of the blood, nevertheless, because the Divine Service of the sprinkling is greater than the slaughtering, for the slaughtering is ritually permitted by a non-Kohen (literally, โ€œforeignerโ€), which is not the case regarding the sprinkling, therefore, the one who is first found worthy (i.e., โ€œthe winnerโ€), when the allotment arrives to him in sprinkling, and he second nearest him in slaughtering, and the third who removes the ashes from inner altaer and offers the incense, and the fourth removes the ashes of he candelabrum and kindles the lights, and the fifth raises up the head and leg for the lamb, and the sixth the two hands, and the seventh, the tail, which are the tail and the foot, and eighth is the breast and the chewing of the cud/ruminant, and the ninth โ€“ the two walls, and the tenth, the insides, and the eleventh, the fine flour of the meal offering of the libations, which is offered with the daily offering, and the twelfth are the sort of cakes of the High Priest, and the thirteenth is the wine of libations. All of these thirteen Kohanim leave with one allotment that is described in chapter two of Tractate Yoma (Mishnah 2)."
109
+ ],
110
+ [
111
+ "ืฆืื• ื•ืจืื• โ€“ on the high place that they had in the Temple.",
112
+ "ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” โ€“ for ritual slaughtering is disqualified at night, as it states (Leviticus 19:6): โ€œIt shall be eaten on the day/ื‘ื™ื•ื that you sacrifice it, [or on the day following],โ€",
113
+ "ื‘ืจืงืื™ โ€“ the morning light shines and has broken through from end to end.",
114
+ "ื”ืื™ืจ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื— (the whole eastern horizon is light) โ€“ that he would not say anything until the entire eastern horizon is lightm, for it is not enough tha it is light only like a point, and the Halakha is according to Mattia ben Shmuel.",
115
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ โ€“ those who are standing below ask him, has the light reached Hebron? And he answers, โ€œyes,โ€ And in order to mention the merit of the forefathers that are buried in Hebron we say this."
116
+ ],
117
+ [
118
+ "ืžืฉืœื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื โ€“ the chamber/office where the lambs of the daily offering/ืชืžื™ื“ were.",
119
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ of those who take fine flour for meal offering and wine for libations, for they would go near the superintendent appointed over the seals and give him the money according to the libations that he requires, and he gives him a seal and he brings the seal to the superintendent over the libations and he receives from him libations. And the chamber that the superintendent sits in is called the chamber of the seals. And in Tractate Shekalim (see Chapter 5, Mishnah 3), it explains that there four seals in the Temple and it was written on them: โ€œcalf, ram, kid and sinnerโ€ When he brings the seal that is written on it, โ€œcalf,โ€ it is known that he gave money for the libations of a bull. [When he brings the seal that is written on it] โ€œram,โ€ it is known that he gave money for the libations of a ram, for the Aramaic translation of a ram is ื“ื›ืจื /male of the flock (ram). [When he brings the seal that is written on it], โ€œkid,โ€ it is known that he brought the money for the libations of a lamb. [When he brings the seal that is written on it], โ€œsinner,โ€ it is known that he brought the money for the libations for a leper.",
120
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ on account of the fire that is always burning there."
121
+ ],
122
+ [
123
+ "ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ ื›ืกืฃ ื•ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ it is not explained why it was necessary for the number of these utensils. But in the Jerusalem Talmud in the Tractate Hagigah, they said that it corresponds to the ninety-three mentionings [of the Divine Name] in the prophecies of Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi.",
124
+ "ื”ืฉืงื• ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ โ€“ [they gave the lamb to be slaughtered as the daily offering water] near the time of its slaughtering, in order that its hide will be straightened out/become flat nicely.",
125
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ there are those who state that an exaggeration was taught, for it (i.e, the cup that the lamb drank from) was not made of of gold, but of a fine copper that like gold, and there are those who stated that it was a cup actually of gold, for there is no poverty in the place of wealthy splendor.[to demonstrate the greatness and honor attributed to the place].",
126
+ "ืืข\"ืค ืฉืžื‘ื•ืงืจ โ€“ the daily offering requires inspection from physical defect four times prior to its slaughter, simila to the Passover lamb."
127
+ ],
128
+ [
129
+ "ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• 'ืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ for the daily offering is a burnt offering and the burnt offering requires [offering] in the north.",
130
+ "ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืžืžืกื™ื โ€“ low columns of stone [that are small].",
131
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– โ€“ square pieces of cedar were on the columns.",
132
+ "ืื•ื ืœื™ื•ืช (hooks) โ€“ similar to hooks; ANTZINISH in the foreign language.",
133
+ "ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื (three rows) โ€“ of hooks, it was this one above that one in all the pieces of the tree, to suspend/hang large animal or a small one.",
134
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื โ€“ for on them they would rinse the insides and it was possible to make them out of gold, for there is no poverty in the place of wealth/splendor, but they did not make them of anything other than marble because the gold shakes and smells bad, but the marble is cold and cools off and preserves it so that it does nor become putrid."
135
+ ],
136
+ [
137
+ "ื”ื˜ื ื™ โ€“ it is the language of (Deuteronomy 26:2): โ€œ[you shall take some of every first fruit of he soil, which you harvest from the land that the LORD your God is giving you], put in a basket.โ€ It is similar to a basket but its mouth is wide.",
138
+ "ื•ื”ื›ื•ื– (oil vessel โ€“ in the shape of a large wine cup) โ€“ a ladle; in the Arabic language they call it ALCUZ.",
139
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช โ€“ to open two locks that are on the northern wicket.",
140
+ "ืชืจืงื‘ (three kabs, a dry measure) โ€“ a utensil that holds three kabim, and the language of โ€œtarkav,โ€ is two [kabim] and a kab, and it was similar to a tarkav, but it didnโ€™t hold other than two kabs and a half, and it was of gold.",
141
+ "ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืืžืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ โ€“ the northern wicket as is taught in the Mishnah further on (see Mishnah 7): โ€œHe came to the northern wicket/door.โ€ It had wo locks, the one was below, inside at the bottom of the opening, and the Kohen that wanted to enter, would put in his forearm into the hole in the wall until his armpit and open it with his hand through the inside, and the other [lock], he opens with a key immediately without effort like all the other openings.",
142
+ "ื›ื™ื•ืŸ (directly) โ€“ like [Tractate Pesahim 37a โ€“ Bartenura, at least as published in the standard ื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ื•ืขื– edition of the Mishnah, states that this quote is on Pesahim 37b]: โ€œhe may form the dough in a mould and attach it to the cake directlyโ€ (i.e., well-fitting without loss of time), meaning to say, quickly without trouble."
143
+ ],
144
+ [
145
+ "ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ืœืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ โ€“ this is the gate of the Temple/the hall containing the golden altar. And it had doors at the beginning of the beams of the wall that was six cubits thick, and other doors at the end of its beams towards the inside. These two wickets/doors had two small openings, one from the right of the large gate and one from its left, a bit distant from the gate. On that which was in the south, it is written (Ezekiel 44:2): โ€œThis gate is to be kept shut and is not to be openedโ€ refers to the future, and from something undefined such it was in the Jerusalem Temple, but the wicket that is in the north, he would open it through a hole near it where one inserts his hand until the armpit and bends his hand inside, and through another lock that is there, it is opened immediately without effort.",
146
+ "ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื (to the cell/compartment back of the Holy of Holies) โ€“ and it is one chamber open to the hall containing the golden altar.",
147
+ "ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ โ€“ and he goes in the cavity of the hall containing the golden altar until the large gate that is at the end of the beams of the wall from the inside and opens it and he comes to the second gate and stands inside and opens it.",
148
+ "ื ื’ืจ (door-bolt, pin fitting into sockets top and bottom) โ€“ a bolt that breaks through from one end of the door to the [other] end of the door. Another explanation, the ื ื’ืจ is a peg/nail (i.e., something fastened) that is wedged in in the back of the door in an incision in the lintel/door-sill.",
149
+ "ื•ืืช ื”ืคื•ืชื—ื•ืช โ€“ the locks and the enclosures."
150
+ ],
151
+ [
152
+ "ืžื™ืจื™ื—ื• ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ ืฉืข ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ โ€“ and from Jerusalem until Jericho is ten Parsangs (see Tractate Yoma 39b) [equivalent to approximately twenty-five kilometers].",
153
+ "ืžื’ืจื™ืคื” (the name of a musical instrument in the Temple) โ€“ a species of musical instrument that was in the Temple, having ten holes, each one of them producing one kindred kinds of music, and its sound could be heard from afar.",
154
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ (he appears also in Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) โ€“ the name of a man ho was a High Priest, ad he made a wheel-work for the wash-basin to sink it into the well/cistern, so that there its waters would not become unfit for use by being kept overnight, for every thing that was sanctified in the Temple vessels became unfit for use by being kept overnight, and when he would depart, and would become one who immersed himself that day [but ineligible to resume eating heave-offering until after sunset), and they would raise him up from the cistern to sanctify his hands and his feet, the sound of the wheel would be heard until Jericho.",
155
+ "ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™ ื›ืจื•ื– โ€“ a Kohen whose name was Gevini, who would announce/cry out each morning in the Temple: โ€œArise, Kohanim, for your Divine Service.โ€",
156
+ "ื—ืœื™ืœ โ€“ TZALNITZLISH in the foreign language; MIZMOR in Arabic, and its sound can be heard from afar. There are those who say PIPRI in the foreign language.",
157
+ "ืฆืœืฆืœ โ€“ TZIMBALI in the foreign language.",
158
+ "ืžื›ื•ื•ืจ โ€“ name of a place."
159
+ ],
160
+ [
161
+ "ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” โ€“ for there wasnโ€™t only just a little big of ashes, and he was not able to take them in handfuls, he swept the rest of the ashes into the basket.",
162
+ "ื•ื”ื ื™ื—ื• โ€“ in the basket there and then he left. But immediately, he would not remove it, for since he had to put the ashes near the Eastn Altar like the removal of the ashes of the Menorah, he waits until after the sprinkling of [the blood of] the daily offering, which he would make the preparations of the two lamps and finish the completion of the removal of he ashes of the Menorah, and then both of of them would remove this basket and that oil vessel and pour the ahses into one place near the altar and they are absorbed there in their place.",
163
+ "ื•ืžืฆื ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds that the Menorah is placed in the aeast and west. And sometimes that he finds also the rest burning, and it (i.e., the Mishnah) took [the words] โ€œthe two eastern lights flickeringโ€ because the rest of the lights, even if they are burning, he puts them out and removes the ashes, but these two lights/candles, if he found them flickering/burning, he does not put them out, and further, because it teaches in the concluding segment [of the Mishnah] โ€œthat if he found that they had gone out, he cleaned them and lit them from those which were [yet] flickering/burning,โ€ but with the rest of the lights, if he found that they had gone out, he does not re-kindle them until the evening.",
164
+ "ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ โ€“ five lights/candles for the west side, he removes from them the old oil and the old wick and the ashes, and places everything in the oil vessel, and puts new oil and a new wick, and after the slaughter of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood, he removes the ashes of the two eastern [lights]/[candles], and places in them 0il and a new wick. But surely, when he stops the preparing with the slaughter of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood and he doesnโ€™t prepare all of them together, because it is written (Exodus 30:7): โ€œ[On it Aaron shall burn aromatic incense:] he shall burn it every morning when he tends the lamps,โ€ the Torah stated that part of the preparation for the two cows, and perform the preparation of the five candles/lights in the first clause of the Mishnah and then he returns with the preparation of the two lights/candles, because for since that he began, he did most of it. But that which he didnโ€™t do six [of them] and then return to do one, because it is written (ibid.), โ€œwhen he tends the lamps, the preparation [is not] less than two candles/lambs. And these words are at a time where there is no miracle, as, for example, after Shimon the Righteous died. But prior to Shimon the Righteous dying, the western light/candle always burned/flickered through a miracle, as it is taught in a Baraita (Talmud Shabbat 22b) : from outside the curtain of the Pact (see Leviticus 24:2-3), the testimony is that Godโ€™s presence rests upon Israel, this is the western candle/light that we place in it oil according to the measure of its fellow and from it he would begin and from it he would conclude, for when he came to prepare the two eastern lights/candles, he would not remove the ashes other than from the first candle/light alone and prepare it, but he leaves the second light/candle that is adjacent to it burning/flickering until the evening when he kindles he lights/candles, and from it candles all of the other lights/candles, but after he kindled the rest of the candles/lights, he prepares it and removes the ashes for this candle in the evening and kindles it. But even though it is written (Exodus 30:7) โ€œwhen he tends the lamps,โ€ that there is no tending less than โ€œtwo,โ€ this is more preferable that he didnโ€™t tend to other than one light/candle from the two eastern candles/lights/lamps and to leave the second lamp/candle/light burning so that he would not tend to it until the evening, in order to publicize the miracle that he always kindles. But if even that he tends five [lights/candles/lamps] that are on the western side of first, and not the five of the eastern side anad at the end the two of the western side, and from them, he would have to kindle, but he doesnโ€™t do this because it is written (Leviticus 24:2-3): โ€œfor kindling lamps regularly. [Aaron shall set them up in the Tent of Meeting] outside the curtain of the Pact [to burn] from evening to morning before the LORD regularly,โ€ the Torah stated, set up a fixed lamp/candle/light to kindle from it all the rest of the candles, and which is this? The second candle/light/lamp of the eastern side, for when he ascends in the hall of the golden altar, it is that candle/lamp/light that he approaches first, but we donโ€™t forgo the occasion to perform a religious act, but one could say that in this, the miracle was established and it was fixed to kindle from it. But, with the first light/lamp/candle, it is impossible, for behold it is written (ibid.,): โ€œbefore the LORDโ€, from that candle of the side of Godโ€™s presence, which is the the western side, but the first candle/lamp/light is not called, โ€œbefore the LORD.โ€",
165
+ "ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• โ€“ the two eastern ones (i.e., candles/lamps/lights). As, for example, after Shimon the Righteous died.",
166
+ "ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ not that he would put a new wick and new oil, in the manner of taking care of/preparing the lights/lamps/candles, for always, we donโ€™t prepare the two eastern lights/candles/lamps other than after the slaughtering of the daily offering in order to interrupt between the preparation of the five to the preparation of the two, but rather, we cleanse them, that is, we remove the ashes that are at the head of the old wick, and lift it up and kindle it, in order that it be interruption between preparing the five candles to the two be well recognized. But if the candles/lights/lamps are not burning, we kindle them from the altar of the burnt offering.",
167
+ "ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ โ€“ this is the preparation of the five candles/lamps/lights, that we place a new wick and new oil and leave them extinguished until the evening when he comes and kindles [them]. But he removes the ashes from here and it is not like the removal of the ashes of the two eastern [lights] that is above. But after the slaughtering of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood, he returns and removes the eastern ashes and places oil and and a new wick and leaves it until the evening extinguished. But a second candle/light/lamp which is called, โ€œwesternโ€ just like this, he cleans and removes the ashes and the old wick and puts in new oil and kindles it from the altar of the burnt offering in order to kindle from the lamps/candles/lights in the evening, the others that the western lamp/candle/light was fixed to kindle from it other candles/lamps/lights, and therefore, also he kindles if he found it extinguished prior to the slaughtering of the daily offering, since he needs nevertheless, to kindle it when he comes and prepares after the slaughtering. Such I found the explanation of this Mishnah in the commentary of our Rabbi, Baruch bar Yitzhah, and he is the clearest of all of the commentaries. But the words of Maimonides are very astonishing, and also what he thinks in that the preparation of the candles/lamps/lights is their kindling, and when he would kindle the lamps/lights of the entire Menorah in the morning, as he kindles it in the evening, it is an exalted hidden thing/miracle in my eyes, but I did not hear nor did I see any of my Rabbis who think thus.",
168
+ "ื•ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ because the Menorah is eighteen handbreadths high and it was necessary to ascend to a high place in order to prepare the lamps/lights/candles.",
169
+ "ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช โ€“ corresponding to the three ascents that are written regarding the Menorah (see Numbers 8:2, Exodus 25:37 and Exodus 27:20): \"ื‘ื”ืขืœื•ืชืš ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช\"/โ€when you mount the lamps; \"ื•ื”ืขืœื” ืืช ื ืจื•ืชื™ื”\"/โ€the lamps shall be so mounted;โ€ \"ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“\" /โ€for kindling the lamps regularly.โ€",
170
+ "ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ until after the sprinkling of the blood of the daily offering for then he makes he preparations of two lamps/candles/lights and removes it, and then his neighbor removed the basket. And when they removed them, they bowed down (according to Tractate Megillah 22b โ€“ this is the spreading of oneโ€™s hand and feet on the floor), at the conclusion of the Divine Service, but not now, fo still their Divine Service was not completed."
171
+ ]
172
+ ],
173
+ [
174
+ [
175
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• (they did not twist/tie together the four feet of the lamb) โ€“ of the daily offering with two front hands to themselves or the two legs to themselves, in order that he should not act like the religious practices of the heathens, for such they would do when they performed slaughtering for idolatry (see Talmud Tamid 31b).",
176
+ "ืืœื ืžืขืงื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• โ€“ the hand with the foot, like the Binding of Isaac.",
177
+ "ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื โ€“ it was slaughtered on the north side of the altar (see Leviticus 1:11) , according to the law of the burnt-offering, and he would turn its head to the south, and its face to the west, so that if it would sprinkle excrement, it would not be adjacent to the altar.",
178
+ "ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ โ€“ the daily-offering sacrifice was slaughtered on the northwestern corner, because in the morning, the sun is in the east and shines opposite it to the west, and the Biblical verse states (Numbers 28:3): โ€œas a regular burnt offering every day, two yearling lambs without blemishโ€ corresponding to the day for the day (ืฉื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ื), meaning to say, corresponding to the sun, for the sun is called daylight.",
179
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื โ€“ that the sun is in the west and shines opposite the east, it was slaughtered on the northeastern corner.",
180
+ "ื‘ื˜ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื™ื” โ€“ far from the altar, because the altar was high and would obscure everything. But Yohanan the High Priest established six orders of rings, in each order, four rings, for twenty-four priestly divisions, and they were established on the floor and made like a bow, and since they would not tie together the daily offering, as it is taught at the beginning of our chapter, they would bring in the neck of the animal in those rings at the time of the ritual slaughtering and would wedge in the head of the ring in the ground.",
181
+ "ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช โ€“ first. After he slaughtered the morning burnt-offering in the northwest corner, he would go to the eastern side and stand on the ground and sprinkle the blood in the utensil below from the SIKRA/red paint and place two gifts which are four, one which is like two on the northeastern corner, and he would go to the southwestern corner and place one which is like two on the southwestern corner."
182
+ ],
183
+ [
184
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ โ€“ like the manner in which the slaughterers would do when they cut/sever the leg with the flesh that is upon it, but rather, they make an incision from under the knee and its surrounding parts that is sold with the head and they suspend it and flay the leg with the the rest of the animal. But surely it comes to tell us that the knee is included in the flying.",
185
+ "ืขืจื›ื•ื‘ื• (ham) โ€“ like the knee (the inner part of the knee).",
186
+ "ืžืจืง ืืช ื”ื”ืคืฉื˜ (stripped off the hide) โ€“ for behold it was not flayed other than to the breast and the hide was still attached to it.",
187
+ "ื ื˜ืœ ืืช ื”ืคื“ืจ โ€“ [forbidden] fat.",
188
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” โ€“ this is the way of honor/respect of above (i.e., God), so that he would not see the soiling/staining of the blood from the ritual slaughtering.",
189
+ "ื•ื”ื›ืจืก ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” โ€“ from the secretions/excrement that is within it, separately.",
190
+ "ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ a chamber that was in the Temple. But they would not rinse it with the rest of the innards, so that it would not become soiled.",
191
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื โ€“ since the feces do not come out from them other than with pressure, because they are thin.",
192
+ "ื‘ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื” โ€“ at the very least. But if he wishes to supplement rinsing them more than three times, he increases it."
193
+ ],
194
+ [
195
+ "ื•ืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“ (the lobe of the liver) โ€“ he would separate from the liver.",
196
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ื™ื–ื” ืžืžืงื•ืžื” โ€“ to the lobe of the liver from its place, for it was offered with the haunch and the tail, and the liver was with the right rib, and the lung with the throat/larynx with the wind-pipe and two ribs with it, as will be explained shortly.",
197
+ "ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื™ืžื ื™ โ€“ he cuts/severs near the spine/backbone, but he leaves two ribs above the spine/backbone and two ribs below the spine/backbone.",
198
+ "ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืžืืœื• (the right hind-leg in his left hand) โ€“ and even though he brings limbs to the ramp of [Divine] Service, and [Divine] Service is invalidated on the left side, since it is not indispensable to atonement, it is permissible as is brought in [Tractate] Yoma.",
199
+ "ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืจื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ (and the flayed end outward) โ€“ the place where they flay the hide which is near the heads of he fingers.",
200
+ "ื‘ื–ืš โ€“ It is the Aramaic translation of (Numbers 7:14): โ€œone ladleโ€ โ€“ one dish, vessel, censer.",
201
+ "ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืกื•ืœืช โ€“ for the meal-offering of libations that is with the daily-offering",
202
+ "ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ the meal-offering of cakes of the High Priest, half of it in the morning and half of it in the evening that is offered every day (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1). But that they interrupted for cakes between the fine flour and the libations that are the needs of the daily-offering is because he name meal-offering is that both fine flour and cakes have the title of a meal-offering, for that reason both are explained together.",
203
+ "ืžื—ืฆื™ ื•ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื• โ€“ but not from the upper half of the ramp, in order that it would be recognized when one goes to the altar from when they return after the recitation of the Shema. But especially on weekdays, they would place the limbs of the daily-offering in the west, to the side of the Divine Presence, but on Sabbaths of the Additional Offering/Musaf, where the obligations of the day were in the west, the parts of the daily-offering were in the east, as is explained in the Tractate Sukkah, in Chapter [Five] of the Flute/ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ [51b โ€“ and Tractate Skekalim, Chapter 8, Mishnah 8].",
204
+ "ืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข โ€“ and all the rest of the blessings, as is brought further in the next chapter (Chapter 5, Mishnah 1)."
205
+ ]
206
+ ],
207
+ [
208
+ [
209
+ "ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื ื•ื ื” ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ in the first chapter of [Tractate] Berakhot [11b], it is defined/explained that it is โ€œAhavah Rabbahโ€/โ€With great love.โ€ But after the breaking forth of daylight and the shining of the sun, we recite [the blessing] โ€œYotzer Orโ€/โ€Who created light.โ€ And the order of the blessings is not indispensable.",
210
+ "ืงืจืื• ืขืฉืจืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ because they are the essence of the Torah. But it was by law that they would read them every day, even in the country (i.e., outside of the Temple/Jerusalem), but they (i.e., the Rabbis) abolished them because of the seditious talk of the sectarians/heretics who would say that only these alone were given at Sini and not the rest of the orah (see Tractate Berakhot 12a).",
211
+ "ื•ื”ื ื‘ืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช โ€“ And which are these three blessings? โ€œEmet Vโ€™Yatzivโ€/โ€True and Enduring,โ€ and the Divine Worship (see the seventeenth blessing of the weekday Amidah โ€“ which is also the fifth blessing of the Amidah for Sabbaths and Festivals), and the Blessing of the Priests through only the reading of the [Biblical] verses, but not the raising of the hands to pronounce the Priestly Blessing, other than after the offering up of the daily offering and the incense, as we have stated in this chapter (see Tractate Berakhot 11b in the Tosafot, s.v. ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื), but today, they donโ€™t make these blessings other than in order that the daily offering will be accepted with favor, and they do not take leave from the Shemoneh Esreh prayer with this.",
212
+ "ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ื“ โ€“ when the division of duty of Priests and Levites that is departing says to the division of duty that is entering (see Talmud Berakhot 12a): โ€œMay He who caused His name to dwell in this house, let dwell among you love and brotherhood, peace and friendship,โ€ for on every Sabbath day, one division of duty would enter for Divine Serveice and the past division of duty would leave."
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ "ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช (those new to the preparation of incense] โ€“ whomever was not found worthy of/won in [offering the] incense all of his life, should come and take a lot. But they did not leave for someone had been found worthy once to repeat it, because it makes one wealthy, as it is written (Deuteronomy 33:10-11): โ€œThey shall offer You incense to savor [and whole-offerings on Your altar]. Bless, O LORD, his substance [and favor his undertakings],โ€ therefore, they do not let a person repeat it/do it again in order that that everyone will become wealthy and blessed through",
216
+ "ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื™ืฉื ื™ื โ€“ because it states regarding the incense, the new [participants] specifically, it (i.e., the Mishnah) stated here, the new with the old, meaning to say, whomever won the lottery in other times and those who never won, should come and participate in the lottery.",
217
+ "ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืื•ืชื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ and there wasnโ€™t a lottery here. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov (which is โ€œunusual,โ€ since we know about him: ืžืฉื ืชื• ืงื‘ ื•ื ืงื™/that his teaching is โ€œonly a little in quantity/ a Kab, but well-siftedโ€ (see Tractate Eruvin 62b)."
218
+ ],
219
+ [
220
+ "ืžืกืจื•ื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื โ€“ those Kohanim who prepared themselves but did not win in the lottery, were wearing the priestly garments, would send them to the ministers, meaning the sextans that are engaged with the needs of the Temple in order that they can strip the holy clothing that is upon them.",
221
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืืœื ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ โ€“ and they wear weekday clothing, and afterwards, remove the undergarments and leave all the priestly clothing and leave.",
222
+ "ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ the windows upon which there are the undergarment, is written upon them, โ€œundergarments,โ€ and those that are written upon them, โ€œthe priestโ€™s undercoat,โ€ is it is written on them โ€œpriestโ€™s undercoatโ€ and similarly for the โ€œpriestโ€™s turban,โ€ and the โ€œbelt.โ€ But the order of the wearing of the clothing, the undergarments are first, to all of the rest of the rest of the holy garments, as it is written (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œ[The priest shall dress in linen raiment,] with the linen breeches next to his body,โ€ so that there Is no thing that precedes the undergarments, and afterwards, the priestโ€™s undercoat, and that he girds himself with a belt, and afterwards, he puts on the priestโ€™s turban."
223
+ ],
224
+ [
225
+ "ื‘ื–ืง โ€“ a small spoon.",
226
+ "ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช โ€“ and it was within the large spoon. For if there wasnโ€™t the large [spoon], since the small one was overflowing/heaped up, the incense would scatter to ground while he was walking. But with the large spoon alone, it was not sufficient, for it was honor towards above (i.e., Heaven) to empty from the overflowing spoon on the coals at the time of he offering [of the incense].",
227
+ "ื•ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœื• โ€“ to the vessel/dish/cense",
228
+ "ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช (pad or cushion made of cloth) โ€“ My Rabbis explained that it was similar to a ring that was a cover from above, and through it he would carry the cover and remove it from upon the small spoon. But in the Arukh it explains that a ืžื˜ื•ืœื˜ืช is a piece of cloth, like ืžื˜ื•ืœื˜ืช in the chapter [five of Tractate Shabbat, Mishnah 3]: โ€œIn What Does an Animal Go Out [on the Sabbath],โ€ that the camel should not be taken out [on the Sabbath] with a pad on its back, that was placed upon the cover of the dish/vessel, like a scarf for beauty."
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืžื›ืชื” (he who won the right to the ashes with the coal-pan)- to bring the coals to the golden altar. And there was no lottery in this, but whomever won with the incense through the lottery states to that person who is with him, โ€œyou merit with me in the coal-panโ€ (see Tractate Yoma 25b โ€“ that according to Rabbi Yehuda, there was no lottery with the coal-pan, but that the person to the right of the winner of the incense was asked to join him).",
232
+ "ื•ื—ืชื” (and took the coals out with a pan) -from the thoroughly lighted coals in the center (see Tracate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) we donโ€™t read here, for they are close to the ashes, for on the contrary, those coals that were thick and burning he would take out with a pan.",
233
+ "ืŸืขื™ืจืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ (and he emptied them out into the [firepan] of gold) โ€“ but he would not take the coals out with the golden pan, in order that the it would not be ruined, for the Torah had compassion on the money of the Israelites.",
234
+ "ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืงื‘ ื’ื—ืœื™ื โ€“ for he would take the coals out with the silver pan of four Kabs and empty them into that (i.e., the pan) of gold which is three. , and in order that that he would bring it full, he would empty it at the end, tand this is the manner of cleansing of above.",
235
+ "ืžื›ื‘ื“ืŸ ืœืืžื” โ€“ to the water channel that was in the Temple courtyard, so that the Kohanim would not scalded.",
236
+ "ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ that it is prohibited to put out the flame.",
237
+ "ื›ื•ืคื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืคืกื›ืชืจ (cover them with a large pot) โ€“ one large utensil. The Aramaic translation of its pots isืคืกื›ืชืจื•ื•ืชื™ื” /its large vessels/pots.",
238
+ "ืœืชืš โ€“ one-half of Kor, fifteen Seโ€™ah, and the Kor is thirty Seโ€™ah.",
239
+ "ืฉืชื™ ืฉืจืฉืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื” โ€“ on the large pot. One from this sides and one from the other side, because through it they lower the ashes from above the altar, as we said nearby, and when they lower it full of ashes through the ground of the ramp which is slanted, one Kohen in front of him pulls it with the chain and one Kohen who was above from the large pot and grabs hold of the chin that is before him, so that it will not roll on the slope of the ramb.",
240
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื”ืจืฅ โ€“ that is found in the Temple courtyard on the Sabbath, we cover it with a large pot in order that the Kohanim will not be defiled with it. We are not able to remove it from there on the Sabbath, for on such an act as being out of harmony with the celebration of the Sabbath, they (i.e., the Rabbis) decreed, and even in the Temple. But especially, when it is found in the Temple courtyard, but if it ws found in the large hall of the golden altar or in the hall/porch leading to the interior of the Tempole, we remove it immediately, and even on the Sabbath day."
241
+ ],
242
+ [
243
+ "ืžื’ืจื™ืคื” (a sort of tympanum)- a large utensil that they would throw in order to produce a sound, and the sound that came out from it is used for three things that will be explained further on.",
244
+ "ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœื” โ€“ if he wasnโ€™t in the Temple courtyard.",
245
+ "ืจืฅ ื•ื‘ื โ€“ to prostrate/worship with his Kohanim brethren.",
246
+ "ื•ืจืืฉ ื”ืžืขืžื“ (head of the priestly watch) โ€“ when he would hear the sound of the tympanum.",
247
+ "ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื˜ืžืื™ื โ€“ of that priestly division who were not appropriate for [Divine] Service.",
248
+ "ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื— โ€“ there are those who say in order to embarrass them and to inform that because of nocturnal defilement he is prevented from Service, in order that he should be careful another time. And there are those who state because of the suspicion, that they should not suspect him that for his labor he went and was prevented from Service, but they knew that because of an accidental defilement of a reptile or another matter he was prevented from [Divine] service. But Maimonides wrote that those with leprosy whose leprosy was already purified, he would place them at the Eastern Gate, in order that they would be ready to be designated to sprinkle upon them the blood of the guilt-offering"
249
+ ]
250
+ ],
251
+ [
252
+ [
253
+ "ื”ื—ืœื• โ€“ those who won the spoon of the incense and the coal pan of the coals to ascend on the steps of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple, for there were twelve steps to the hall. But in front of them, they would go first [to ascend]: whomever won the cleansing of the inner altar in order to to take the basket that was placed there, after it was needed to place the ashes near the eastern altar like the Menorah, he would wait until after the sprinkling of the daily offering, for the person who won the cleansing of the Menorah/candelabrum would make the preparations of the two lamps/candles/lights and finish the completion of the cleansing of the Menorah, and then both of them would remove โ€“ this one the basket and that one the oil vessel (in the shape of a large wine cup) and they would pour the ashes in one place near the altar eastward.",
254
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ for now the Mitzvah had been completed.",
255
+ "ืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื” โ€“ as for example, after Shimon the Righteous had died, there was no miracle, whether it (i.e., the lamp) went out now after the slaughtering of the daily offering, or whether they found that it had gone out prior to the slaughtering of the daily offering, and they kindled, as we stated above in the first โ€œThe Superintendent said to themโ€ (Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 9), even though that now they found that it was still burning/flickering, since there was no miracle existing, they would put it out and clean its ashes in order to finish the preparation of the two lamps/candles/lights together.",
256
+ "ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื• ืžืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for they would not kindle the western lamp/candle/light ever other than from the fire of the altar of the burnt offering, as it is written (Leviticus 6:6): โ€œA perpetual fire shall be kept burning on the altar [not to go out],โ€ and it is written (Leviticus 24:2): โ€œfor kindling lamps regularlyโ€, above the outer altar it was kindled.",
257
+ "ืžืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื” โ€“ of three steps that were before the Menorah/candelabrum.",
258
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ for his Mitzvah was completed."
259
+ ],
260
+ [
261
+ "ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื โ€“ that were in the coal-pan.",
262
+ "ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ of the incense.",
263
+ "ื•ืจื“ื“ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ืชื” (he flattened โ€“ the heap of coals โ€“ with the bottom of the coal-pan) โ€“ in order that the incense would not fall from on top of the coals, therefore, he would spread [the glowing coals] and stretch them so that they would not be sloping/slanting this way or that. The Aramaic translation of ื•ื™ืจืงืขื•/he spread is ื•ืจื“ื™ื“ื•/flatten, stamp, beat. And he would offer it on the golden altar, but not within the coal-pan. But the incense of Yom Kippur, he would place the cals within the coal-pan, and upon it he would offer it, for there is no flattening/stamping of the coals on Yom Kippur."
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• โ€“ into the spoon.",
267
+ "ืœืื•ื”ื‘ื• โ€“ that came with him to the hall containing the golden altar for this this purpose. If there scattered from incense that was in the dish/vessel into the pan/censer, because the censer/dish was full and overflowing, and sometimes, it would fall from him into the pan/censer, he would give the incense to his friend/fellow when it had scattered into the palm of the handfuls of the person offering the incense.",
268
+ "ื•ืžืœืžื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• โ€“ because he had never offered incense before, as is taught in the Mishnah above (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 5, Mishnah 2): โ€œThose who are new [to the preparation of] the incense, come and cast lots,โ€ therefore, they had to teach him.",
269
+ "ืฉืœื ืชืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืคื ื™ืš ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืœื ืชื›ื•ื” โ€“ he would pour the incense on the coals on the western side far from him, and when it would scatter to his side, he would heap it up, as we have stated in [Tractate] Yoma [49b] so that its smoke would delay in coming, and this is the honor/glory that he would tarry/delay during the [Divine] Service. And he would heap up and make a pile on the western side, and when he would come to drag the incense that is adjacent/near him, he would pile it up to the western side far from him, and he wouldnโ€™t be burned from the incense that would be bunrf. Bu if he had made the pile in front of him, when he gathered the incense that had scattered outside of him and he brought it near him, it would be that his arm would be singed/burned by the gathering of the incense that is burning in front of him. That is what is taught in the Baraitha in the chapter [five of Tractate Yoma], โ€œThey brought out for himโ€ [at the bottom of 52b] that he would gather in front of him which is outside of him.",
270
+ "ื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ืžืจื“ื“ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื (he flattened the heap of coals and went out) โ€“ meaning to say, immediately that he flattened the incense on top of the coals, he went out.",
271
+ "ืคืจืฉื• ื”ืขื โ€“ all of the Kohanim depart from between the hall with the golden altar and the Altar at the time of the offering of the incense, as it is written (Leviticus 16:17): โ€œWhen he goes in to make expiation in the Shrine, no one else shall be in the Tent of Meeting [until he comes out],โ€ all atonement is made holy, no person shall be in the Tent of Meeting, therefore, whether at the time of the incense, whether at the time of the giving of the blood of the bullock of the anointed Priest or the bull for an unwitting communal sin and the goats of idolatry, the Kohanim would leave from the area between the Entrance hall and the altar. But at the time of the offering of the incense of Yom Kippur, they would not leave other than from the hall containing the golden altar, because the incense of Yom Kippur was not outside in the hall of the golden altar on the golden altar, but rather in the innermost section in the house of the Holy of Holies, therefore, there is no need that they should leave from between the Entrance hall and the altar, other than from the hall of the golden altar alone."
272
+ ]
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ [
276
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ืฉืชื•ื•ืช โ€“ in the great room with the golden altar, but we donโ€™t call it coming in without need.",
277
+ "ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช โ€“ that are the shoulders of the Ephod.",
278
+ "ื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ืœื• ืืช ื”ืคืจื•ื›ืช โ€“ that is hanging/suspended from the opening of the hall [leading to the interior of the Temple], for there werenโ€™t doors at the opening of the hall, like the other openings in the Temple, obut rather only a curtain."
279
+ ],
280
+ [
281
+ "ื‘ืื• ื•ืขืžื“ื• โ€“ for after they blessed and read and did their Divine Service that is stated above, they came to the Ascent/steps in the front of the Temple Hall.",
282
+ "ืขืžื“ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื โ€“ these are the five Kohanim that had the utensils in their hands.",
283
+ "ื•ื‘ืจื›ื• ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช โ€“ and theses are the three verses of the Priestly Blessing (Numbers 6:24-26), โ€œMay the LORD bless you and keep you;โ€ โ€May the LORD deal kindly with you and graciously with you;โ€ โ€œMay the LORD bestow His favor upon you and grant you peace.โ€ But we call it one blessing because they would not answer Amen after tehm between each verse in the manner that they do outside of the Temple/Jerusalem.",
284
+ "ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื• โ€“ with a Yud, Heh, etc.",
285
+ "ื•ื‘ืžื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ื• โ€“ with an Aleph, Daleth, etc. for we donโ€™t mention Godโ€™s name as it is written other than in the Temple alone, as it states (Exodus 20:21): โ€œin every place where I cause My name to be mentioned I will come to you and bless you.โ€ They (i.e., the Rabbis) invert the order in which it is written and expound upon it: In every place where I will come to you and bless you โ€“ which is the Temple, there I will mention My name.",
286
+ "ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืชืคื•ืชื™ื”ื โ€“ because they require the raising of their palms, as it is written (Leviticus 9:22): โ€œAaron lifted his hands toward the people and blessed them,โ€ and it is written (Deuteronomy 18:5): โ€œ[For the LORD your God has chosen] him and his descendants, [out of all your tribes, to be in attendance for service in the name of the LORD] for all time;โ€ just as it is he regarding the lifting of the palms, even his descendants (literally, โ€œhis sons,) for all time.",
287
+ "ื•ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ โ€“ when they bless the people with Godโ€™s ineffable Name, and the Divine Presence is above the second joints of their fingers, they raise their hands above from their heads.",
288
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ืืช ื™ื“ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื™ืฅ โ€“ because the name of God is written on it.",
289
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda (see also Tractate Sotah, Chapter 7, Mishnah 6, where the latter sections this Mishnah is also repeated)."
290
+ ],
291
+ [
292
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ โ€“ that he offers incenses any time that he wants, and takes a portion when he wishes.",
293
+ "ืœืžื—ืฆื™ืช ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ โ€“ and he had tired a bit.",
294
+ "ื•ืกืžืš ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ because of the honor/prestige of the High Priest that his offering of the incense would be regarded as more important than the rest of the Kohanim.",
295
+ "ื•ื–ืจืงืŸ โ€“ as we have expounded [on the verse] (Deuteronomy 12:27): โ€œYou shall offer your burnt offerings, both the flesh and the blood, [on the altar of the LORD your God; and of your other sacrifices, the blood shall be poured out on the altar of the LORD your God, and you sall eat the flesh],โ€ just as the blood is sprinkled, so too the flesh is sprinkled (see Tractate Pesahim 47a).",
296
+ "ื ืฉืžื˜ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ื”ืœืš ืœื• โ€“ but the first [priest] remains there to receive the limbs from those who stretch forth their hands and to give them to the High Priest.",
297
+ "ื‘ื ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ the High Priest who was at the top of the ramp when he was in the south, walks around [in a circuit] in a rightward direction, for all of the turns that you make [in the Temple] must be towards the right (see Tractate Yoma 58b -and see also Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 3, in terms of the order of the turns made), therefore, he would walk to the southeast and from there to the northeast, until he reaches the southwest, the place of the perforations/holes where the wine and the water that they perform the libations descend in them and from there go to the pits by the side of the altar in to which the remainder of the libations was poured which are the foundations, and there, the one Kohen stands and hands to him the wine for the libations, but the High Priest does not carry the wine with him, lest the wine become spoiled in the smoke of the pile of wood on the altar in the Temple when he walks around the altar, and while he is walking around, he turns [a piece of flesh on the altar] with a hook, that is, he drips limbs that were not consumed on the altar.",
298
+ "But the rest of the Kohanim that perform the libations of the wine, walk going to the left from he ramp to the southwestern [corner] which is close to the ramp, as is taught in the Mishnah in Tractate Zevakhim, in the Chapter, โ€œThe Holy of Holiesโ€ (Chapter Six, Mishnah 3), โ€œAll of those who ascend the altar go up on the right (i.e. east) side and make a circuit and go down on the left, except for the one who does who goes up for these three things,โ€ libations of the wine and the water and the burnt offering of the bird. The wine and the water so that they wonโ€™t be affected by the smoke. And the burnt offering of the bird also, so that it would not die in the smoke. But the High Priest that is similar to a member of the household, he has permission to go as he desires, what the rest of the priests are not allowed to do, and he also has permission to turn a piece of flesh with a hook without a lottery, he has to go around the altar in order to walk in a rightward direction.",
299
+ "ื•ื”ืกื’ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ (the prefect/assistant stands on the corner) โ€“ near the High Priest who comes to offer libations.",
300
+ "ื•ื”ืกื•ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ื• โ€“ to wave when the Kohen offers the libation. In order that the Levites will know, and that they will speak/break out through song, and Ben Arza know and he knocked/struck the cymbal, as it states nearby.",
301
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื โ€“ two tables were in the western side of he ramp, one table of silver, where they put the Temple utensils, and one table of marble, where they put the limbs, and it is called, the table of the fats.",
302
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื โ€“ the nae of a person that strikes the cymbal, TZIMBAL in the foreign language."
303
+ ],
304
+ [
305
+ "ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื”' ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื” โ€“ because it is the first [thing] in the act of Creation.",
306
+ "ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”' โ€“ for on it (i.e., the second day of Creation), the waters were divided and he firmament was placed between the [upper] waters and the lower [waters].",
307
+ "ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืืœื”ื™ื ื ืฆื‘ ื‘ืขื“ืช ืืœ โ€“ for on it (i.e., the third day of Creation), the dry land appears that upon it, the judges stand to administer justice.",
308
+ "ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืืœ ื ืงืžื•ืช โ€“ for on it (i.e., the fourth day of Creation), the son, and the moon and the stars were created that God, in the future, will be avenged from those who worship them.",
309
+ "ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืจื ื™ื ื• ืœืืœื”ื™ื ืขื–ื ื• โ€“ for on it (i.e., the fifth day of Creation), the living creatures were created that He who sees them (i.e., God) sing and praise to its Creator.",
310
+ "ื‘ืฉืฉื™ ื”' ืžืœืš โ€“ for on it (i.e., the sixth day of Creation) the Creation was completed and on it, man was created who recognizes the Kingship of His Creator.",
311
+ "ืžื ื•ื—ื” ืœื—ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื™ื โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds like the one who stated that for six thousand years, there will be a world and one will be destroyed, and on account that in the seventh millennium, there wonโ€™t be anything but the Holy One, blessed be He, as it states (Isaiah 2:11): โ€œNone but the LORD shall be Exalted in that day,โ€ therefore on Shabbat, we recite (Psalm 92): โ€œA psalm. A song; for the sabbath day,โ€ for the seventh millennium, as one day of the Holy One, blessed be He is one thousand years [for us]."
312
+ ]
313
+ ]
314
+ ],
315
+ "sectionNames": [
316
+ "Chapter",
317
+ "Mishnah",
318
+ "Comment"
319
+ ]
320
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid/English/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,318 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Tamid",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ โ€“ because of the honor, and it is greatness to the Temple that it should not be without guards/watchmen, and three places we derive as it is written (Numbers 3:38): โ€œThose who were to camp before the Tabernacle, in front, before the Tent of Meeting, on the east โ€“ were Moses and Aaron and his sons, attending to the duties of the sanctuary, as a duty on behalf of the Israelites...],โ€ those who guard from one watch to another, which is a hint to three divisions of duty for priests [and Levites] in three places, but just as we find in the Tabernacle that the Kohanim, Aaron and his sons were guarding in it in three places, even so too in the Temple.",
10
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช โ€“ [According to the Jerusalem Talmud, Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Halakhah 5, the chamber of the House of Avtinas (see also Tractate Shekalim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1 and Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Mishnah 5 concerning facts about this clan) was in the southern part of the Temple courtyard by the side of the Water Gate โ€“ which was the gate where they would enter on the holiday of Sukkot with a flask of water that was drawn from the Shiloah spring fo the libations on the altar, but according to the Talmud, Tractate Yoma 19a, there were doubts as to where this chamber was โ€“ in the south or in the north, which is the preference of this commentary to the Mishnah] โ€“ that were built on the side of the gates of the Temple courtyard.",
11
+ "ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ (young priests, or possibly โ€œarchersโ€) โ€“ children; the Aramaic Targum/translation is ืจื‘ื™ื /child. Another explanation: ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ/ those who shoot arrows with bows, from the language of {Genesis 21:20): โ€œ[God was with the boy (i.e., Ishmael) and he grew up; he dwelt in the wildeness] and became a bowman.โ€",
12
+ "ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ืคื” โ€“ there was nothing over the bulding of the House of the Hearth other than a [round] arch, AREUVLETU in the foreign language, made m the earth.",
13
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ (was surrounded with stone pavements) โ€“ colonnades/porticos surrounding, [made] of hewn stones that were sunk in the wall and came out from the wall into the House of the Hearth/ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ to the side of the ground, and on top of them were other stones, shorter than them that also came out from the wall. And they were similar to steps one on top of the other.",
14
+ "ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ โ€“ the division for duty of priests and Levites/guard that was divided into seven priestโ€™s divisions corresponding to the days of the week, each one serves on his day, and the elders of the priestโ€™s division of that day would sleep there on those paved level spaces between steps in the Temple hall.",
15
+ "ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” (fledgling priests) โ€“ young boys whose hair begins to sprout, and they were guards.",
16
+ "ื›ืกืชื• โ€“ the language of pillows and cushions.",
17
+ "ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ โ€“ there were not able to lie down there on the beds but rather on the ground in the manner of those who guard the courtyards of the kings.",
18
+ "ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ corresponding to their heads, but not actually under their heads, because there are the clothes of the Kohen that have in them Kilayim/mixture of linen and wool, as for example, the belt, and it is not permitted to use them other than at the time of [Divine] service.",
19
+ "ื•ืžืชื›ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืขืฆืžืŸ โ€“ in weekday clothing.",
20
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ื” (winding staircase)- in a cavity/cave that goes underneath the Temple, for the cavity was underneath the Sanctuary, and the entire Sanctuary is called ื‘ื™ืจื” /the chosen Divine residence/the Temple, as it is written (I Chronicles 29:19 โ€“ the verse is slightly misquoted by Rabbi Obadiah of Bertinoro in the printed editions: He writes: ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™ โ€“ whereas the correct quote is:ืœื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™ ): โ€œand to build this temple for which I have made provision.โ€ But because he was one to whom a nocturnal emission/pollution had occurred, he would not walk on the path of the Temple courtyard, but rather on he path of the cavities/caves, for he holds that these cavities were not sanctified.",
21
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ in the cavity/cave from this side and that side.",
22
+ "ื•ืžื“ื•ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืฉื โ€“ hat the Kohen would warm himself in it after he immersed [in a ritual bath].",
23
+ "ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• โ€“ that no person who enter in it ever all the while that his fellow was there.",
24
+ "ืžืฆืื• ื ืขื•ืœ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ this is his sign that there is a person there, and he would not enter.",
25
+ "ื ืกืชืคื’ โ€“ wiped off the water that was on his skin.",
26
+ "ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื• โ€“ in the house of the Hearth.",
27
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื โ€“ he would leave and go outside, because one who has immersed [in a Mikveh] must wait for sunset to be perfectly clean โ€“ see Leviticus 22:7) is sent off outside of the Temple courtyard, as we stated in these matters that every person who had a flux, including one with a nocturnal emission."
28
+ ],
29
+ [
30
+ "ืœืชืจื•ื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ the removal of the ashes from the Altar (see Leviticus 6:3).",
31
+ "ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ โ€“ for no person enters the Temple courtyard to perform Divine service, even if he is ritually pure, until he immerses [in a ritual bath].",
32
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืื™ื–ื• ืฉืขื” ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื (superintendent/deputy/officer) -meaning to say, is there a fixed time for the coming of the superintendent/officer, for it is stated that he (i.e., the Kohen) would get up early and immerse [in a ritual bath] prior to the arrival of the superintendent, but rather, definitely there was no fixed time for his arrival, for all of the times were not equal, for sometimes he would come from the crowing of the cock (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 1, Mishnah 8), etc., but therefore, whomever wanted to remove the ashes would wake up whenever he could, and afterwards, the superintendent would come and he would knock on them, to those who were in the House of the Hearth, and they would open it for him.",
33
+ "ืžืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ โ€“ there are those who interpret It as the calling of the rooster, and there are those who interpret that [an individual] would customarily call [to the Kohanim] near the rising of the sun [saying: โ€œArise Kohanim to your Divine serviceโ€].",
34
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1) โ€“ all of those to whom they would give a white [slip of paper] to remove the ashes from the Altar, would immerse prior to the superintendentโ€™s coming and afterwards they would take a lottery between them, and the one to which the lottery comes (i.e., the one who wins) goes up and removes the ashes. And the order of the lottery and its actions is explained in Tractate Yoma, Chapter 2."
35
+ ],
36
+ [
37
+ "ืคืฉืคืฉ (wicket) โ€“ small opening that is within the body of the lare opening, and through it they wouold enter from the House of the Hearth to the Temple courtyard.",
38
+ "ืืœื• โ€“ they would walk in the parlor/covered place in front of the house in the Temple courtyard in the eastern direction. For the parlors/recesses were around the Temple courtyard from the inside, with pillars going out beyond the walls of the Temple courtyard, and from the pillars until the walls of the Temple courtyard, there was overhanging boughs/twigs on top of them and they are called in the foreign language PRITIKAN (i.e., Porticos), and from the pillars towards the outside it was without overhanging boughs/twigs, and he Altar was in a place without overhanging boughs. And they were divided into two divisions/parties, in order that they would check and see all of the sacred vessels, that all of them will be in their places in peace. And they would walk on the parlors that were made in the northern direction, these walk on it on the eastern half and those walk on it on the half of he western side until they come in contact with each other in the place where they make the cakes of the meal of offering of the High Priest, who would bring each day half of it in the morning and half of It in the evening (see Leviticus 6:13-14 and Tractate Menahot, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5), and this was near the Nicanor Gate, and there they would say โ€œShalomโ€ to each other, everything is โ€œpeace/Shalom,โ€ meaning to say, we found all of the utensils in peace and no utensil was missing."
39
+ ],
40
+ [
41
+ "ื”ื–ื”ืจ ืฉืœ ืชื’ืข ื‘ื›ืœื™ โ€“ in the coal-pan which is a sacred vessel, for a person is not permitted to draw close to the Altar nor to any [Divine] Service until he sanctifies his hands and his feet.",
42
+ "ื‘ืžืงืฆื•ืข (corner) โ€“ in the corner-piece.",
43
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ โ€“ this was the name of the High Priest who made the wheel work (a machine for sinking the wash basin (the laver for the Kohanim in the Temple courtyard) into the well (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 3, Mishnah 10 and Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 8). It was a revolving wheel that through it the wash basin was sunk into the cistern, so that their waters would not be invalidated/unfit for use by being kept overnight, because anything that was sanctified in a sacred vessel is invalidated/unfit for use by being kept overnight, but when the wash basin was sunk into the cistern, its waters were not invalidated. But Maimonides states, that the wheel work which is a utensil surrounding the wash basin, that was not sanctified in the Temple vessel, and there they would leave the water at night in order that it not become sanctified and would be invalidated overnight.",
44
+ "ืžื”ืื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช (the thoroughly lighted coals in the center) โ€“ the coals that are in the center of the fire that were well consumed/burned up to be ashes.",
45
+ "ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฆืคื” (he heaped up the cinders on the pavement) โ€“ because it is written (Leviticus 6:3): \"ื•ืฉืžื•\" /โ€[and he shall take up the ashes to which the ffire has reduced the burnt offering on the altar] and place them beside the altar,โ€ and we expound [Tractate Temurah 34a], โ€œand place themโ€ โ€“ all of it, and โ€œplace themโ€ โ€“ so that it should not scatter."
46
+ ]
47
+ ],
48
+ [
49
+ [
50
+ "ืจืื•ื”ื• ืื—ื™ื• โ€“ to him that removed the ashes on the altar.",
51
+ "ืฉื™ืจื“ โ€“ from the a;tar amd [it the coals on the eastern side.",
52
+ "ื•ื”ื ืจืฆื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืงื“ืฉื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื โ€“ in order to perform the Divine Service.",
53
+ "ืกื•ื ืงื™ื (press them) โ€“ remove them, from the language of shaking and moving about. And similarly, like a stuffed goat {Tractate Pesahim 3b], a goat that is tired as a result of the shaking and the goring that they gore one another, even here, they stuff/choke from the movements and they turn them over in the water pipes to the sides of the altar.",
54
+ "ื‘ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ (on the circuit by the ramp) โ€“ meaning to say on the ramp, that is opposite the circuit (i.e., a sort of gallery around the altar for the Kohen to walk on)."
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคืจ โ€“ afer they had piled up [the ato th sides or to surround the limbs and fat-pieces that had not been consumed, they would pull the ashes with trowels that were in their hands and bring them up to the pile (i.e., the place on the altar where the ashes were piled up, like a kind of large pile of ashes that was in the center of the altar heaped up and made like an apple.",
58
+ "ืคืขืžื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ an exaggeration is taught, for never did they leave three hundred Kor to be upon it.",
59
+ "ื•ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืชื• โ€“ they would not removethe ashes outside, even thogh it was a great deal on the altar.",
60
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ so that it would appear that there were man sacrifices on the altar.",
61
+ "ืžื™ืžื™ื• ืœื ื ืชืขืฆืœ โ€“ meaning to say, that which was so many ashes, not on account of the laziness of the Kohanim, but rather as an ornament and to demonstrate that many sacrifices were offeed on the altar."
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ "ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ืจื™ืŸ (heaping up pieces of wood) โ€“ two long and planed wood they would put into the length of the pile of wood in the altar, as it is written (Leviticus 6:5): โ€œevery morning the priest shall feed wood to it,โ€ which teaches that it requires two pieces of wood (e.g., the word ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ in the verse is in the plural).",
65
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื” โ€“ as it is taught (in this Mishnah): โ€œthey began heaping up pieces of woodโ€ plainly/undefined, and it doesnโ€™t explain from what species of tree were these pieces of wood. And it responds, affirmatively, meaning to say, that everything is valid except for olives and [grape] vines, which ae prohibited because of the cultivation of the land of Israel because they are laden with fruit/produce. But there are those who state the reason because they ae made into ashes immediately.",
66
+ "ืžื•ืจื‘ื™ื•ืช (boughs) โ€“ branches of fig-trees, and especially bad fig-trees, that donโ€™t produce fruit.",
67
+ "ืขืฅ ืฉืžืŸ โ€“ that makes the oil of the balsam tree. But I heard that it is a tree that they call PINO in the foreign language, and TZINUBOR in Arabic. But even though it is an eatable tree, there is no need like that of the vine and the olive, therefore, they did not forbid it because of the of the settlement of the land of Israel, in the manner that they forbade the vine and the olive."
68
+ ],
69
+ [
70
+ "ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” โ€“ because there is another pile of wood on the altar in the Temple, they called this the large pile of wood. There were three piles of wood on the altar every day, the first was the large pile of wood where they would burn on it the daily [morning] offering/ืชืžื™ื“; and the second was a lesser pile than it which was called the pile of wood of the incense, that they take from it coals with a coal-pan for the incense which they offer in the morning and at twilight, and third is not used a all other than for the establishment of the fire, as it is written (Leviticus 6:5): โ€œThe fire on the altar shall be kept burning, [not to go out],โ€ this is the pile for the establishment of the fire.",
71
+ "ื•ื—ื–ื™ืชื” ืžื–ืจื—ื” โ€“ its appearance which is the opening and the window of he pile of wood on the altar, to the eastern side of the altar.",
72
+ "ื•ืจืืฉื™ ื’ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ the insides were long until they would touch the โ€œappleโ€/place on the altar where the ashes were piled up.",
73
+ "ืืช ื”ืืœื™ืชื (wood of the fig tree, used as kindling wood on the altar) โ€“ they insert dried branches/twigs used for fuel and thin chips between the big pieces to kindle the fire. And the word ืืœื™ืชื is the language of tail/fat-tail, named for the tails of the fire-brands."
74
+ ],
75
+ [
76
+ "ื‘ืจืจื• ืžืฉื โ€“ from between the place of he wood.",
77
+ "ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื (an amount of five Seah of cinders) โ€“ in that pile on the altar of incense like five Seah of burning coals, that from them he would take coals out with a pan (see Tractate Yoma, Chapter 4, Mishnah 4) for the needs of the incense.",
78
+ "ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ โ€“ like by mere estimate/sight (ื‘ืื•ืžื“).",
79
+ "ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืื™ื โ€“ because they need more burning coal for the two dishes/censers of frankincense of the show-bread [on the table of the Sanctuary], that they would offer up as incense from one Shabbat to the next.",
80
+ "ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืžืขืจื›ื” โ€“ and they would be burned there on the sides of the large pile of wood on the altar.",
81
+ "ื•ื‘ืื• ืœื”ื ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช โ€“ to perform the lotteries."
82
+ ]
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ [
86
+ "ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื• โ€“ take an allotment [by counting out a certain number on the raised fingers of those among whom a decision is to be made]. This is the lottery that is explained in chapter 2 of [Tractate] Yoma [Mishnah 2].",
87
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื•ื—ื˜ โ€“ even though ritual slaughtering is ritually permitted by a non-Kohen (literally, โ€œforeignerโ€), for it is the beginning of the Divine Service of the daily offering and is beloved to them, for if they donโ€™t take an allotment, they will come to quarrel about it and they will come to danger (i.e., loss of life).",
88
+ "ืžื™ ื–ื•ืจืง โ€“ who receives the blood, he is the one who sprinkles, for the essence of the sacrifice is the sprinkling, and for that reason, it (i.e., the Mishnah) took it.",
89
+ "ืžื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ โ€“ the person who clears the ashes from the inner court is he one who offers the incense. And since the removal of the ashes is the beginning of the Divine Service of incense, it (i.e., the Mishnah) took it. And similarly, the removal of ashes from the Menorah/candelabrum is the beginning of the kindling [of the Menorah]. And the removal of the ashes of the inner altar and the Menorah would precede the slaughtering of the daily offering. But that it (i.e., the Mishnah) mentions in the order of the allotment โ€“ the slaughtering and sprinkling at the opening clause is beause they are the essence of the Divine Service.",
90
+ "ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ โ€“ the tail.",
91
+ "ื”ื—ื–ื” โ€“ all [the permitted fat] that sees the ground.",
92
+ "ื•ื”ื’ืจื” โ€“ the place where it ruminates/chews the cud, is [in] the neck, and through it, the windpipe is attached with the liver and the heart.",
93
+ "ื–ื›ื” ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” โ€“ he who won the allotment sprinkles the blood and the one nearest him slaughters. But even though the slaughtering precedes the reception of the blood, nevertheless, because the Divine Service of the sprinkling is greater than the slaughtering, for the slaughtering is ritually permitted by a non-Kohen (literally, โ€œforeignerโ€), which is not the case regarding the sprinkling, therefore, the one who is first found worthy (i.e., โ€œthe winnerโ€), when the allotment arrives to him in sprinkling, and he second nearest him in slaughtering, and the third who removes the ashes from inner altaer and offers the incense, and the fourth removes the ashes of he candelabrum and kindles the lights, and the fifth raises up the head and leg for the lamb, and the sixth the two hands, and the seventh, the tail, which are the tail and the foot, and eighth is the breast and the chewing of the cud/ruminant, and the ninth โ€“ the two walls, and the tenth, the insides, and the eleventh, the fine flour of the meal offering of the libations, which is offered with the daily offering, and the twelfth are the sort of cakes of the High Priest, and the thirteenth is the wine of libations. All of these thirteen Kohanim leave with one allotment that is described in chapter two of Tractate Yoma (Mishnah 2)."
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "ืฆืื• ื•ืจืื• โ€“ on the high place that they had in the Temple.",
97
+ "ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” โ€“ for ritual slaughtering is disqualified at night, as it states (Leviticus 19:6): โ€œIt shall be eaten on the day/ื‘ื™ื•ื that you sacrifice it, [or on the day following],โ€",
98
+ "ื‘ืจืงืื™ โ€“ the morning light shines and has broken through from end to end.",
99
+ "ื”ืื™ืจ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื— (the whole eastern horizon is light) โ€“ that he would not say anything until the entire eastern horizon is lightm, for it is not enough tha it is light only like a point, and the Halakha is according to Mattia ben Shmuel.",
100
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ โ€“ those who are standing below ask him, has the light reached Hebron? And he answers, โ€œyes,โ€ And in order to mention the merit of the forefathers that are buried in Hebron we say this."
101
+ ],
102
+ [
103
+ "ืžืฉืœื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื โ€“ the chamber/office where the lambs of the daily offering/ืชืžื™ื“ were.",
104
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ of those who take fine flour for meal offering and wine for libations, for they would go near the superintendent appointed over the seals and give him the money according to the libations that he requires, and he gives him a seal and he brings the seal to the superintendent over the libations and he receives from him libations. And the chamber that the superintendent sits in is called the chamber of the seals. And in Tractate Shekalim (see Chapter 5, Mishnah 3), it explains that there four seals in the Temple and it was written on them: โ€œcalf, ram, kid and sinnerโ€ When he brings the seal that is written on it, โ€œcalf,โ€ it is known that he gave money for the libations of a bull. [When he brings the seal that is written on it] โ€œram,โ€ it is known that he gave money for the libations of a ram, for the Aramaic translation of a ram is ื“ื›ืจื /male of the flock (ram). [When he brings the seal that is written on it], โ€œkid,โ€ it is known that he brought the money for the libations of a lamb. [When he brings the seal that is written on it], โ€œsinner,โ€ it is known that he brought the money for the libations for a leper.",
105
+ "ืœืฉื›ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ โ€“ on account of the fire that is always burning there."
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ "ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ ื›ืกืฃ ื•ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ it is not explained why it was necessary for the number of these utensils. But in the Jerusalem Talmud in the Tractate Hagigah, they said that it corresponds to the ninety-three mentionings [of the Divine Name] in the prophecies of Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi.",
109
+ "ื”ืฉืงื• ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ โ€“ [they gave the lamb to be slaughtered as the daily offering water] near the time of its slaughtering, in order that its hide will be straightened out/become flat nicely.",
110
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ โ€“ there are those who state that an exaggeration was taught, for it (i.e, the cup that the lamb drank from) was not made of of gold, but of a fine copper that like gold, and there are those who stated that it was a cup actually of gold, for there is no poverty in the place of wealthy splendor.[to demonstrate the greatness and honor attributed to the place].",
111
+ "ืืข\"ืค ืฉืžื‘ื•ืงืจ โ€“ the daily offering requires inspection from physical defect four times prior to its slaughter, simila to the Passover lamb."
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• 'ืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ for the daily offering is a burnt offering and the burnt offering requires [offering] in the north.",
115
+ "ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืžืžืกื™ื โ€“ low columns of stone [that are small].",
116
+ "ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– โ€“ square pieces of cedar were on the columns.",
117
+ "ืื•ื ืœื™ื•ืช (hooks) โ€“ similar to hooks; ANTZINISH in the foreign language.",
118
+ "ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื (three rows) โ€“ of hooks, it was this one above that one in all the pieces of the tree, to suspend/hang large animal or a small one.",
119
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื โ€“ for on them they would rinse the insides and it was possible to make them out of gold, for there is no poverty in the place of wealth/splendor, but they did not make them of anything other than marble because the gold shakes and smells bad, but the marble is cold and cools off and preserves it so that it does nor become putrid."
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "ื”ื˜ื ื™ โ€“ it is the language of (Deuteronomy 26:2): โ€œ[you shall take some of every first fruit of he soil, which you harvest from the land that the LORD your God is giving you], put in a basket.โ€ It is similar to a basket but its mouth is wide.",
123
+ "ื•ื”ื›ื•ื– (oil vessel โ€“ in the shape of a large wine cup) โ€“ a ladle; in the Arabic language they call it ALCUZ.",
124
+ "ืฉื ื™ ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช โ€“ to open two locks that are on the northern wicket.",
125
+ "ืชืจืงื‘ (three kabs, a dry measure) โ€“ a utensil that holds three kabim, and the language of โ€œtarkav,โ€ is two [kabim] and a kab, and it was similar to a tarkav, but it didnโ€™t hold other than two kabs and a half, and it was of gold.",
126
+ "ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืืžืช ื”๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื—ื™ โ€“ the northern wicket as is taught in the Mishnah further on (see Mishnah 7): โ€œHe came to the northern wicket/door.โ€ It had wo locks, the one was below, inside at the bottom of the opening, and the Kohen that wanted to enter, would put in his forearm into the hole in the wall until his armpit and open it with his hand through the inside, and the other [lock], he opens with a key immediately without effort like all the other openings.",
127
+ "ื›ื™ื•ืŸ (directly) โ€“ like [Tractate Pesahim 37a โ€“ Bartenura, at least as published in the standard ื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื•ื‘ื•ืขื– edition of the Mishnah, states that this quote is on Pesahim 37b]: โ€œhe may form the dough in a mould and attach it to the cake directlyโ€ (i.e., well-fitting without loss of time), meaning to say, quickly without trouble."
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ "ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ืœืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ โ€“ this is the gate of the Temple/the hall containing the golden altar. And it had doors at the beginning of the beams of the wall that was six cubits thick, and other doors at the end of its beams towards the inside. These two wickets/doors had two small openings, one from the right of the large gate and one from its left, a bit distant from the gate. On that which was in the south, it is written (Ezekiel 44:2): โ€œThis gate is to be kept shut and is not to be openedโ€ refers to the future, and from something undefined such it was in the Jerusalem Temple, but the wicket that is in the north, he would open it through a hole near it where one inserts his hand until the armpit and bends his hand inside, and through another lock that is there, it is opened immediately without effort.",
131
+ "ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื (to the cell/compartment back of the Holy of Holies) โ€“ and it is one chamber open to the hall containing the golden altar.",
132
+ "ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ โ€“ and he goes in the cavity of the hall containing the golden altar until the large gate that is at the end of the beams of the wall from the inside and opens it and he comes to the second gate and stands inside and opens it.",
133
+ "ื ื’ืจ (door-bolt, pin fitting into sockets top and bottom) โ€“ a bolt that breaks through from one end of the door to the [other] end of the door. Another explanation, the ื ื’ืจ is a peg/nail (i.e., something fastened) that is wedged in in the back of the door in an incision in the lintel/door-sill.",
134
+ "ื•ืืช ื”ืคื•ืชื—ื•ืช โ€“ the locks and the enclosures."
135
+ ],
136
+ [
137
+ "ืžื™ืจื™ื—ื• ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ ืฉืข ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ โ€“ and from Jerusalem until Jericho is ten Parsangs (see Tractate Yoma 39b) [equivalent to approximately twenty-five kilometers].",
138
+ "ืžื’ืจื™ืคื” (the name of a musical instrument in the Temple) โ€“ a species of musical instrument that was in the Temple, having ten holes, each one of them producing one kindred kinds of music, and its sound could be heard from afar.",
139
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ (he appears also in Tractate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) โ€“ the name of a man ho was a High Priest, ad he made a wheel-work for the wash-basin to sink it into the well/cistern, so that there its waters would not become unfit for use by being kept overnight, for every thing that was sanctified in the Temple vessels became unfit for use by being kept overnight, and when he would depart, and would become one who immersed himself that day [but ineligible to resume eating heave-offering until after sunset), and they would raise him up from the cistern to sanctify his hands and his feet, the sound of the wheel would be heard until Jericho.",
140
+ "ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™ ื›ืจื•ื– โ€“ a Kohen whose name was Gevini, who would announce/cry out each morning in the Temple: โ€œArise, Kohanim, for your Divine Service.โ€",
141
+ "ื—ืœื™ืœ โ€“ TZALNITZLISH in the foreign language; MIZMOR in Arabic, and its sound can be heard from afar. There are those who say PIPRI in the foreign language.",
142
+ "ืฆืœืฆืœ โ€“ TZIMBALI in the foreign language.",
143
+ "ืžื›ื•ื•ืจ โ€“ name of a place."
144
+ ],
145
+ [
146
+ "ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” โ€“ for there wasnโ€™t only just a little big of ashes, and he was not able to take them in handfuls, he swept the rest of the ashes into the basket.",
147
+ "ื•ื”ื ื™ื—ื• โ€“ in the basket there and then he left. But immediately, he would not remove it, for since he had to put the ashes near the Eastn Altar like the removal of the ashes of the Menorah, he waits until after the sprinkling of [the blood of] the daily offering, which he would make the preparations of the two lamps and finish the completion of the removal of he ashes of the Menorah, and then both of of them would remove this basket and that oil vessel and pour the ahses into one place near the altar and they are absorbed there in their place.",
148
+ "ื•ืžืฆื ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds that the Menorah is placed in the aeast and west. And sometimes that he finds also the rest burning, and it (i.e., the Mishnah) took [the words] โ€œthe two eastern lights flickeringโ€ because the rest of the lights, even if they are burning, he puts them out and removes the ashes, but these two lights/candles, if he found them flickering/burning, he does not put them out, and further, because it teaches in the concluding segment [of the Mishnah] โ€œthat if he found that they had gone out, he cleaned them and lit them from those which were [yet] flickering/burning,โ€ but with the rest of the lights, if he found that they had gone out, he does not re-kindle them until the evening.",
149
+ "ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ โ€“ five lights/candles for the west side, he removes from them the old oil and the old wick and the ashes, and places everything in the oil vessel, and puts new oil and a new wick, and after the slaughter of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood, he removes the ashes of the two eastern [lights]/[candles], and places in them 0il and a new wick. But surely, when he stops the preparing with the slaughter of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood and he doesnโ€™t prepare all of them together, because it is written (Exodus 30:7): โ€œ[On it Aaron shall burn aromatic incense:] he shall burn it every morning when he tends the lamps,โ€ the Torah stated that part of the preparation for the two cows, and perform the preparation of the five candles/lights in the first clause of the Mishnah and then he returns with the preparation of the two lights/candles, because for since that he began, he did most of it. But that which he didnโ€™t do six [of them] and then return to do one, because it is written (ibid.), โ€œwhen he tends the lamps, the preparation [is not] less than two candles/lambs. And these words are at a time where there is no miracle, as, for example, after Shimon the Righteous died. But prior to Shimon the Righteous dying, the western light/candle always burned/flickered through a miracle, as it is taught in a Baraita (Talmud Shabbat 22b) : from outside the curtain of the Pact (see Leviticus 24:2-3), the testimony is that Godโ€™s presence rests upon Israel, this is the western candle/light that we place in it oil according to the measure of its fellow and from it he would begin and from it he would conclude, for when he came to prepare the two eastern lights/candles, he would not remove the ashes other than from the first candle/light alone and prepare it, but he leaves the second light/candle that is adjacent to it burning/flickering until the evening when he kindles he lights/candles, and from it candles all of the other lights/candles, but after he kindled the rest of the candles/lights, he prepares it and removes the ashes for this candle in the evening and kindles it. But even though it is written (Exodus 30:7) โ€œwhen he tends the lamps,โ€ that there is no tending less than โ€œtwo,โ€ this is more preferable that he didnโ€™t tend to other than one light/candle from the two eastern candles/lights/lamps and to leave the second lamp/candle/light burning so that he would not tend to it until the evening, in order to publicize the miracle that he always kindles. But if even that he tends five [lights/candles/lamps] that are on the western side of first, and not the five of the eastern side anad at the end the two of the western side, and from them, he would have to kindle, but he doesnโ€™t do this because it is written (Leviticus 24:2-3): โ€œfor kindling lamps regularly. [Aaron shall set them up in the Tent of Meeting] outside the curtain of the Pact [to burn] from evening to morning before the LORD regularly,โ€ the Torah stated, set up a fixed lamp/candle/light to kindle from it all the rest of the candles, and which is this? The second candle/light/lamp of the eastern side, for when he ascends in the hall of the golden altar, it is that candle/lamp/light that he approaches first, but we donโ€™t forgo the occasion to perform a religious act, but one could say that in this, the miracle was established and it was fixed to kindle from it. But, with the first light/lamp/candle, it is impossible, for behold it is written (ibid.,): โ€œbefore the LORDโ€, from that candle of the side of Godโ€™s presence, which is the the western side, but the first candle/lamp/light is not called, โ€œbefore the LORD.โ€",
150
+ "ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• โ€“ the two eastern ones (i.e., candles/lamps/lights). As, for example, after Shimon the Righteous died.",
151
+ "ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื โ€“ not that he would put a new wick and new oil, in the manner of taking care of/preparing the lights/lamps/candles, for always, we donโ€™t prepare the two eastern lights/candles/lamps other than after the slaughtering of the daily offering in order to interrupt between the preparation of the five to the preparation of the two, but rather, we cleanse them, that is, we remove the ashes that are at the head of the old wick, and lift it up and kindle it, in order that it be interruption between preparing the five candles to the two be well recognized. But if the candles/lights/lamps are not burning, we kindle them from the altar of the burnt offering.",
152
+ "ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ โ€“ this is the preparation of the five candles/lamps/lights, that we place a new wick and new oil and leave them extinguished until the evening when he comes and kindles [them]. But he removes the ashes from here and it is not like the removal of the ashes of the two eastern [lights] that is above. But after the slaughtering of the daily offering and the sprinkling of its blood, he returns and removes the eastern ashes and places oil and and a new wick and leaves it until the evening extinguished. But a second candle/light/lamp which is called, โ€œwesternโ€ just like this, he cleans and removes the ashes and the old wick and puts in new oil and kindles it from the altar of the burnt offering in order to kindle from the lamps/candles/lights in the evening, the others that the western lamp/candle/light was fixed to kindle from it other candles/lamps/lights, and therefore, also he kindles if he found it extinguished prior to the slaughtering of the daily offering, since he needs nevertheless, to kindle it when he comes and prepares after the slaughtering. Such I found the explanation of this Mishnah in the commentary of our Rabbi, Baruch bar Yitzhah, and he is the clearest of all of the commentaries. But the words of Maimonides are very astonishing, and also what he thinks in that the preparation of the candles/lamps/lights is their kindling, and when he would kindle the lamps/lights of the entire Menorah in the morning, as he kindles it in the evening, it is an exalted hidden thing/miracle in my eyes, but I did not hear nor did I see any of my Rabbis who think thus.",
153
+ "ื•ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ because the Menorah is eighteen handbreadths high and it was necessary to ascend to a high place in order to prepare the lamps/lights/candles.",
154
+ "ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช โ€“ corresponding to the three ascents that are written regarding the Menorah (see Numbers 8:2, Exodus 25:37 and Exodus 27:20): \"ื‘ื”ืขืœื•ืชืš ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช\"/โ€when you mount the lamps; \"ื•ื”ืขืœื” ืืช ื ืจื•ืชื™ื”\"/โ€the lamps shall be so mounted;โ€ \"ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“\" /โ€for kindling the lamps regularly.โ€",
155
+ "ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ until after the sprinkling of the blood of the daily offering for then he makes he preparations of two lamps/candles/lights and removes it, and then his neighbor removed the basket. And when they removed them, they bowed down (according to Tractate Megillah 22b โ€“ this is the spreading of oneโ€™s hand and feet on the floor), at the conclusion of the Divine Service, but not now, fo still their Divine Service was not completed."
156
+ ]
157
+ ],
158
+ [
159
+ [
160
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• (they did not twist/tie together the four feet of the lamb) โ€“ of the daily offering with two front hands to themselves or the two legs to themselves, in order that he should not act like the religious practices of the heathens, for such they would do when they performed slaughtering for idolatry (see Talmud Tamid 31b).",
161
+ "ืืœื ืžืขืงื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• โ€“ the hand with the foot, like the Binding of Isaac.",
162
+ "ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื โ€“ it was slaughtered on the north side of the altar (see Leviticus 1:11) , according to the law of the burnt-offering, and he would turn its head to the south, and its face to the west, so that if it would sprinkle excrement, it would not be adjacent to the altar.",
163
+ "ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ โ€“ the daily-offering sacrifice was slaughtered on the northwestern corner, because in the morning, the sun is in the east and shines opposite it to the west, and the Biblical verse states (Numbers 28:3): โ€œas a regular burnt offering every day, two yearling lambs without blemishโ€ corresponding to the day for the day (ืฉื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ื), meaning to say, corresponding to the sun, for the sun is called daylight.",
164
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื โ€“ that the sun is in the west and shines opposite the east, it was slaughtered on the northeastern corner.",
165
+ "ื‘ื˜ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื™ื” โ€“ far from the altar, because the altar was high and would obscure everything. But Yohanan the High Priest established six orders of rings, in each order, four rings, for twenty-four priestly divisions, and they were established on the floor and made like a bow, and since they would not tie together the daily offering, as it is taught at the beginning of our chapter, they would bring in the neck of the animal in those rings at the time of the ritual slaughtering and would wedge in the head of the ring in the ground.",
166
+ "ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช โ€“ first. After he slaughtered the morning burnt-offering in the northwest corner, he would go to the eastern side and stand on the ground and sprinkle the blood in the utensil below from the SIKRA/red paint and place two gifts which are four, one which is like two on the northeastern corner, and he would go to the southwestern corner and place one which is like two on the southwestern corner."
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ โ€“ like the manner in which the slaughterers would do when they cut/sever the leg with the flesh that is upon it, but rather, they make an incision from under the knee and its surrounding parts that is sold with the head and they suspend it and flay the leg with the the rest of the animal. But surely it comes to tell us that the knee is included in the flying.",
170
+ "ืขืจื›ื•ื‘ื• (ham) โ€“ like the knee (the inner part of the knee).",
171
+ "ืžืจืง ืืช ื”ื”ืคืฉื˜ (stripped off the hide) โ€“ for behold it was not flayed other than to the breast and the hide was still attached to it.",
172
+ "ื ื˜ืœ ืืช ื”ืคื“ืจ โ€“ [forbidden] fat.",
173
+ "ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” โ€“ this is the way of honor/respect of above (i.e., God), so that he would not see the soiling/staining of the blood from the ritual slaughtering.",
174
+ "ื•ื”ื›ืจืก ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” โ€“ from the secretions/excrement that is within it, separately.",
175
+ "ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ a chamber that was in the Temple. But they would not rinse it with the rest of the innards, so that it would not become soiled.",
176
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื โ€“ since the feces do not come out from them other than with pressure, because they are thin.",
177
+ "ื‘ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื” โ€“ at the very least. But if he wishes to supplement rinsing them more than three times, he increases it."
178
+ ],
179
+ [
180
+ "ื•ืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“ (the lobe of the liver) โ€“ he would separate from the liver.",
181
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ื™ื–ื” ืžืžืงื•ืžื” โ€“ to the lobe of the liver from its place, for it was offered with the haunch and the tail, and the liver was with the right rib, and the lung with the throat/larynx with the wind-pipe and two ribs with it, as will be explained shortly.",
182
+ "ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื™ืžื ื™ โ€“ he cuts/severs near the spine/backbone, but he leaves two ribs above the spine/backbone and two ribs below the spine/backbone.",
183
+ "ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืžืืœื• (the right hind-leg in his left hand) โ€“ and even though he brings limbs to the ramp of [Divine] Service, and [Divine] Service is invalidated on the left side, since it is not indispensable to atonement, it is permissible as is brought in [Tractate] Yoma.",
184
+ "ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืจื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ (and the flayed end outward) โ€“ the place where they flay the hide which is near the heads of he fingers.",
185
+ "ื‘ื–ืš โ€“ It is the Aramaic translation of (Numbers 7:14): โ€œone ladleโ€ โ€“ one dish, vessel, censer.",
186
+ "ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืกื•ืœืช โ€“ for the meal-offering of libations that is with the daily-offering",
187
+ "ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ the meal-offering of cakes of the High Priest, half of it in the morning and half of it in the evening that is offered every day (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1). But that they interrupted for cakes between the fine flour and the libations that are the needs of the daily-offering is because he name meal-offering is that both fine flour and cakes have the title of a meal-offering, for that reason both are explained together.",
188
+ "ืžื—ืฆื™ ื•ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื• โ€“ but not from the upper half of the ramp, in order that it would be recognized when one goes to the altar from when they return after the recitation of the Shema. But especially on weekdays, they would place the limbs of the daily-offering in the west, to the side of the Divine Presence, but on Sabbaths of the Additional Offering/Musaf, where the obligations of the day were in the west, the parts of the daily-offering were in the east, as is explained in the Tractate Sukkah, in Chapter [Five] of the Flute/ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ [51b โ€“ and Tractate Skekalim, Chapter 8, Mishnah 8].",
189
+ "ืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข โ€“ and all the rest of the blessings, as is brought further in the next chapter (Chapter 5, Mishnah 1)."
190
+ ]
191
+ ],
192
+ [
193
+ [
194
+ "ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื ื•ื ื” ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ in the first chapter of [Tractate] Berakhot [11b], it is defined/explained that it is โ€œAhavah Rabbahโ€/โ€With great love.โ€ But after the breaking forth of daylight and the shining of the sun, we recite [the blessing] โ€œYotzer Orโ€/โ€Who created light.โ€ And the order of the blessings is not indispensable.",
195
+ "ืงืจืื• ืขืฉืจืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ because they are the essence of the Torah. But it was by law that they would read them every day, even in the country (i.e., outside of the Temple/Jerusalem), but they (i.e., the Rabbis) abolished them because of the seditious talk of the sectarians/heretics who would say that only these alone were given at Sini and not the rest of the orah (see Tractate Berakhot 12a).",
196
+ "ื•ื”ื ื‘ืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช โ€“ And which are these three blessings? โ€œEmet Vโ€™Yatzivโ€/โ€True and Enduring,โ€ and the Divine Worship (see the seventeenth blessing of the weekday Amidah โ€“ which is also the fifth blessing of the Amidah for Sabbaths and Festivals), and the Blessing of the Priests through only the reading of the [Biblical] verses, but not the raising of the hands to pronounce the Priestly Blessing, other than after the offering up of the daily offering and the incense, as we have stated in this chapter (see Tractate Berakhot 11b in the Tosafot, s.v. ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื), but today, they donโ€™t make these blessings other than in order that the daily offering will be accepted with favor, and they do not take leave from the Shemoneh Esreh prayer with this.",
197
+ "ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ื“ โ€“ when the division of duty of Priests and Levites that is departing says to the division of duty that is entering (see Talmud Berakhot 12a): โ€œMay He who caused His name to dwell in this house, let dwell among you love and brotherhood, peace and friendship,โ€ for on every Sabbath day, one division of duty would enter for Divine Serveice and the past division of duty would leave."
198
+ ],
199
+ [
200
+ "ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช (those new to the preparation of incense] โ€“ whomever was not found worthy of/won in [offering the] incense all of his life, should come and take a lot. But they did not leave for someone had been found worthy once to repeat it, because it makes one wealthy, as it is written (Deuteronomy 33:10-11): โ€œThey shall offer You incense to savor [and whole-offerings on Your altar]. Bless, O LORD, his substance [and favor his undertakings],โ€ therefore, they do not let a person repeat it/do it again in order that that everyone will become wealthy and blessed through",
201
+ "ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื™ืฉื ื™ื โ€“ because it states regarding the incense, the new [participants] specifically, it (i.e., the Mishnah) stated here, the new with the old, meaning to say, whomever won the lottery in other times and those who never won, should come and participate in the lottery.",
202
+ "ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืื•ืชื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ and there wasnโ€™t a lottery here. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov (which is โ€œunusual,โ€ since we know about him: ืžืฉื ืชื• ืงื‘ ื•ื ืงื™/that his teaching is โ€œonly a little in quantity/ a Kab, but well-siftedโ€ (see Tractate Eruvin 62b)."
203
+ ],
204
+ [
205
+ "ืžืกืจื•ื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื โ€“ those Kohanim who prepared themselves but did not win in the lottery, were wearing the priestly garments, would send them to the ministers, meaning the sextans that are engaged with the needs of the Temple in order that they can strip the holy clothing that is upon them.",
206
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืืœื ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ โ€“ and they wear weekday clothing, and afterwards, remove the undergarments and leave all the priestly clothing and leave.",
207
+ "ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ the windows upon which there are the undergarment, is written upon them, โ€œundergarments,โ€ and those that are written upon them, โ€œthe priestโ€™s undercoat,โ€ is it is written on them โ€œpriestโ€™s undercoatโ€ and similarly for the โ€œpriestโ€™s turban,โ€ and the โ€œbelt.โ€ But the order of the wearing of the clothing, the undergarments are first, to all of the rest of the rest of the holy garments, as it is written (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œ[The priest shall dress in linen raiment,] with the linen breeches next to his body,โ€ so that there Is no thing that precedes the undergarments, and afterwards, the priestโ€™s undercoat, and that he girds himself with a belt, and afterwards, he puts on the priestโ€™s turban."
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ "ื‘ื–ืง โ€“ a small spoon.",
211
+ "ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช โ€“ and it was within the large spoon. For if there wasnโ€™t the large [spoon], since the small one was overflowing/heaped up, the incense would scatter to ground while he was walking. But with the large spoon alone, it was not sufficient, for it was honor towards above (i.e., Heaven) to empty from the overflowing spoon on the coals at the time of he offering [of the incense].",
212
+ "ื•ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœื• โ€“ to the vessel/dish/cense",
213
+ "ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช (pad or cushion made of cloth) โ€“ My Rabbis explained that it was similar to a ring that was a cover from above, and through it he would carry the cover and remove it from upon the small spoon. But in the Arukh it explains that a ืžื˜ื•ืœื˜ืช is a piece of cloth, like ืžื˜ื•ืœื˜ืช in the chapter [five of Tractate Shabbat, Mishnah 3]: โ€œIn What Does an Animal Go Out [on the Sabbath],โ€ that the camel should not be taken out [on the Sabbath] with a pad on its back, that was placed upon the cover of the dish/vessel, like a scarf for beauty."
214
+ ],
215
+ [
216
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืžื›ืชื” (he who won the right to the ashes with the coal-pan)- to bring the coals to the golden altar. And there was no lottery in this, but whomever won with the incense through the lottery states to that person who is with him, โ€œyou merit with me in the coal-panโ€ (see Tractate Yoma 25b โ€“ that according to Rabbi Yehuda, there was no lottery with the coal-pan, but that the person to the right of the winner of the incense was asked to join him).",
217
+ "ื•ื—ืชื” (and took the coals out with a pan) -from the thoroughly lighted coals in the center (see Tracate Tamid, Chapter 1, Mishnah 4) we donโ€™t read here, for they are close to the ashes, for on the contrary, those coals that were thick and burning he would take out with a pan.",
218
+ "ืŸืขื™ืจืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ (and he emptied them out into the [firepan] of gold) โ€“ but he would not take the coals out with the golden pan, in order that the it would not be ruined, for the Torah had compassion on the money of the Israelites.",
219
+ "ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืงื‘ ื’ื—ืœื™ื โ€“ for he would take the coals out with the silver pan of four Kabs and empty them into that (i.e., the pan) of gold which is three. , and in order that that he would bring it full, he would empty it at the end, tand this is the manner of cleansing of above.",
220
+ "ืžื›ื‘ื“ืŸ ืœืืžื” โ€“ to the water channel that was in the Temple courtyard, so that the Kohanim would not scalded.",
221
+ "ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ that it is prohibited to put out the flame.",
222
+ "ื›ื•ืคื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืคืกื›ืชืจ (cover them with a large pot) โ€“ one large utensil. The Aramaic translation of its pots isืคืกื›ืชืจื•ื•ืชื™ื” /its large vessels/pots.",
223
+ "ืœืชืš โ€“ one-half of Kor, fifteen Seโ€™ah, and the Kor is thirty Seโ€™ah.",
224
+ "ืฉืชื™ ืฉืจืฉืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื” โ€“ on the large pot. One from this sides and one from the other side, because through it they lower the ashes from above the altar, as we said nearby, and when they lower it full of ashes through the ground of the ramp which is slanted, one Kohen in front of him pulls it with the chain and one Kohen who was above from the large pot and grabs hold of the chin that is before him, so that it will not roll on the slope of the ramb.",
225
+ "ื•ืขืœ ื”ืจืฅ โ€“ that is found in the Temple courtyard on the Sabbath, we cover it with a large pot in order that the Kohanim will not be defiled with it. We are not able to remove it from there on the Sabbath, for on such an act as being out of harmony with the celebration of the Sabbath, they (i.e., the Rabbis) decreed, and even in the Temple. But especially, when it is found in the Temple courtyard, but if it ws found in the large hall of the golden altar or in the hall/porch leading to the interior of the Tempole, we remove it immediately, and even on the Sabbath day."
226
+ ],
227
+ [
228
+ "ืžื’ืจื™ืคื” (a sort of tympanum)- a large utensil that they would throw in order to produce a sound, and the sound that came out from it is used for three things that will be explained further on.",
229
+ "ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœื” โ€“ if he wasnโ€™t in the Temple courtyard.",
230
+ "ืจืฅ ื•ื‘ื โ€“ to prostrate/worship with his Kohanim brethren.",
231
+ "ื•ืจืืฉ ื”ืžืขืžื“ (head of the priestly watch) โ€“ when he would hear the sound of the tympanum.",
232
+ "ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื˜ืžืื™ื โ€“ of that priestly division who were not appropriate for [Divine] Service.",
233
+ "ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื— โ€“ there are those who say in order to embarrass them and to inform that because of nocturnal defilement he is prevented from Service, in order that he should be careful another time. And there are those who state because of the suspicion, that they should not suspect him that for his labor he went and was prevented from Service, but they knew that because of an accidental defilement of a reptile or another matter he was prevented from [Divine] service. But Maimonides wrote that those with leprosy whose leprosy was already purified, he would place them at the Eastern Gate, in order that they would be ready to be designated to sprinkle upon them the blood of the guilt-offering"
234
+ ]
235
+ ],
236
+ [
237
+ [
238
+ "ื”ื—ืœื• โ€“ those who won the spoon of the incense and the coal pan of the coals to ascend on the steps of the hall leading to the interior of the Temple, for there were twelve steps to the hall. But in front of them, they would go first [to ascend]: whomever won the cleansing of the inner altar in order to to take the basket that was placed there, after it was needed to place the ashes near the eastern altar like the Menorah, he would wait until after the sprinkling of the daily offering, for the person who won the cleansing of the Menorah/candelabrum would make the preparations of the two lamps/candles/lights and finish the completion of the cleansing of the Menorah, and then both of them would remove โ€“ this one the basket and that one the oil vessel (in the shape of a large wine cup) and they would pour the ashes in one place near the altar eastward.",
239
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ for now the Mitzvah had been completed.",
240
+ "ืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื” โ€“ as for example, after Shimon the Righteous had died, there was no miracle, whether it (i.e., the lamp) went out now after the slaughtering of the daily offering, or whether they found that it had gone out prior to the slaughtering of the daily offering, and they kindled, as we stated above in the first โ€œThe Superintendent said to themโ€ (Tractate Tamid, Chapter 3, Mishnah 9), even though that now they found that it was still burning/flickering, since there was no miracle existing, they would put it out and clean its ashes in order to finish the preparation of the two lamps/candles/lights together.",
241
+ "ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื• ืžืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for they would not kindle the western lamp/candle/light ever other than from the fire of the altar of the burnt offering, as it is written (Leviticus 6:6): โ€œA perpetual fire shall be kept burning on the altar [not to go out],โ€ and it is written (Leviticus 24:2): โ€œfor kindling lamps regularlyโ€, above the outer altar it was kindled.",
242
+ "ืžืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื” โ€“ of three steps that were before the Menorah/candelabrum.",
243
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื โ€“ for his Mitzvah was completed."
244
+ ],
245
+ [
246
+ "ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื โ€“ that were in the coal-pan.",
247
+ "ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ of the incense.",
248
+ "ื•ืจื“ื“ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ืชื” (he flattened โ€“ the heap of coals โ€“ with the bottom of the coal-pan) โ€“ in order that the incense would not fall from on top of the coals, therefore, he would spread [the glowing coals] and stretch them so that they would not be sloping/slanting this way or that. The Aramaic translation of ื•ื™ืจืงืขื•/he spread is ื•ืจื“ื™ื“ื•/flatten, stamp, beat. And he would offer it on the golden altar, but not within the coal-pan. But the incense of Yom Kippur, he would place the cals within the coal-pan, and upon it he would offer it, for there is no flattening/stamping of the coals on Yom Kippur."
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• โ€“ into the spoon.",
252
+ "ืœืื•ื”ื‘ื• โ€“ that came with him to the hall containing the golden altar for this this purpose. If there scattered from incense that was in the dish/vessel into the pan/censer, because the censer/dish was full and overflowing, and sometimes, it would fall from him into the pan/censer, he would give the incense to his friend/fellow when it had scattered into the palm of the handfuls of the person offering the incense.",
253
+ "ื•ืžืœืžื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• โ€“ because he had never offered incense before, as is taught in the Mishnah above (see Tractate Tamid, Chapter 5, Mishnah 2): โ€œThose who are new [to the preparation of] the incense, come and cast lots,โ€ therefore, they had to teach him.",
254
+ "ืฉืœื ืชืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืคื ื™ืš ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืœื ืชื›ื•ื” โ€“ he would pour the incense on the coals on the western side far from him, and when it would scatter to his side, he would heap it up, as we have stated in [Tractate] Yoma [49b] so that its smoke would delay in coming, and this is the honor/glory that he would tarry/delay during the [Divine] Service. And he would heap up and make a pile on the western side, and when he would come to drag the incense that is adjacent/near him, he would pile it up to the western side far from him, and he wouldnโ€™t be burned from the incense that would be bunrf. Bu if he had made the pile in front of him, when he gathered the incense that had scattered outside of him and he brought it near him, it would be that his arm would be singed/burned by the gathering of the incense that is burning in front of him. That is what is taught in the Baraitha in the chapter [five of Tractate Yoma], โ€œThey brought out for himโ€ [at the bottom of 52b] that he would gather in front of him which is outside of him.",
255
+ "ื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ืžืจื“ื“ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื (he flattened the heap of coals and went out) โ€“ meaning to say, immediately that he flattened the incense on top of the coals, he went out.",
256
+ "ืคืจืฉื• ื”ืขื โ€“ all of the Kohanim depart from between the hall with the golden altar and the Altar at the time of the offering of the incense, as it is written (Leviticus 16:17): โ€œWhen he goes in to make expiation in the Shrine, no one else shall be in the Tent of Meeting [until he comes out],โ€ all atonement is made holy, no person shall be in the Tent of Meeting, therefore, whether at the time of the incense, whether at the time of the giving of the blood of the bullock of the anointed Priest or the bull for an unwitting communal sin and the goats of idolatry, the Kohanim would leave from the area between the Entrance hall and the altar. But at the time of the offering of the incense of Yom Kippur, they would not leave other than from the hall containing the golden altar, because the incense of Yom Kippur was not outside in the hall of the golden altar on the golden altar, but rather in the innermost section in the house of the Holy of Holies, therefore, there is no need that they should leave from between the Entrance hall and the altar, other than from the hall of the golden altar alone."
257
+ ]
258
+ ],
259
+ [
260
+ [
261
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ืฉืชื•ื•ืช โ€“ in the great room with the golden altar, but we donโ€™t call it coming in without need.",
262
+ "ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช โ€“ that are the shoulders of the Ephod.",
263
+ "ื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ืœื• ืืช ื”ืคืจื•ื›ืช โ€“ that is hanging/suspended from the opening of the hall [leading to the interior of the Temple], for there werenโ€™t doors at the opening of the hall, like the other openings in the Temple, obut rather only a curtain."
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "ื‘ืื• ื•ืขืžื“ื• โ€“ for after they blessed and read and did their Divine Service that is stated above, they came to the Ascent/steps in the front of the Temple Hall.",
267
+ "ืขืžื“ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื โ€“ these are the five Kohanim that had the utensils in their hands.",
268
+ "ื•ื‘ืจื›ื• ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช โ€“ and theses are the three verses of the Priestly Blessing (Numbers 6:24-26), โ€œMay the LORD bless you and keep you;โ€ โ€May the LORD deal kindly with you and graciously with you;โ€ โ€œMay the LORD bestow His favor upon you and grant you peace.โ€ But we call it one blessing because they would not answer Amen after tehm between each verse in the manner that they do outside of the Temple/Jerusalem.",
269
+ "ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื• โ€“ with a Yud, Heh, etc.",
270
+ "ื•ื‘ืžื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ื• โ€“ with an Aleph, Daleth, etc. for we donโ€™t mention Godโ€™s name as it is written other than in the Temple alone, as it states (Exodus 20:21): โ€œin every place where I cause My name to be mentioned I will come to you and bless you.โ€ They (i.e., the Rabbis) invert the order in which it is written and expound upon it: In every place where I will come to you and bless you โ€“ which is the Temple, there I will mention My name.",
271
+ "ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืชืคื•ืชื™ื”ื โ€“ because they require the raising of their palms, as it is written (Leviticus 9:22): โ€œAaron lifted his hands toward the people and blessed them,โ€ and it is written (Deuteronomy 18:5): โ€œ[For the LORD your God has chosen] him and his descendants, [out of all your tribes, to be in attendance for service in the name of the LORD] for all time;โ€ just as it is he regarding the lifting of the palms, even his descendants (literally, โ€œhis sons,) for all time.",
272
+ "ื•ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ โ€“ when they bless the people with Godโ€™s ineffable Name, and the Divine Presence is above the second joints of their fingers, they raise their hands above from their heads.",
273
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ืืช ื™ื“ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื™ืฅ โ€“ because the name of God is written on it.",
274
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda (see also Tractate Sotah, Chapter 7, Mishnah 6, where the latter sections this Mishnah is also repeated)."
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ โ€“ that he offers incenses any time that he wants, and takes a portion when he wishes.",
278
+ "ืœืžื—ืฆื™ืช ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ โ€“ and he had tired a bit.",
279
+ "ื•ืกืžืš ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ because of the honor/prestige of the High Priest that his offering of the incense would be regarded as more important than the rest of the Kohanim.",
280
+ "ื•ื–ืจืงืŸ โ€“ as we have expounded [on the verse] (Deuteronomy 12:27): โ€œYou shall offer your burnt offerings, both the flesh and the blood, [on the altar of the LORD your God; and of your other sacrifices, the blood shall be poured out on the altar of the LORD your God, and you sall eat the flesh],โ€ just as the blood is sprinkled, so too the flesh is sprinkled (see Tractate Pesahim 47a).",
281
+ "ื ืฉืžื˜ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ื”ืœืš ืœื• โ€“ but the first [priest] remains there to receive the limbs from those who stretch forth their hands and to give them to the High Priest.",
282
+ "ื‘ื ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ the High Priest who was at the top of the ramp when he was in the south, walks around [in a circuit] in a rightward direction, for all of the turns that you make [in the Temple] must be towards the right (see Tractate Yoma 58b -and see also Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 5, Mishnah 3, in terms of the order of the turns made), therefore, he would walk to the southeast and from there to the northeast, until he reaches the southwest, the place of the perforations/holes where the wine and the water that they perform the libations descend in them and from there go to the pits by the side of the altar in to which the remainder of the libations was poured which are the foundations, and there, the one Kohen stands and hands to him the wine for the libations, but the High Priest does not carry the wine with him, lest the wine become spoiled in the smoke of the pile of wood on the altar in the Temple when he walks around the altar, and while he is walking around, he turns [a piece of flesh on the altar] with a hook, that is, he drips limbs that were not consumed on the altar.",
283
+ "But the rest of the Kohanim that perform the libations of the wine, walk going to the left from he ramp to the southwestern [corner] which is close to the ramp, as is taught in the Mishnah in Tractate Zevakhim, in the Chapter, โ€œThe Holy of Holiesโ€ (Chapter Six, Mishnah 3), โ€œAll of those who ascend the altar go up on the right (i.e. east) side and make a circuit and go down on the left, except for the one who does who goes up for these three things,โ€ libations of the wine and the water and the burnt offering of the bird. The wine and the water so that they wonโ€™t be affected by the smoke. And the burnt offering of the bird also, so that it would not die in the smoke. But the High Priest that is similar to a member of the household, he has permission to go as he desires, what the rest of the priests are not allowed to do, and he also has permission to turn a piece of flesh with a hook without a lottery, he has to go around the altar in order to walk in a rightward direction.",
284
+ "ื•ื”ืกื’ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ (the prefect/assistant stands on the corner) โ€“ near the High Priest who comes to offer libations.",
285
+ "ื•ื”ืกื•ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ื• โ€“ to wave when the Kohen offers the libation. In order that the Levites will know, and that they will speak/break out through song, and Ben Arza know and he knocked/struck the cymbal, as it states nearby.",
286
+ "ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื โ€“ two tables were in the western side of he ramp, one table of silver, where they put the Temple utensils, and one table of marble, where they put the limbs, and it is called, the table of the fats.",
287
+ "ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื โ€“ the nae of a person that strikes the cymbal, TZIMBAL in the foreign language."
288
+ ],
289
+ [
290
+ "ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื”' ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื” โ€“ because it is the first [thing] in the act of Creation.",
291
+ "ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”' โ€“ for on it (i.e., the second day of Creation), the waters were divided and he firmament was placed between the [upper] waters and the lower [waters].",
292
+ "ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืืœื”ื™ื ื ืฆื‘ ื‘ืขื“ืช ืืœ โ€“ for on it (i.e., the third day of Creation), the dry land appears that upon it, the judges stand to administer justice.",
293
+ "ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืืœ ื ืงืžื•ืช โ€“ for on it (i.e., the fourth day of Creation), the son, and the moon and the stars were created that God, in the future, will be avenged from those who worship them.",
294
+ "ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืจื ื™ื ื• ืœืืœื”ื™ื ืขื–ื ื• โ€“ for on it (i.e., the fifth day of Creation), the living creatures were created that He who sees them (i.e., God) sing and praise to its Creator.",
295
+ "ื‘ืฉืฉื™ ื”' ืžืœืš โ€“ for on it (i.e., the sixth day of Creation) the Creation was completed and on it, man was created who recognizes the Kingship of His Creator.",
296
+ "ืžื ื•ื—ื” ืœื—ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื™ื โ€“ this Tanna/teacher holds like the one who stated that for six thousand years, there will be a world and one will be destroyed, and on account that in the seventh millennium, there wonโ€™t be anything but the Holy One, blessed be He, as it states (Isaiah 2:11): โ€œNone but the LORD shall be Exalted in that day,โ€ therefore on Shabbat, we recite (Psalm 92): โ€œA psalm. A song; for the sabbath day,โ€ for the seventh millennium, as one day of the Holy One, blessed be He is one thousand years [for us]."
297
+ ]
298
+ ]
299
+ ],
300
+ "versions": [
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+ [
302
+ "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
303
+ "http://sefaria.org/"
304
+ ]
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+ ],
306
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื™ื“",
307
+ "categories": [
308
+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Kodashim"
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+ ],
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+ "sectionNames": [
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+ "Chapter",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
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+ ]
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+ }
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1
+ {
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+ "language": "he",
3
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid",
4
+ "versionSource": "http://mobile.tora.ws/",
5
+ "versionTitle": "On Your Way",
6
+ "status": "locked",
7
+ "priority": 1.0,
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+ "license": "Public Domain",
9
+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื•ื‘ืœื›ืชืš ื‘ื“ืจืš",
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+ "actualLanguage": "he",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
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+ "direction": "rtl",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื™ื“",
17
+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
20
+ "Bartenura",
21
+ "Seder Kodashim"
22
+ ],
23
+ "text": [
24
+ [
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื‘ื•ื“, ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื”ื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื. ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื’,) ื•ื”ื—ื•ื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืงื“ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืฉื•ืžืจื™ ืžืฉืžืจืช ืœืžืฉืžืจืช, ืจืžื– ืœืฉืœืฉ ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ื•ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ืืฃ ืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ืŸ:",
27
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
28
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ.</b> ื™ืœื“ื™ื. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืœื“, ืจื‘ื™ื. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ, ื”ืžื•ืจื™ื ื—ืฆื™ื ื‘ืงืฉืช, ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื” ืงืฉืช:",
29
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื”, ืืจืงื•ื•ืœื˜ืดื• ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
30
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ.</b> ืืฆื˜ื‘ืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘, ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ ื’ื–ื™ืช, ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืงืจืงืข, ื•ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ืงืฆืจื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•:",
31
+ "<b>ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘.</b> ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ืœืง ืœืฉื‘ืขื” ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืช ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืข ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื™ื•ืžื•, ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ:",
32
+ "<b>ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื‘ื—ื•ืจื™ื ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื–ืงื ื ืœืคืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:",
33
+ "<b>ื›ืกืชื•.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช:",
34
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืฉื›ื‘ ืฉื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื˜ื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื•ืžืจื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื:",
35
+ "<b>ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ ืžืžืฉ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืœืื™ื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื‘ื ื˜, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
36
+ "<b>ื•ืžืชื›ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืขืฆืžืŸ.</b> ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœ:",
37
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื”. ืฉืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืจื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื ื›ืดื˜:ื™ืดื˜) ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื“ืจืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉื•:",
38
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ:",
39
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ื•ืจื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื.</b> ืฉื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืชื—ืžื ื‘ื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ:",
40
+ "<b>ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื ื›ื ืก ื‘ื• ืื“ื ืžืขื•ืœื ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื‘ืจื• ืฉื:",
41
+ "<b>ืžืฆืื• ื ืขื•ืœ.</b> ื–ื” ืกื™ืžื ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืื“ื ืฉื ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก:",
42
+ "<b>ื ืกืชืคื’.</b> ืงื™ื ื— ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจื•:",
43
+ "<b>ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื•.</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“:",
44
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ. ืœืคื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžืฉืชืœื— ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื”, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืœ ื–ื‘ ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™:"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "<b>ืœืชืจื•ื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ:",
48
+ "<b>ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืื“ื ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ:",
49
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืื™ื–ื• ืฉืขื” ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ ืื™ื›ื ื–ืžืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื‘ื™ืืช ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ื“ืืžืจืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื‘ื™ืืช ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื–ืžืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื‘ื™ืืชื• ืฉืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืขืชื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ื•ืช ืฉืคืขืžื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืžืงืจื•ืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ ื›ื•ืณ, ื•ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืชืจื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื•ื“ื•ืคืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœืื•ืชื ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“, ื•ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืคื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ืœื•:",
50
+ "<b>ืžืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœ. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœืงืจื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืขืœื•ืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ:",
51
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก.</b> ื›ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื‘ื ืœืชืจื•ื, ื”ื™ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื™ื• ืžื˜ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืคื™ื™ืก ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ, ื•ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื ืœื• ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืชื•ืจื. ืกื“ืจ ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื•ืžืขืฉื”ื•, ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:"
52
+ ],
53
+ [
54
+ "<b>ืคืฉืคืฉ.</b> ืคืชื— ืงื˜ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื’ื•ืคื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ื‘ื• ื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืขื–ืจื”:",
55
+ "<b>ืืœื• ื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื—. ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื›ืกื“ืจืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืขื–ืจื” ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื›ื•ืชืœื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืกื›ืš ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืจื˜ื™ืงืดืŸ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื•ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืœื ืกื›ืš, ื•ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ืกื›ืš. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืžืชื—ืœืงื™ื ืœืฉืชื™ ื›ืชื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ื ื•ืจื•ืื™ื ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื•ื. ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจืื•ืช ื”ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ืœืฆื“ ืจื•ื— ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช, ืืœื• ืžื”ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืืœื• ืžื”ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืขื“ ืฉืคื•ื’ืขื™ื ื–ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ืžื ื—ืช ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื” ืฉืœื•ื, ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืœื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืฆืื ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื•ื ื•ืœื ื ืคืงื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืœื™:"
56
+ ],
57
+ [
58
+ "<b>ื”ื–ื”ืจ ืฉืœื ืชื’ืข ื‘ื›ืœื™.</b> ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœืงืจื‘ ืืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœืฉื•ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื•:",
59
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืงืฆื•ืข.</b> ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื–ื•ื™ืช:",
60
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ืš ืฉืžื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืขืฉื” ืžื•ื›ื ื™ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ. ื’ืœื’ืœ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืฉืขืœ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉืงืขื™ื ื”ื›ื™ื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ืช ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ืงืข ื”ื›ื™ื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืื•ืžืจ, ืฉื”ืžื•ื›ื ื™ ื”ื•ื ื›ืœื™ ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืชืงื“ืฉื• ื•ื™ืคืกืœื• ื‘ืœื™ื ื”:",
61
+ "<b>ื”ืžืื•ื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ืืฉ ืฉื ืชืื›ืœื• ื”ื™ื˜ื‘ ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื“ืฉืŸ:",
62
+ "<b>ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฆืคื”.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืฉืžื•, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ [ืชืžื•ืจื” ื“ืฃ ืœืดื“ ืขืดื] ื•ืฉืžื• ื›ื•ืœื•, ื•ืฉืžื• ืฉืœื ื™ืคื–ืจ:"
63
+ ]
64
+ ],
65
+ [
66
+ [
67
+ "<b>ืจืื•ื”ื• ืื—ื™ื•.</b> ืœืื•ืชื• ืฉืชืจื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
68
+ "<b>ืฉื™ืจื“.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื•:",
69
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจืฆื• ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื•ืงื“ืฉื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
70
+ "<b>ืกื•ื ืงื™ื.</b> ืžืกืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ. ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ืขื ื•ืข ื•ื ื“ื ื•ื“. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื’ื“ื™ ืžืกื ืงืŸ [ืคืกื—ื™ื ื“ืฃ ื’ืณ ืขืดื‘], ื’ื“ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื ืขื ื•ืข ื•ื ื’ื™ื—ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื’ื—ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื‘ื–ื”. ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืกื•ื ืงื™ื ืžื ืขื ืขื™ื ื•ืžื”ืคื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
71
+ "<b>ื‘ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘:"
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคืจ.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกืœืงื• ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ื ืื• ืœืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืคื“ืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืืคืจ ื‘ืžื’ืจืคื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื ื•ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืชืคื•ื—, ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ืืคืจ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืชืคื•ื—:",
75
+ "<b>ืคืขืžื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ื’ื•ื–ืžื ืงืชื ื™, ื“ืžืขื•ืœื ืœื ื”ื ื™ื—ื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ:",
76
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืœื—ื•ืฅ ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
77
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื” ืฉืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
78
+ "<b>ืžื™ืžื™ื• ืœื ื ืชืขืฆืœ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ืœื ืžื—ืžืช ืขืฆืœื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืืœื ืœื ื•ื™ ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืฉืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืงืจื‘ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—: "
79
+ ],
80
+ [
81
+ "<b>ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืขืฆื™ื ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ื•ืžืฉื•ืคื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœืชื•ืš ืื•ืจืš ื”ืžืขืจื›ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื•ื‘ื™ืขืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ, ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฉื ื™ ืขืฆื™ื:",
82
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื”.</b> ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ืจื™ืŸ ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืงื ืžืคืจืฉ ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขืฆื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื”ื’ื™ื–ืจื™ื. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืœ ื–ื™ืช ื•ืฉืœ ื’ืคืŸ ื“ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื ื™ื ืคื™ืจื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื˜ืขืžื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืขืฉื™ื ื“ืฉืŸ ืžื™ื“:",
83
+ "<b>ืžื•ืจื‘ื™ื•ืช.</b> ืขื ืคื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืื ื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืชืื ื™ื ืจืขื•ืช. ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืคื™ืจื™:",
84
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ืขืฅ ืฉืžืŸ.</b> ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืฉืžืŸ ืืคืจืกืžื•ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ ืฉืžืขืชื™, ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืงื•ืจื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืœืขืดื– ืคื™ื ืดื•, ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ื•ืดืจ. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขืฅ ืžืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืฆื•ืจืš ื›ืžื• ื‘ื’ืคืŸ ื•ื–ื™ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืืกืจื•ื”ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœ ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืืกืจื• ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ื”ื–ื™ืช:"
85
+ ],
86
+ [
87
+ "<b>ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ืขื•ื“ ืžืขืจื›ื” ืื—ืจืช, ืงืจื™ ืœื”ืš ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”. ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื, ืื—ืช ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืฉื•ืจืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื” ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ืช ืžืขืจื›ื” ืคื—ื•ืชื” ืžืžื ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ืฉื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืžืžื ื” ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ื ื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช ื›ืœื•ื ืืœื ืœืงื™ื•ื ื”ืืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื•ื”ืืฉ ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชื•ืงื“ ื‘ื•, ื–ื• ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœ ืงื™ื•ื ื”ืืฉ:",
88
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื–ื™ืชื” ืžื–ืจื—ื”.</b> ืžืจืื™ืช ืคื ื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืคืชื— ื•ื”ื—ืœื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื›ื”, ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
89
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ื’ื™ื–ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื™ื ื‘ืชืคื•ื—:",
90
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืืœื™ืชื.</b> ื—ืจื™ื•ืช ื•ืงืกืžื™ืŸ ื“ืงื™ืŸ ืชื•ื—ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืฆื™ืช ื”ืืฉ ื•ืืœื™ืชื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืœื™ื”, ืขืœ ืฉื ื–ื ื‘ื•ืช ื”ืื•ื“ื™ื:"
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืจื• ืžืฉื.</b> ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืงื•ื ื”ืขืฆื™ื:",
94
+ "<b>ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื›ืžื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืฉืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช:",
95
+ "<b>ื‘ืขื•ืžื“.</b> ื›ืžื• ื‘ืื•ืžื“:",
96
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืขื•ื“ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืฉื ื™ ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ืžืฉื‘ืช ืœืฉื‘ืช:",
97
+ "<b>ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืžืขืจื›ื”.</b> ื•ื ืฉืจืคื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืฆื“ื™ ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื”:",
98
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื• ืœื”ื ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืคื™ื™ืกื•ืช:"
99
+ ]
100
+ ],
101
+ [
102
+ [
103
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•.</b> ื”ื˜ื™ืœื• ืคื™ื™ืก. ื”ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:",
104
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื•ื—ื˜.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื‘ื–ืจ, ืชืงื ื• ื‘ื” ืคื™ื™ืก, ื“ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื ื•ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ื” ืœื”ื•, ืื™ ืœื ื™ื˜ื™ืœื• ืคื™ื™ืก ืืชื• ืœืื™ื ืฆื•ื™ื™ ืขืœื” ื•ืืชื• ื‘ื” ืœื™ื“ื™ ืกื›ื ื”:",
105
+ "<b>ืžื™ ื–ื•ืจืง.</b> ืžืงื‘ืœ ื”ื“ื ื”ื•ื ื”ื–ื•ืจืง, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ื ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ืœื”:",
106
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™.</b> ื•ื”ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื, ื ืงื˜ ืœื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ื“ืœืงื”. ื•ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื”. ื•ื”ื ื“ืžื“ื›ืจ ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื•ื–ื•ืจืง ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื”ื ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื˜ืคื™:",
107
+ "<b>ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ.</b> ื”ืืœื™ื”:",
108
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื–ื”.</b> ื›ืœ [ื”ืฉื•ืžืŸ] ื”ืจื•ืื” ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข:",
109
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ืจื”.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื’ืจื”, ื”ื•ื ื”ืฆื•ืืจ, ื•ื‘ื• ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืงื ื” ื”ืจื™ืื” ืขื ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืœื‘:",
110
+ "<b>ื–ื›ื” ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื”.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืขืœื” ืœื• ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ื–ื•ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื, ื•ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ืฉื•ื—ื˜. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืงื•ื“ืžืช ืœืงื‘ืœืช ื”ื“ื, ืžืดืž ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื‘ื–ืจ ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื–ื›ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืœื• ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื•ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืžืขืœื” ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ื•ื”๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืฉื™ ืฉืชื™ ื”ื™ื“ื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืืœื™ื” ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื•ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ื”ื—ื–ื” ื•ื”ื’ืจื”, ื•ื”ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ืฉืชื™ ื“ืคื ื•ืช, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื”ืกื•ืœืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืขื ื”ืชืžื™ื“. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื ืกื›ื™ื. ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ืื—ื“ ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:"
111
+ ],
112
+ [
113
+ "<b>ืฆืื• ื•ืจืื•.</b> ืขืœ ืžืงื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ:",
114
+ "<b>ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜) ื‘ื™ื•ื ื–ื‘ื—ื›ื:",
115
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืงืื™.</b> ื”ืื™ืจ ื•ื”ื‘ืจื™ืง ื”ืฉื—ืจ:",
116
+ "<b>ื”ืื™ืจ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื ืขื“ ืฉื”ืื™ืจื• ืคื ื™ [ื›ืœ] ืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืกืคื™ืง ื›ืฉื”ื‘ืจื™ืง ื›ื ืงื•ื“ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžืชื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืืœ:",
117
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœื• ื”ื’ื™ืข ื”ืื•ืจ ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื–ื›ื•ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ื”ืงื‘ื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ:"
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "<b>ืžืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ื ืฉื:",
121
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืœื•ืงื—ื™ ืกื•ืœืช ืœืžื ื—ื” ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืกื›ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืืฆืœ ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืžืขื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืฆืจื™ืš, ื•ื”ื•ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ื—ื•ืชื ื•ืžื•ืœื™ืš ื”ื—ื•ืชื ืืฆืœ ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ื•ืžืงื‘ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื. ื•ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉืงืœื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ืขื’ืœ, ื–ื›ืจ, ื’ื“ื™, ื—ื•ื˜ื. ื›ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ืชื ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื• ืขื’ืœ, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืคืจ. ื–ื›ืจ, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืื™ืœ, ืฉืชืจื’ื•ื ืื™ืœ, ื“ื›ืจื. ื’ื“ื™, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉ. ื—ื•ื˜ื, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืžืฆื•ืจืข:",
122
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืžื“ื•ืจื” ืฉื“ื•ืœืงืช ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“. ืงืจื•ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“:"
123
+ ],
124
+ [
125
+ "<b>ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ ื›ืกืฃ ื•ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ืœืžื” ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ืœื™ื ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืืžืจื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืื–ื›ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื—ื’ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื” ื•ืžืœืื›ื™:",
126
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืงื• ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“.</b> ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื•, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ืขื•ืจื• ื ืคืฉื˜ ื™ืคื”:",
127
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื’ื•ื–ืžื ืงืชื ื™ ื“ืœื ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื”, ืืœื ืฉืœ ื ื—ื•ืฉืช ื™ืคื” ื›ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืžืฉ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช:",
128
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืžื‘ื•ืงืจ.</b> ื“ืชืžื™ื“ ื˜ืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจ ืžืžื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื•, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืฉื” ื”ืคืกื—:"
129
+ ],
130
+ [
131
+ "<b>ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื“ืชืžื™ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
132
+ "<b>ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื.</b> ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ ื ืžื•ื›ื™ื:",
133
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื–.</b> ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืžืจื•ื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื:",
134
+ "<b>ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื•ื•ื™ื. ืื™ื ืฆื™ื ื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–: ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ื, ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื–, ื•ืชื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
135
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื–ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื–ื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ืขืฅ, ืœืชืœื•ืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืื• ืงื˜ื ื”:",
136
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื.</b> ืฉืขืœื™ื”ื ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืขืฉื•ืชืŸ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื•ืœื ืขืฉืื•ื ืืœื ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืจืชื™ื— ื•ืžืกืจื™ื—, ื•ื”ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืงืจืจ ื•ืžืฆื ืŸ ื•ืžืขืžื™ื“ื• ืฉืœื ื™ืกืจื™ื—:"
137
+ ],
138
+ [
139
+ "<b>ื”ื˜ื ื™.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ืฉืžืช ื‘ื˜ื ื. ื“ื•ืžื” ืœืกืœ ื•ืคื™ื• ืจื—ื‘:",
140
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ื•ื–.</b> ืงื™ืชื•ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขืจื‘ื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืืœื›ื•ืดื–:",
141
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช.</b> ืœืคืชื•ื— ืฉื ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™:",
142
+ "<b>ืชืจืงื‘.</b> ื›ืœื™ ืฉืžื—ื–ื™ืง ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื‘ื™ืŸ. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจืงื‘, ืชืจื™ ื•ืงื‘. ื•ื“ื•ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืœืชืจืงื‘ ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ื–ื™ืง ืืœื ืงื‘ื™ื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื”:",
143
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืืžืช ื”ืฉื—ื™.</b> ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ื ืœื• ืœืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื”ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืชื™ืชื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื—, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืžื›ื ื™ืก ืืžืช ื™ื“ื• ื‘ื—ื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ ืฉืœื• ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื‘ื™ื“ื• ื“ืจืš ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ืคื•ืชื— ื‘ืžืคืชื— ืžื™ื“ ื‘ืœื ื˜ื•ืจื— ื›ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื:",
144
+ "<b>ื›ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื›ืžื• [ืคืกื—ื™ื ืœืดื– ืขืดื‘] ื™ืขืฉื ื” ื‘ื“ืคื•ืก ื•ื™ืงื‘ืขื ื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื”ืจ ื‘ืœื ื˜ื•ืจื—:"
145
+ ],
146
+ [
147
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ืœืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืจ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ืœืกื•ืฃ ืขื‘ื™ื• ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื. ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืฉื ื™ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืžืืœื• ืจื—ื•ืง ืงืฆืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจ. ืื•ืชื• ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืกื’ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื™ืคืชื— ื‘ืฉืœ ืขืชื™ื“, ื•ืžืกืชืžื ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ืคืฉืคืฉ ืฉื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ืชื—ื• ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืจ ืฉืืฆืœื• ืฉืชื•ื—ื‘ ื‘ื• ื™ื“ื• ืขื“ ื”ืฉื—ื™ ื•ื›ื•ืคืฃ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœ ืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ื• ืฉื ืคืชื— ืœืืœืชืจ ื‘ืœื™ ื˜ื•ืจื—:",
148
+ "<b>ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ:",
149
+ "<b>ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื“ ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื• ื•ื‘ื ืœื• ืืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื•:",
150
+ "<b>ื ื’ืจ.</b> ื‘ืจื™ื— ืฉืžื‘ืจื™ื— ืžืงืฆื” ื”ื“ืœืช ืœืงืฆื” ื”ื“ืœืช. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื ื’ืจ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ื™ืชื“ ื”ื ืขื•ืฅ ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื”ื“ืœืช ื‘ื ืงื‘ ืฉื‘ืืกืงื•ืคื”:",
151
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ื”ืคื•ืชื—ื•ืช.</b> ื”ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ื ื•ื”ืžืกื’ืจื•ืช:"
152
+ ],
153
+ [
154
+ "<b>ืžื™ืจื™ื—ื• ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืžื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืขื“ ื™ืจื™ื—ื• ืขืฉืจ ืคืจืกืื•ืช:",
155
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ื ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืขืฉืจื” ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•, ื•ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืื” ืžื™ื ื™ ื–ืžืจ, ื•ืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืขื“ ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง:",
156
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืื“ื ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื”, ื•ืขืฉื” ื’ืœื’ืœ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ ืœืฉืงืขื• ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืฉื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ื” ื•ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื•ืจ ืœืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ืœ ื”ื’ืœื’ืœ ื ืฉืžืข ืขื“ ื™ืจื™ื—ื•:",
157
+ "<b>ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™ ื›ืจื•ื–.</b> ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืฉืžื• ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื›ืจื™ื– ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืขืžื“ื• ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื›ื:",
158
+ "<b>ื—ืœื™ืœ.</b> ืฆืœืžื™ืฆืœื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื–ืžืืดืจ, ื•ืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคื™ืคืจืดื™ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
159
+ "<b>ืฆืœืฆืœ.</b> ืฆืžื‘ืœืดื™ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
160
+ "<b>ืžื›ื•ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื:"
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืจืง ืžืขื˜ ื“ืฉืŸ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ืงื— ื‘ื—ืคื ื™ื•, ื›ื™ื‘ื“ ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื˜ื ื™:",
164
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื™ื—ื•.</b> ืœื˜ื ื™ ืฉื ื•ื™ืฆื. ืื‘ืœ ืžื™ื“ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืฆื™ืื•, ืฉื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืชืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื” ื›ืžื• ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื”ืฉืœืžืช ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื•ืื– ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื”ื˜ื ื™ ื•ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ืฉื•ืคื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื ื‘ืœืขื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
165
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฆื ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ืžื ื•ืจื” ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืžืขืจื‘ ื”ื™ื ืžื•ื ื—ืช. ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืžื•ืฆื ื’ื ื”ืฉืืจ ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื, ื•ื ืงื˜ ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžื›ื‘ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ, ื•ืืœื• ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืื ืžืฆืืŸ ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ื‘ืŸ, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื‘ืกื™ืคื ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• ืœืืœื• ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช. ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ, ื•ื‘ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘:",
166
+ "<b>ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ืฉืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืžืกื™ืจ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื”ื™ืฉืŸ ื•ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืฉื ื” ื•ื”ื“ืฉืŸ, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื”ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ื–, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื”, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื•, ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื”. ื•ื”ื ื“ืžืคืกื™ืง ื”ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื˜ื™ื‘ืŸ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ืœืณ) ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื”ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืœืง ื”ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ืœืฉื ื™ ื‘ืงืจื™ื, ื•ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืชื—ื™ืœ, ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืจื•ื‘ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉื™ืชื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, [ืื™ืŸ] ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื ืจื•ืช ืคื—ื•ืช [ืžืฉืชื™ื]. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืก, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง. ืื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืณ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ื“ื•ืœืง ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ื“ืจืš ื ืก, ื‘ื“ืชื ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืคืจื•ื›ืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช, ืขื“ื•ืช ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืฉื•ืจื” ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื–ื• ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื” ืฉืžืŸ ื›ืžื“ืช ื—ื‘ืจื•ืชื™ื” ื•ืžืžื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืกื™ื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื”ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืœื ื”ื ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืžื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื•, ื•ืžื ื™ื— ื”ื ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื“ื•ืœืง ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ืฉืžื“ืœื™ืง ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื•ืžืžื ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืง ื›ืœ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ืื—ืจื™ื, ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืฉืืจ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ืžื˜ื™ื‘ื• ื•ืžื“ืฉื ื• ืœื ืจ ื–ื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื•. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ื, ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ ื˜ืคื™ ืฉืœื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืื ื ืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ืœื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื“ื•ืœืง ืฉืœื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘, ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจืกื ื”ื ืก ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืœืง ืชืžื™ื“. ื•ืžื” ืฉืžื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ืœื ื—ืžืฉ ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉืชื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง, ื•ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื›ื™ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื“) ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“ ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืคืจื•ื›ืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื™ืขืจื•ืš ืื•ืชื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ, ืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ืงื‘ืข ื ืจ ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื• ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื–ื” ื–ื” ื ืจ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—, ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™, ื“ื›ื™ ืขื™ื™ืœ ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ื”ื”ื•ื ื ืจ ืคื’ืข ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืขื‘ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืืชื•ืงื ื”ื ืก ื•ื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื•. ื•ื‘ื ืจ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ, ืžืื•ืชื• ื ืจ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ืจ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ:",
167
+ "<b>ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ืฉืชื™ื ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง:",
168
+ "<b>ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ื“ืจืš ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ืŸ ืžื˜ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืœื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ื, ืืœื ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืžืกื™ืจ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืฉื ื”, ื•ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื” ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ื™ื›ืจ ื™ืคื” ื”ืคืกืง ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ืœืฉืชื™ื. ื•ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
169
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ.</b> ื–ื• ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืžื ื™ื—ืŸ ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื•ืช ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ื ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง. ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื“ื”ื›ื ืื™ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื“ืœืขื™ืœ. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ [ื”ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช] ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื” ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื”. ื•ื ืจ ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉืงืจื•ื™ื” ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื•ืžืกื™ืจ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื•ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื™ืฉื ื” ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื” ืžืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื”ืื—ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื• ื ืจื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช, ื•ืœื›ืš ื ืžื™ ืžื“ืœื™ืงื” ืื ืžืฆืื” ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืงื” ื›ืฉื‘ื ื•ืžื˜ื™ื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื‘ืจื•ืš ื‘ืจ ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืžื—ื•ื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ื. ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื ื‘ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ืชืžื•ื”ื™ื ืžืื“, ื•ื’ื ืžื” ืฉืกื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื”ื“ืœืงืชืŸ ื•ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื‘, ืคืœื™ืื” ื ืฉื’ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื™ื ื™, ื•ืœื ืฉืžืขืชื™ ื•ืœื ืจืื™ืชื™ ืœืื—ื“ ืžืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืฉืกื•ื‘ืจ ื›ืŸ:",
170
+ "<b>ื•ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืฉืจ ื˜ืคื—ื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช:",
171
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื”ืขืœืื•ืช ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื‘ื”ืขืœื•ืชืš ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ื”ืขืœื” ืืช ื ืจื•ืชื™ื”, ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“:",
172
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ื ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืื– ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื˜ื ื™. ื•ื›ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื• ื‘ื’ืžืจ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื•ืœื ืขื›ืฉื™ื•, ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ื’ืžืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชืŸ:"
173
+ ]
174
+ ],
175
+ [
176
+ [
177
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืขืฆืžืŸ ืื• ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืจื’ืœื™ื• ืœืขืฆืžืŸ, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ื—ื•ืงื•ืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื, ืฉื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”:",
178
+ "<b>ืืœื ืžืขืงื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•,</b> ื”ื™ื“ ืขื ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื›ืขืงื™ื“ืช ื™ืฆื—ืง:",
179
+ "<b>ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ื™ืจืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฆืคื•ื ื” ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ื˜ื” ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื ื•ืคื ื™ื• ืœืžืขืจื‘, ืฉืื ื™ืจื‘ื™ืฅ ื’ืœืœื™ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
180
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ืงืจืŸ ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ืฉืžืฉ ื‘ืžื–ืจื— ื•ื–ื•ืจื—ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ื” ืœืžืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ื, ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื ื’ื“ ื”ืฉืžืฉ, ืฉื”ืฉืžืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื™ื•ื:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื.</b> ืฉื—ืžื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžืื™ืจื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ืงืจืŸ ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช:",
182
+ "<b>ื‘ื˜ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื™ื”.</b> ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื’ื‘ื•ื” ื•ืžืืคื™ืœ ื›ื•ืœื•. ื•ื™ื•ื—ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืชืงื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื ืฉืœ ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช, ื‘ื›ืœ ืกื“ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช, ืœืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืจืฆืคื” ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืงืฉืช, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ื ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ, ื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ืŸ ืฆื•ืืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ื ื•ืขืฆื™ื ืจืืฉ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
183
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืชื—ื™ืœื”.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืฉื—ื˜ ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืืจืฅ ื•ื–ื•ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ [ื—ื•ื˜] ื”ืกืงืจื ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืžืชื ื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ืืจื‘ืข, ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช. ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช:"
184
+ ],
185
+ [
186
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ.</b> ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื˜ื‘ื—ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉืžื—ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ ืขื ื”ืขื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื•, ืืœื ื ื•ืงื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืช ื”ืืจื›ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื ืžื›ืจืช ืขื ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ืชื•ืœื” ื‘ื• ื•ืžืคืฉื™ื˜ ื”ืจื’ืœ ืขื ืฉืืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื”ื›ืจืขื™ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ืŸ:",
187
+ "<b>ืขืจื›ื•ื‘ื•.</b> ื›ืžื• ืืจื›ื•ื‘ื•:",
188
+ "<b>ืžื™ืจืง ืืช ื”ื”ืคืฉื˜.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื”ื•ืคืฉื˜ ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื—ื–ื” ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืจ ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ื•:",
189
+ "<b>ื ื˜ืœ ื”ืคื“ืจ.</b> ื”ื—ืœื‘:",
190
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ื•ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื” ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ืœื›ืœื•ืš ื“ื ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”:",
191
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ืจืก ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื”.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืคืจืฉ ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ื”, ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื”:",
192
+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืœื ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ืขื ืฉืืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืฉืœื ืชื˜ื ืคื:",
193
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืจืขื™ ื™ื•ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื“ื•ื—ืง ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื“ืงื™ื:",
194
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื”.</b> ืœื›ืœ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช. ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื”ื“ื™ื—ืŸ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื, ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ:"
195
+ ],
196
+ [
197
+ "<b>ื•ืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ื“:",
198
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ื™ื–ื”.</b> ืœืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ืžืžืงื•ืžื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืขื ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ ื•ื”ืืœื™ื”, ื•ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื”ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื”ื™ืžื ื™, ื•ื”ืจืื™ื” ืขื ื”ื’ื™ืจื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืขืžื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš:",
199
+ "<b>ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื™ืžื ื™,</b> ื—ื•ืชืš ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉื“ืจื”, ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ื— ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ืืœ ื”ืฉื“ืจื” ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”:",
200
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืžืืœื•.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืื‘ืจื™ื ืœื›ื‘ืฉ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ื‘ืฉืžืืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžืขื›ื‘ืช ื›ืคืจื”, ืฉืจื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉืžืืœ, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื™ื•ืžื:",
201
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืจื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžืคืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื”ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืจืืฉื™ ื”ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช:",
202
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืš.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื›ืฃ ืื—ืช, ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื ื—ื“ื:",
203
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืกื•ืœืช.</b> ืœืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉืขื ื”ืชืžื™ื“:",
204
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื ื—ืช ืžื—ื‘ืช ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉืžืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืืคืกืงื™ื” ืœื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืœืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ืŸ ืฆืจื›ื™ ืชืžื™ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื•ืœืช ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉื ืžื ื—ื” ืœื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉืŸ ื™ื—ื“:",
205
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื™ ื›ื‘ืฉ ื•ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื•.</b> ื•ืœื ืžื—ืฆื™ื• ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื™ื›ืจืช ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ื” ืœืžื–ื‘๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื›ืฉื™ื—ื–ืจื• ืžืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืื‘ืจื™ ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช, ื“ืฉืœ ืžื•ืกืคื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืขืจื‘, ื”ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืžื–ืจื—, ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ:",
206
+ "<b>ืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข.</b> ื•ื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื:"
207
+ ]
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ [
211
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื ืื”ื‘ื” ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ืื™ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื–ืจื—ื” ื”ื—ืžื” ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืจ. ื•ืกื“ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ืžืขื›ื‘:",
212
+ "<b>ืงืจืื• ืขืฉืจืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืืฃ ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื, ืืœื ืฉื‘ื™ื˜ืœื•ื ืžืคื ื™ ืชืจืขื•ืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืืœื• ืœื‘ื“ื ื ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ืกื™ื ื™ ื•ืœื ืฉืืจ ื”ืชื•ืจื”:",
213
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื‘ืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช, ืืžืช ื•ื™ืฆื™ื‘, ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืœื ื ืฉื™ืืช ื›ืคื™ื, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ื•ืฉืื™ื ืืช ื›ืคื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื, ื•ื”ืื™ื“ื ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ื ืš ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืžืงื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ืคื˜ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืš ืžืชืคืœืช ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืฉืจื”:",
214
+ "<b>ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ืฉืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืžืจ ืœืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื ื›ื ืก, ืžื™ ืฉืฉื™ื›ืŸ ืืช ืฉืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื™ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื›ื ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ืื—ื•ื” ืฉืœื•ื ื•ืจื™ืขื•ืช, ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉืžืจ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ืฉืขื‘ืจ:"
215
+ ],
216
+ [
217
+ "<b>ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื–ื›ื” ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ื• ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก. ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ื” ืคืขื ืื—ืช ืœืฉื ื•ืช ื‘ื”, ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืžืขืฉืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื™ืณ) ื™ืฉื™ืžื• ืงื˜ื•ืจื” ื‘ืืคืš ื•ื’ื•ืณ ื‘ืจืš ื”ืณ ื—ื™ืœื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœืฉื ื•ืช ื‘ื” ืื“ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœ ืžืชืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืžืชื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื‘ื”:",
218
+ "<b>ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื™ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื“ื•ืงื, ืืžืจ ื”ื›ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื’ื ื™ืฉื ื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ืคืขืžื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื–ื›ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•:",
219
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืื•ืชื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื›ืืŸ ืคื™ื™ืก. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘:"
220
+ ],
221
+ [
222
+ "<b>ืžืกืจื•ื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื.</b> ืื•ืชื ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื”ื›ื™ื ื• ืขืฆืžื ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื• ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื‘ื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืกืจื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืกืงื™ื ื‘ืฆืจื›ื™ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืคืฉื™ื˜ื•ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืขืœื™ื”ื:",
223
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืืœื ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“.</b> ื•ืœื•ื‘ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœ ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžืคืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื”ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื›ืœ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ื›ืœื™ื.</b> ื”ื—ืœื•ื ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืžื›ื ืกื™ื, ื•ืืช ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื ืช ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื ืคืช ื•ืื‘ื ื˜. ื•ืกื“ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืฉืช ื”ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื, ื”ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ืชื—ืœื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื’ืณ) ื•ืžื›ื ืกื™ ื‘ื“ ื™ืœื‘ืฉ ืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจื•, ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืœืžื›ื ืกื™ื, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื›ืชื•ื ืช, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื—ื•ื’ืจ ื‘ืื‘ื ื˜, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฆื•ื ืฃ ื‘ืžืฆื ืคืช:"
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื‘ื–ืš.</b> ื›ืฃ ืงื˜ืŸ:",
228
+ "<b>ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืฉืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงื˜ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชืคื–ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืœืืจืฅ ื‘ื”ื•ืœื›ืชื•. ื•ื‘ื›ืฃ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืœื‘ื“ ืœื ืกื’ื™, ื“ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ื•ื ื›ืœืคื™ ืžืขืœื” ืœืขืจื•ืช ืžื›ืฃ ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืงื˜ืจื”:",
229
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœื•.</b> ืœื‘ื–ืš:",
230
+ "<b>ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื”ื™ื” ืœื›ืกื•ื™ ืžืœืžืขืœื” ืฉืขืœ ื™ื“ื” ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœ ื”ื›ื™ืกื•ื™ ื•ืžืกื™ืจื• ืžืขืœ ื”ื‘ื–ืš. ื•ื‘ืขืจื•ืš ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื‘ื’ื“, ื›ืžื• ืœื ื™ืฆื ื”ื’ืžืœ ื‘ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช ื“ืคืจืง ื‘ืžื” ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ื•ืฆืื”. ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืชื•ืŸ ืขืœ ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื‘ื–ืš ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืกื•ื“ืจ ืงื˜ืŸ ืœื ื•ื™:"
231
+ ],
232
+ [
233
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืžื—ืชื”.</b> ืœื”ื•ืœื™ืš ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื–ื” ืคื™ื™ืก, ืืœื ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืคื™ื™ืก ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื” ืฉืขืžื• ื–ื›ื” ืขืžื™ ื‘ืžื—ืชื”:",
234
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืชื”.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžืื•ื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื”ื›ื, ืฉื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ืœื“ืฉืŸ, ื“ืื“ืจื‘ื” ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื’ืกื•ืช ื•ื‘ื•ืขืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื”:",
235
+ "<b>ื•ืขื™ืจืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืชืงืœืงืœ, ื•ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืกื” ืขืœ ืžืžื•ื ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
236
+ "<b>ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืงื‘ ื’ื—ืœื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉืœ ื›ืกืฃ ื‘ืช ืืจื‘ืขื” ืงื‘ื™ื ื•ืžืขืจื” ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื”. ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื” ืžืœืื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืจื” ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”, ืฉื–ื”ื• ื“ืจืš ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื”:",
237
+ "<b>ืžื›ื‘ื“ืŸ ืœืืžื”.</b> ืœืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”. ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื•ื• ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
238
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœื›ื‘ื•ืช:",
239
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืคื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืคืกื›ืชืจ.</b> ื›ืœื™ ืื—ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืชืจื’ื•ื ืกื™ืจื•ืชื™ื•, ืคืกื›ืชืจื•ื•ืชื™ื”:",
240
+ "<b>ืœืชืš.</b> ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื•ืจ, ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืกืื™ืŸ, ืฉื”ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืกืื™ืŸ:",
241
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ ืฉืจืฉืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื•.</b> ื‘ืคืกื›ืชืจ. ืื—ืช ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฆื“ ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื• ืžื•ืจื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืกืžื•ืš, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื•ื›ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื“ื• ืžืœื ื“ืฉืŸ ื“ืจืš ืงืจืงืข ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ืคืข ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืžื•ืฉื›ื• ื‘ืฉืจืฉืจืช ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื›ืชืจ ื•ืชื•ืคืก ื‘ืฉืจืฉืจืช ืฉืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืœื ืชืชื’ืœื’ืœ ื‘ืžื“ืจื•ืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ:",
242
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื”ืฉืจืฅ.</b> ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื›ื•ืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืคืกื›ืชืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ืžืื• ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื. ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืžืฉื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืช ื›ื–ื” ื’ื–ืจื• ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ืื‘ืœ ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืื• ื‘ืื•ืœื, ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžื™ื“ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉื‘ืช:"
243
+ ],
244
+ [
245
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ืจืคื”.</b> ื›ืœื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื–ื•ืจืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉืžื™ืข ืงื•ืœ, ื•ื”ืงื•ืœ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืžื ื• ืžืฉืžืฉ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืžื“ืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:",
246
+ "<b>ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœื”.</b> ืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
247
+ "<b>ืจืฅ ื•ื‘ื.</b> ืœื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื•ืช ืขื ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
248
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉ ื”ืžืขืžื“.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœ ื”ืžื’ืจื™ืคื”:",
249
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื˜ืžืื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“.",
250
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื‘ื™ื™ืฉืŸ ื•ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉืžืคื ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืงืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื ืžื ืข ืœืขื‘ื•ื“, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื–ื”ืจ ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื—ืฉื“, ืฉืœื ื™ื—ืฉื“ื•ื”ื• ืฉืœืžืœืื›ืชื• ื”ืœืš ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ืžืœืขื‘ื•ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื™ื“ืขื• ืฉืžืคื ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื ืก ืฉืœ ืฉืจืฅ ืื• ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ ื ืžื ืข ืžืœืขื‘ื•ื“. ื•ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื ื›ืชื‘, ืฉืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื˜ื”ืจื• ืžืฆืจืขืชื ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ื ื‘ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื–ื•ืžื ื™ื ืœื–ืจื•ืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ื“ื ื”ืืฉื:"
251
+ ]
252
+ ],
253
+ [
254
+ [
255
+ "<b>ื”ื—ืœื•.</b> ืื•ืชื ืฉื–ื›ื• ื‘ื›ืš ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื•ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉืœ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขื•ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ืื•ืœื, ืฉืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืœืื•ืœื. ื•ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ื ืœืœื›ืช ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื˜ื ื™ ืฉื”ื ื™ื— ืฉื, ืžืื—ืจ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืชืช ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื” ื›ืžื• ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ื•ื›ื” ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื”ืฉืœืžืช ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื•ืื– ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื”ื˜ื ื™ ื•ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ืฉื•ืคื›ื™ื ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื”:",
256
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืฉืขืชื” ื ื’ืžืจื” ืžืฆื•ืชื•:",
257
+ "<b>ืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื ืก, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ื“ืœื™ืงื• ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืงืžื, ืืขืดืค ืฉืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืžืฆืื• ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืœืง, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื ืก ืงื™ื™ื, ืžื›ื‘ื”ื• ื•ืžื“ืฉื ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื™ื—ื“:",
258
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื• ืžืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืืœื ืžืืฉ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ) ืืฉ ืชืžื™ื“ ืชื•ืงื“ ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื“) ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“, ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืชื•ืงื“:",
259
+ "<b>ืžืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”:",
260
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื’ืžืจ ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
261
+ ],
262
+ [
263
+ "<b>ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื.</b> ืฉื‘ืžื—ืชื”:",
264
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช:",
265
+ "<b>ื•ืจื“ื“ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ืชื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืคื•ืœ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืžืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืžืจืงืขืŸ ื•ืคื•ืฉื˜ืŸ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืคืขื™ื ืื™ืœืš ื•ืื™ืœืš. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื•ื™ืจืงืขื•, ื•ืจื“ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื—ืชื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ื— ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื—ืชื” ื•ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืจื™ื“ื•ื“ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื:"
266
+ ],
267
+ [
268
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื•.</b> ืœื›ืฃ:",
269
+ "<b>ืœืื•ื”ื‘ื•.</b> ืฉื‘ื ืฉื ืขืžื• ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื›ืš. ื•ืื ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื‘ื‘ื–ืš ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื‘ื–ืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ื ื•ืคืœ ืžืžื ื• ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืื•ื”ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืชืคื–ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ ื‘ื—ืคื ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ:",
270
+ "<b>ื•ืžืœืžื“ื™ื ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ืžืขื•ืœื, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืœืœืžื“ื•:",
271
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ืชืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืœื ืชื›ื•ื”.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืคืš ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืžื ื•, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชืคื–ืจ ืœืฆื“ ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื™ื” ืฆื•ื‘ืจื•, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื [ื“ืฃ ืžืดื˜] ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ืขืฉื ื” ืฉื•ื”ื” ืœื‘ื•ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉื•ื”ื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”. ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฆื•ื‘ืจ ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื’ืœ ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืฉื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื’ืจื•ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื”ื•ื ืฆื•ื‘ืจื• ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืžื ื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืฉืจืฃ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื’ืœ ืœืคื ื™ื•, ื›ืฉื™ืืกืฃ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืชืคื–ืจ ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื• ืืฆืœื•, ื ืžืฆื ื–ืจื•ืขื• ื ื›ื•ื” ื‘ืฆื™ื‘ื•ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืฉื•ืจืฃ ืœืคื ื™ื•. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืชื ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื• (ืกื•ืฃ ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืฃ ื ืดื‘) ืฆื•ื‘ืจ ืคื ื™ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื•:",
272
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ื™, ืœ ืžืจื“ื“ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ื“ ืฉืจื™ื“ื“ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื™ืฆื:",
273
+ "<b>ืคืจืฉื• ื”ืขื.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–) ื•ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ื‘ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื›ืคืจ ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ื›ืคืจื” ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“, ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืœ ืคืจ ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื™ื— ื•ืคืจ ื”ืขืœื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืœ ืฆื™ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘, ืืœื ืœืคื ื™ ื•ืœืคื ื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืคืจืฉื• ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
274
+ ]
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ [
278
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื•ืช.</b> ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืœื ืžืงืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉืœื ืœืฆื•ืจืš:",
279
+ "<b>ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืฉืขืœ ื›ืชืคื•ืช ื”ืืคื•ื“:",
280
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ืœื• ืืช ื”ืคืจื•ื›ืช.</b> ืฉืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืœืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื›ืฉืืจ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืคืจื•ื›ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
281
+ ],
282
+ [
283
+ "<b>ื‘ืื• ื•ืขืžื“ื•.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืจื›ื• ื•ืงืจืื• ื•ืขืฉื• ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื•ืช ื”ืืžื•ืจื•ืช ืœืขื™ืœ, ื‘ืื• ืœืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ืื•ืœื:",
284
+ "<b>ืขืžื“ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ื›ื•ืณ:",
285
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืจื›ื• ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ื•ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื™ื‘ืจื›ืš, ื™ืืจ, ื™ืฉื. ื•ืงืจื™ ืœื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื”ืŸ ืืžืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืง ืœืคืกื•ืง ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื:",
286
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื•.</b> ื‘ื™ื•ืดื“ ื”ืดื:",
287
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ื•.</b> ื‘ืืœืดืฃ ื“ืœืดืช. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื• ืืœื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืณ:ื›ืดื) ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ืื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ืฉืžื™ ืื‘ื•ื ืืœื™ืš ื•ื‘ืจื›ืชื™ืš, ืกืจืกื”ื• ื•ื“ืจืฉื”ื•, ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ืื‘ื•ื ืืœื™ืš ื•ื‘ืจื›ืชื™ืš, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืฉื ืื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ืฉืžื™:",
288
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืชืคื•ืชื™ื”ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ื ืฉื™ืืช ื›ืคื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ืฉื ืื”ืจืŸ ืืช ื™ื“ื™ื• ืืœ ื”ืขื ื•ื™ื‘ืจื›ื, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—:ื”ืณ) ื”ื•ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ื, ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ืฉื™ืื•ืช ื›ืคื™ื, ืืฃ ื‘ื ื™ื• ื‘ื ืฉื™ืื•ืช ื›ืคื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ื:",
289
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืฉื ื”๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืคื•ืจืฉ ื•ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืงืฉืจื™ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืชื™ื”ื, ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ื ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืจืืฉื™ื”ื:",
290
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื™ืฅ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืฉื ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื•:",
291
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
292
+ ],
293
+ [
294
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื”, ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื—ืœืง ื›ืฉื™ืจืฆื”:",
295
+ "<b>ืœืžื—ืฆื™ืช ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ.</b> ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืชื™ื™ื’ืข ืงืฆืช:",
296
+ "<b>ื•ืกืžืš ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืชื”ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ื”ืงื˜ืจืชื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืืจ ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
297
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืจืงืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื™ืช ืขื•ืœื•ืชื™ืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื”ื“ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื–), ืžื” ื“ื ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืืฃ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
298
+ "<b>ื ืฉืžื˜ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ื”ืœืš ืœื•.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ืฉืืจ ืฉื ืœืงื‘ืœ ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืชื ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
299
+ "<b>ื‘ื ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ืžืงื™ืฃ ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื“ื›ืœ ืคื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืืชื” ืคื•ื ื” ืœื ื™ื”ื• ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ื•ืžืฉื ืœืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ืขื“ ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืงื•ื ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืžื ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืฉื ืขื•ืžื“ ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืžื•ืฉื™ื˜ ืœื• ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืกื›ื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•, ืฉืžื ื™ืชืงืœืงืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ื›ืฉืžืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ื‘ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื™ืฃ, ืžื”ืคืš ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื–ืœื’, ืืช ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื ืชืื›ืœื• ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ื™ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉืžืืœ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืคืจืง ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืœืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื, ื ืกื•ืš ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืชืขืฉื ื•. ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืžื™, ืฉืœื ืชืžื•ืช ื‘ืขืฉืŸ. ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื“ื•ืžื” ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืœืš ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืคืฅ ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ืŸ, ื•ื’ืค ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืคืš ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื ื‘ืœื ืคื™ื™ืก, ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืœื›ืช ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ:",
300
+ "<b>ื”ืกื’ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ.</b> ืืฆืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ื ืœื ืกืš:",
301
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืกื•ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ื•.</b> ืœื”ื ื™ืฃ ื›ืฉื™ื ืกืš ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื“ืขื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื•ื™ื“ื‘ืจื• ื‘ืฉื™ืจ, ื•ื™ื“ืข ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื ื•ื™ืงื™ืฉ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ, ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš:",
302
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื‘ืฉ, ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ืกืฃ ืฉื‘ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช, ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ืื‘ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื:",
303
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื.</b> ืฉื ืื“ื ื”ืžืงื™ืฉ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ, ืฆืžื‘ืดืœ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
304
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื™ืขื• ืœืคืจืง.</b> ืœืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืฉื”:"
305
+ ],
306
+ [
307
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื”ืณ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช:",
308
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืณ</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื—ืœืงื• ื”ืžื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืจืงื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืœืžื™ื:",
309
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืืœื”ื™ื ื ืฆื‘ ื‘ืขื“ืช ืืœ.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ืจืื™ืช ื”ื™ื‘ืฉื” ืฉืขืœื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ื”ื“ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ื™ืŸ:",
310
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืืœ ื ืงืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจืื• ื”ืฉืžืฉ ื•ื”ื™ืจื— ื•ื”ื›ื•ื›ื‘ื™ื ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘ืดื” ืœื”ื ืงื ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื:",
311
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืจื ื™ื ื• ืœืืœื”ื™ื ืขื•ื–ื ื•.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ืฉื”ืจื•ืื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืจื ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื‘ื— ืœื‘ื•ืจืื•:",
312
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืฉื™ ื”ืณ ืžืœืš.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ืฉืœืžื” ื”ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจื ืื“ื ืฉืžื›ื™ืจ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืฆืจื•:",
313
+ "<b>ืžื ื•ื—ื” ืœื—ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ืœื” ื›ืžืดื“ ืฉื™ืชื ืืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ืขืœืžื ื•ื—ื“ ื—ืจื•ื‘, ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื‘ืืœืฃ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ืื ื”ืงื‘ืดื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ื‘ืณ:ื™ืดื) ื•ื ืฉื’ื‘ ื”ืณ ืœื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ืœื›ืš ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžื–ืžื•ืจ ืฉื™ืจ ืœื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ืช, ืœืืœืฃ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™, ืฉื™ื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ื”ืงื‘ืดื” ื”ื•ื ืืœืฃ ืฉื ื”:"
314
+ ]
315
+ ]
316
+ ],
317
+ "sectionNames": [
318
+ "Chapter",
319
+ "Mishnah",
320
+ "Comment"
321
+ ]
322
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,318 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Tamid",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Tamid",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื›ื‘ื•ื“, ื•ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื”ื™ื ืœื‘ื™ืช ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืœื ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื. ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื’,) ื•ื”ื—ื•ื ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืงื“ืžื” ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืฉื•ืžืจื™ ืžืฉืžืจืช ืœืžืฉืžืจืช, ืจืžื– ืœืฉืœืฉ ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ื•ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช, ืืฃ ืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ืŸ:",
10
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื˜ื™ื ืก ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื ื™ืฆื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื‘ื ื•ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฆื“ ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”:",
11
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ.</b> ื™ืœื“ื™ื. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืœื“, ืจื‘ื™ื. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื”ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ, ื”ืžื•ืจื™ื ื—ืฆื™ื ื‘ืงืฉืช, ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื” ืงืฉืช:",
12
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ื›ืคื”.</b> ื‘ื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื™ืคื”, ืืจืงื•ื•ืœื˜ืดื• ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
13
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืงืฃ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ.</b> ืืฆื˜ื‘ืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘, ืฉืœ ืื‘ื ื™ ื’ื–ื™ืช, ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืงืขื•ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืœืชื•ืš ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืงืจืงืข, ื•ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ืื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ืงืฆืจื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ, ื•ื”ื™ื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื–ื• ืขืœ ื–ื•:",
14
+ "<b>ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘.</b> ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ืœืง ืœืฉื‘ืขื” ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืช ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืข ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืขื•ื‘ื“ ื™ื•ืžื•, ื•ื–ืงื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉื ื™ื ืฉื ืขืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ:",
15
+ "<b>ื•ืคืจื—ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”.</b> ื‘ื—ื•ืจื™ื ืฉืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื–ืงื ื ืœืคืจื•ื—, ื•ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื”ืฉื•ืžืจื™ื:",
16
+ "<b>ื›ืกืชื•.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช:",
17
+ "<b>ืื™ืฉ ื›ืกืชื• ื‘ืืจืฅ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืฉื›ื‘ ืฉื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžื˜ื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ืืจืฅ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื•ืžืจื™ ื—ืฆืจื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื:",
18
+ "<b>ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ืชื—ืช ืจืืฉื™ื”ืŸ ืžืžืฉ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืœืื™ื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื‘ื ื˜, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื”ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
19
+ "<b>ื•ืžืชื›ืกื™ื ื‘ื›ืกื•ืช ืขืฆืžืŸ.</b> ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœ:",
20
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืกื™ื‘ื”.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืจื”. ืฉืžื—ื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื‘ื™ืจื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื ื›ืดื˜:ื™ืดื˜) ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืจื” ืืฉืจ ื”ื›ื™ื ื•ืชื™. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื”ืœืš ื“ืจืš ื”ืขื–ืจื” ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช, ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžื—ื™ืœื•ืช ืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉื•:",
21
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื‘ืžื—ื™ืœื” ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ:",
22
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ื•ืจื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉื.</b> ืฉื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืชื—ืžื ื‘ื” ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ:",
23
+ "<b>ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื•.</b> ืฉืœื ื ื›ื ืก ื‘ื• ืื“ื ืžืขื•ืœื ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื‘ืจื• ืฉื:",
24
+ "<b>ืžืฆืื• ื ืขื•ืœ.</b> ื–ื” ืกื™ืžื ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืื“ื ืฉื ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก:",
25
+ "<b>ื ืกืชืคื’.</b> ืงื™ื ื— ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจื•:",
26
+ "<b>ื‘ื ื•ื™ืฉื‘ ืœื•.</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“:",
27
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื ืคืชื—ื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ. ืœืคื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžืฉืชืœื— ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืขื–ืจื”, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืœ ื–ื‘ ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืขืœ ืงืจื™:"
28
+ ],
29
+ [
30
+ "<b>ืœืชืจื•ื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ:",
31
+ "<b>ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืื“ื ื ื›ื ืก ืœืขื–ืจื” ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื˜ื”ื•ืจ, ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ:",
32
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืื™ื–ื• ืฉืขื” ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ ืื™ื›ื ื–ืžืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื‘ื™ืืช ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ื“ืืžืจืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื‘ื™ืืช ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื–ืžืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื‘ื™ืืชื• ืฉืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืขืชื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ื•ืช ืฉืคืขืžื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืžืงืจื•ืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ ื›ื•ืณ, ื•ื”ืœื›ืš ืžื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืชืจื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื›ื™ื ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื•ื“ื•ืคืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœืื•ืชื ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“, ื•ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืคื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ืœื•:",
33
+ "<b>ืžืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื’ื‘ืจ.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœ. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœืงืจื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืขืœื•ืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ:",
34
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ืœ ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก.</b> ื›ืœ ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื‘ื ืœืชืจื•ื, ื”ื™ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื”, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื™ื• ืžื˜ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืคื™ื™ืก ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ, ื”ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ, ื•ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื ืœื• ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืชื•ืจื. ืกื“ืจ ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื•ืžืขืฉื”ื•, ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:"
35
+ ],
36
+ [
37
+ "<b>ืคืฉืคืฉ.</b> ืคืชื— ืงื˜ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื’ื•ืคื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื— ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ื‘ื• ื”ื™ื• ื ื›ื ืกื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“ ืœืขื–ืจื”:",
38
+ "<b>ืืœื• ื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื“ืจืš ื”ืžื–ืจื—. ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื›ืกื“ืจืื•ืช ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœืขื–ืจื” ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื, ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื›ื•ืชืœื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื”, ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื•ืขื“ ื›ื•ืชืœื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื” ืกื›ืš ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ื”ืŸ ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืจื˜ื™ืงืดืŸ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ื•ืœื—ื•ืฅ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืœื ืกื›ืš, ื•ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื”ืกื›ืš. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืžืชื—ืœืงื™ื ืœืฉืชื™ ื›ืชื•ืช, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•ื“ืงื™ื ื•ืจื•ืื™ื ื›ืœ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืฉืœื•ื. ื•ื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ืื›ืกื“ืจืื•ืช ื”ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ืœืฆื“ ืจื•ื— ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช, ืืœื• ืžื”ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืืœื• ืžื”ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ื” ื‘ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืขื“ ืฉืคื•ื’ืขื™ื ื–ื” ื‘ื–ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ืžื ื—ืช ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื‘ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉืขืจ ื ื™ืงื ื•ืจ, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื” ืฉืœื•ื, ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืœื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžืฆืื ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื•ื ื•ืœื ื ืคืงื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืœื™:"
39
+ ],
40
+ [
41
+ "<b>ื”ื–ื”ืจ ืฉืœื ืชื’ืข ื‘ื›ืœื™.</b> ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœืงืจื‘ ืืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ืœืฉื•ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื•:",
42
+ "<b>ื‘ืžืงืฆื•ืข.</b> ื‘ืงืจืŸ ื–ื•ื™ืช:",
43
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ.</b> ื›ืš ืฉืžื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืขืฉื” ืžื•ื›ื ื™ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ. ื’ืœื’ืœ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืฉืขืœ ื™ื“ื• ืžืฉืงืขื™ื ื”ื›ื™ื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ืช ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืฉื•ืงืข ื”ื›ื™ื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืจืžื‘ืดื ืื•ืžืจ, ืฉื”ืžื•ื›ื ื™ ื”ื•ื ื›ืœื™ ืกื‘ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช, ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืชืงื“ืฉื• ื•ื™ืคืกืœื• ื‘ืœื™ื ื”:",
44
+ "<b>ื”ืžืื•ื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช.</b> ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ืืฉ ืฉื ืชืื›ืœื• ื”ื™ื˜ื‘ ื•ื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื“ืฉืŸ:",
45
+ "<b>ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฆืคื”.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืฉืžื•, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ [ืชืžื•ืจื” ื“ืฃ ืœืดื“ ืขืดื] ื•ืฉืžื• ื›ื•ืœื•, ื•ืฉืžื• ืฉืœื ื™ืคื–ืจ:"
46
+ ]
47
+ ],
48
+ [
49
+ [
50
+ "<b>ืจืื•ื”ื• ืื—ื™ื•.</b> ืœืื•ืชื• ืฉืชืจื ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
51
+ "<b>ืฉื™ืจื“.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืžื–ืจื—ื•:",
52
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ืจืฆื• ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื•ืงื“ืฉื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
53
+ "<b>ืกื•ื ืงื™ื.</b> ืžืกืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ. ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ืขื ื•ืข ื•ื ื“ื ื•ื“. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื’ื“ื™ ืžืกื ืงืŸ [ืคืกื—ื™ื ื“ืฃ ื’ืณ ืขืดื‘], ื’ื“ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื ืขื ื•ืข ื•ื ื’ื™ื—ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื’ื—ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื‘ื–ื”. ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ืกื•ื ืงื™ื ืžื ืขื ืขื™ื ื•ืžื”ืคื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
54
+ "<b>ื‘ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘:"
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "<b>ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืืคืจ.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกืœืงื• ืœืฆื“ื“ื™ื ืื• ืœืกื•ื‘ื‘ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืคื“ืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื ืชืื›ืœื•, ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืืคืจ ื‘ืžื’ืจืคื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื ื•ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืชืคื•ื—, ื›ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืจื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืœ ืืคืจ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืืžืฆืข ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืขืฉื•ื™ ื›ืชืคื•ื—:",
58
+ "<b>ืคืขืžื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ื’ื•ื–ืžื ืงืชื ื™, ื“ืžืขื•ืœื ืœื ื”ื ื™ื—ื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื›ื•ืจ:",
59
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืฉื ื™ื ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืœื—ื•ืฅ ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
60
+ "<b>ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ื™ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื” ืฉืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
61
+ "<b>ืžื™ืžื™ื• ืœื ื ืชืขืฆืœ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื“ืฉืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ืœื ืžื—ืžืช ืขืฆืœื•ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืืœื ืœื ื•ื™ ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืฉืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืจื‘ื” ืงืจื‘ื• ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—: "
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ื™ ืขืฆื™ื ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ื•ืžืฉื•ืคื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœืชื•ืš ืื•ืจืš ื”ืžืขืจื›ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื•ื‘ื™ืขืจ ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ, ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฉื ื™ ืขืฆื™ื:",
65
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืขืฆื™ื ื›ืฉืจื™ื ืœืžืขืจื›ื”.</b> ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื”ื—ืœื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื–ืจื™ืŸ ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืงื ืžืคืจืฉ ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ืขืฆื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื”ื’ื™ื–๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื›ืœ ื›ืฉืจื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืœ ื–ื™ืช ื•ืฉืœ ื’ืคืŸ ื“ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื ื™ื ืคื™ืจื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื˜ืขืžื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื ืขืฉื™ื ื“ืฉืŸ ืžื™ื“:",
66
+ "<b>ืžื•ืจื‘ื™ื•ืช.</b> ืขื ืคื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืื ื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ืชืื ื™ื ืจืขื•ืช. ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืคื™ืจื™:",
67
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ืขืฅ ืฉืžืŸ.</b> ื”ืขื•ืฉื” ืฉืžืŸ ืืคืจืกืžื•ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ ืฉืžืขืชื™, ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืื™ืœืŸ ืฉืงื•ืจื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืœืขืดื– ืคื™ื ืดื•, ื•ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืฆื™ื ื•ื‘ื•ืดืจ. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืขืฅ ืžืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืฆื•ืจืš ื›ืžื• ื‘ื’ืคืŸ ื•ื–ื™ืช, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ืืกืจื•ื”ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœ ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืืกืจื• ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ื”ื–ื™ืช:"
68
+ ],
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ืขื•ื“ ืžืขืจื›ื” ืื—ืจืช, ืงืจื™ ืœื”ืš ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”. ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื, ืื—ืช ืžืขืจื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉืฉื•ืจืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื” ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ืช ืžืขืจื›ื” ืคื—ื•ืชื” ืžืžื ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ืฉื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืžืžื ื” ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ื ื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช ื›ืœื•ื ืืœื ืœืงื™ื•ื ื”ืืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื•ื”ืืฉ ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืชื•ืงื“ ื‘ื•, ื–ื• ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœ ืงื™ื•ื ื”ืืฉ:",
71
+ "<b>ื•ื—ื–ื™ืชื” ืžื–ืจื—ื”.</b> ืžืจืื™ืช ืคื ื™ื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืคืชื— ื•ื”ื—ืœื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื›ื”, ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
72
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉื™ ื’ื™ื–ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื’ืขื™ื ื‘ืชืคื•ื—:",
73
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืืœื™ืชื.</b> ื—ืจื™ื•ืช ื•ืงืกืžื™ืŸ ื“ืงื™ืŸ ืชื•ื—ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืฆื™ืช ื”ืืฉ ื•ืืœื™ืชื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืœื™ื”, ืขืœ ืฉื ื–ื ื‘ื•ืช ื”ืื•ื“ื™ื:"
74
+ ],
75
+ [
76
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืจื• ืžืฉื.</b> ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืงื•ื ื”ืขืฆื™ื:",
77
+ "<b>ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืžืขืจื›ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื›ืžื• ื—ืžืฉ ืกืื™ื ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืฉืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช:",
78
+ "<b>ื‘ืขื•ืžื“.</b> ื›ืžื• ื‘ืื•ืžื“:",
79
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืขื•ืžื“ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืกืื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืขื•ื“ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืฉื ื™ ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื™ ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ืฉืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืงื˜ื™ืจื™ื ืžืฉื‘ืช ืœืฉื‘ืช:",
80
+ "<b>ืžื—ื–ื™ืจื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ ืœืžืขืจื›ื”.</b> ื•ื ืฉืจืคื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืฆื“ื™ ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื”:",
81
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื• ืœื”ื ืœืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื’ื–ื™ืช.</b> ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืคื™ื™ืกื•ืช:"
82
+ ]
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ [
86
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•.</b> ื”ื˜ื™ืœื• ืคื™ื™ืก. ื”ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืจืœ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ื‘ืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:",
87
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื•ื—ื˜.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื‘ื–ืจ, ืชืงื ื• ื‘ื” ืคื™ื™ืก, ื“ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื ื•ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ื” ืœื”ื•, ืื™ ืœื ื™ื˜ื™ืœื• ืคื™ื™ืก ืืชื• ืœืื™ื ืฆื•ื™ื™ ืขืœื” ื•ืืชื• ื‘ื” ืœื™ื“ื™ ืกื›ื ื”:",
88
+ "<b>ืžื™ ื–ื•ืจืง.</b> ืžืงื‘ืœ ื”ื“ื ื”ื•ื ื”ื–ื•ืจืง, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ื ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืœื”ื›ื™ ื ืงื˜ ืœื”:",
89
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™.</b> ื•ื”ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช. ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื”ื™ื, ื ืงื˜ ืœื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ื“ืœืงื”. ื•ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื”. ื•ื”ื ื“ืžื“ื›ืจ ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื•ื–ื•ืจืง ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื”ื ืขื™ืงืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื˜ืคื™:",
90
+ "<b>ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ.</b> ื”ืืœื™ื”:",
91
+ "<b>ื”ื—ื–ื”.</b> ื›ืœ [ื”ืฉื•ืžืŸ] ื”ืจื•ืื” ืืช ื”ืงืจืงืข:",
92
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ืจื”.</b> ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขืœื” ื’ืจื”, ื”ื•ื ื”ืฆื•ืืจ, ื•ื‘ื• ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืงื ื” ื”ืจื™ืื” ืขื ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืœื‘:",
93
+ "<b>ื–ื›ื” ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื”.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืขืœื” ืœื• ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ื–ื•ืจืง ืืช ื”ื“ื, ื•ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ืฉื•ื—ื˜. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืงื•ื“ืžืช ืœืงื‘ืœืช ื”ื“ื, ืžืดืž ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ื–ืจื™ืงื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื‘ื–ืจ ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื–ื›ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืœื• ื”ืคื™ื™ืก ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื•ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื•ื”ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืžืขืœื” ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ื•ื”ืฉืฉื™ ืฉืชื™ ื”ื™ื“ื™ื, ื•ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืืœื™ื” ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื•ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ื”ื—ื–ื” ื•ื”ื’ืจื”, ื•ื”ืชืฉื™ืขื™ ืฉืชื™ ื“ืคื ื•ืช, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ื•ื”ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ ื”ืกื•ืœืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืขื ื”ืชืžื™ื“. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื•ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื ืกื›ื™ื. ื›ืœ ืืœื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ืื—ื“ ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืคืจืง ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืณ ื“ื™ื•ืžื:"
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>ืฆืื• ื•ืจืื•.</b> ืขืœ ืžืงื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ:",
97
+ "<b>ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ืฉื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื˜) ื‘ื™ื•ื ื–ื‘ื—ื›ื:",
98
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืงืื™.</b> ื”ืื™ืจ ื•ื”ื‘ืจื™ืง ื”ืฉื—ืจ:",
99
+ "<b>ื”ืื™ืจ ืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื ืขื“ ืฉื”ืื™ืจื• ืคื ื™ [ื›ืœ] ืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืกืคื™ืง ื›ืฉื”ื‘ืจื™ืง ื›ื ืงื•ื“ื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžืชื™ื ื‘ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืืœ:",
100
+ "<b>ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœื• ื”ื’ื™ืข ื”ืื•ืจ ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื™ืŸ. ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื–ื›ื•ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ื”ืงื‘ื•ืจื™ื ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ:"
101
+ ],
102
+ [
103
+ "<b>ืžืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื.</b> ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ื ืฉื:",
104
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ืœื•ืงื—ื™ ืกื•ืœืช ืœืžื ื—ื” ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืกื›ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืืฆืœ ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ืžืขื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืฆืจื™ืš, ื•ื”ื•ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื• ื—ื•ืชื ื•ืžื•ืœื™ืš ื”ื—ื•ืชื ืืฆืœ ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื ืกื›ื™ื ื•ืžืงื‘ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื. ื•ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ืงืจื•ื™ื” ืœืฉื›ืช ื”ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉืงืœื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉืืจื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ืชืžื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ืขื’ืœ, ื–ื›ืจ, ื’ื“ื™, ื—ื•ื˜ื. ื›ืฉืžื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ืชื ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื• ืขื’ืœ, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืคืจ. ื–ื›ืจ, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืื™ืœ, ืฉืชืจื’ื•ื ืื™ืœ, ื“ื›ืจื. ื’ื“ื™, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืฉ. ื—ื•ื˜ื, ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉื ืชืŸ ืžืขื•ืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ ืžืฆื•ืจืข:",
105
+ "<b>ืœืฉื›ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“.</b> ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืžื“ื•ืจื” ืฉื“ื•ืœืงืช ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“. ืงืจื•ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื•ืงื“:"
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ "<b>ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ ื›ืกืฃ ื•ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืœื ืืชืคืจืฉ ืœืžื” ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ืœื™ื ื”ืœืœื•. ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืืžืจื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืชืฉืขื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืื–ื›ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื•ืื•ืช ื—ื’ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื” ื•ืžืœืื›ื™:",
109
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืงื• ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“.</b> ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื•, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ืขื•ืจื• ื ืคืฉื˜ ื™ืคื”:",
110
+ "<b>ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื’ื•ื–ืžื ืงืชื ื™ ื“ืœื ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื”, ืืœื ืฉืœ ื ื—ื•ืฉืช ื™ืคื” ื›ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืžืฉ, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช:",
111
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืžื‘ื•ืงืจ.</b> ื“ืชืžื™ื“ ื˜ืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืงื•ืจ ืžืžื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื•, ื“ื•ืžื™ื ื“ืฉื” ื”ืคืกื—:"
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "<b>ืœืฆืคื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื“ืชืžื™ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืฆืคื•ืŸ:",
115
+ "<b>ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื.</b> ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื‘ืŸ ื ืžื•ื›ื™ื:",
116
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื–.</b> ื—ืชื™ื›ื•ืช ืžืจื•ื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื– ื”ื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื:",
117
+ "<b>ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช.</b> ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื•ื•ื™ื. ืื™ื ืฆื™ื ื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–: ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื™ื, ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืืจื–, ื•ืชื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
118
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ื ืงืœื™ื•ืช ื–ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื–ื• ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ืขืฅ, ืœืชืœื•ืช ื‘ื”ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืื• ืงื˜ื ื”:",
119
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืžื•ื“ื™ื.</b> ืฉืขืœื™ื”ื ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื” ืืคืฉืจ ืœืขืฉื•ืชืŸ ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืขื ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืขืฉื™ืจื•ืช, ื•ืœื ืขืฉืื•ื ืืœื ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื–ื”ื‘ ืžืจืชื™ื— ื•ืžืกืจื™ื—, ื•ื”ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืงืจืจ ื•ืžืฆื ืŸ ื•ืžืขืžื™ื“ื• ืฉืœื ื™ืกืจื™ื—:"
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "<b>ื”ื˜ื ื™.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื•ืฉืžืช ื‘ื˜ื ื. ื“ื•ืžื” ืœืกืœ ื•ืคื™ื• ืจื—ื‘:",
123
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ื•ื–.</b> ืงื™ืชื•ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขืจื‘ื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืืœื›ื•ืดื–:",
124
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช.</b> ืœืคืชื•ื— ืฉื ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™:",
125
+ "<b>ืชืจืงื‘.</b> ื›ืœื™ ืฉืžื—ื–ื™ืง ืฉืœืฉื” ืงื‘ื™ืŸ. ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจืงื‘, ืชืจื™ ื•ืงื‘. ื•ื“ื•ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืœืชืจืงื‘ ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื—ื–ื™ืง ืืœื ืงื‘ื™ื™ื ื•ื—ืฆื™, ื•ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื”:",
126
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ื™ื•ืจื“ ืœืืžืช ื”ืฉื—ื™.</b> ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ื ืœื• ืœืคืฉืคืฉ ื”ืฆืคื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื”ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืชื™ืชื• ืฉืœ ืคืชื—, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืžื›ื ื™ืก ืืžืช ื™ื“ื• ื‘ื—ื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืชืœ ืขื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ ืฉืœื• ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื‘ื™ื“ื• ื“ืจืš ืคื ื™ื, ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ืคื•ืชื— ื‘ืžืคืชื— ืžื™ื“ ื‘ืœื ื˜ื•ืจื— ื›ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืคืชื—ื™ื:",
127
+ "<b>ื›ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ื›ืžื• [ืคืกื—ื™ื ืœืดื– ืขืดื‘] ื™ืขืฉื ื” ื‘ื“ืคื•ืก ื•ื™ืงื‘ืขื ื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื”ืจ ื‘ืœื ื˜ื•ืจื—:"
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ืœืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืจ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื• ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื‘ื™ื• ืฉืฉ ืืžื•ืช, ื•ื“ืœืชื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช ืœืกื•ืฃ ืขื‘ื™ื• ืœืฆื“ ืคื ื™ื. ื•ืฉื ื™ ืคืฉืคืฉื™ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืฉื ื™ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ืžื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืžืืœื• ืจื—ื•ืง ืงืฆืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจ. ืื•ืชื• ืฉื‘ื“ืจื•ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืกื’ื•ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื™ืคืชื— ื‘ืฉืœ ืขืชื™ื“, ื•ืžืกืชืžื ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืœืžื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ืคืฉืคืฉ ืฉื‘ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืคื•ืชื—ื• ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืจ ืฉืืฆืœื• ืฉืชื•ื—ื‘ ื‘ื• ื™ื“ื• ืขื“ ื”ืฉื—ื™ ื•ื›ื•ืคืฃ ื™ื“ื• ื‘ืคื ื™ื, ื•ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžื ืขื•ืœ ืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ื• ืฉื ืคืชื— ืœืืœืชืจ ื‘ืœื™ ื˜ื•ืจื—:",
131
+ "<b>ื•ืคื•ืชื— ื”ืคืฉืคืฉ ื•ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉื ืœืชื.</b> ื•ื”ื™ื ืœืฉื›ื” ืื—ืช ื”ืคืชื•ื—ื” ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ:",
132
+ "<b>ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืชื ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ.</b> ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ื—ืœืœ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขื“ ื”ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื•ื‘ื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื• ื•ื‘ื ืœื• ืืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืคื ื™ื ื•ืคื•ืชื—ื•:",
133
+ "<b>ื ื’ืจ.</b> ื‘ืจื™ื— ืฉืžื‘ืจื™ื— ืžืงืฆื” ื”ื“ืœืช ืœืงืฆื” ื”ื“ืœืช. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ, ื ื’ืจ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ื™ืชื“ ื”ื ืขื•ืฅ ืื—ื•ืจื™ ื”ื“ืœืช ื‘ื ืงื‘ ืฉื‘ืืกืงื•ืคื”:",
134
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ื”ืคื•ืชื—ื•ืช.</b> ื”ืžื ืขื•ืœื™ื ื•ื”ืžืกื’ืจื•ืช:"
135
+ ],
136
+ [
137
+ "<b>ืžื™ืจื™ื—ื• ื”ื™ื• ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืงื•ืœ ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื•ืžื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ืขื“ ื™ืจื™ื—ื• ืขืฉืจ ืคืจืกืื•ืช:",
138
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ืžื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ื ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืขืฉืจื” ื ืงื‘ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื•, ื•ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืื” ืžื™ื ื™ ื–ืžืจ, ื•ืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืขื“ ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง:",
139
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืงื˜ื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืื“ื ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื”, ื•ืขืฉื” ื’ืœื’ืœ ืœื›ื™ื•ืจ ืœืฉืงืขื• ื‘ื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ืžื™ื• ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื‘ืœื™ื ื”, ืฉื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ืชืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช ื ืคืกืœ ื‘ืœื™ื ื” ื•ื‘ื™ื•ืฆื ื•ื‘ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื™ื•ื, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื•ืจ ืœืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื• ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ืจื’ืœื™ื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ืœ ื”ื’ืœื’ืœ ื ืฉืžืข ืขื“ ื™ืจื™ื—ื•:",
140
+ "<b>ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™ ื›ืจื•ื–.</b> ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืฉืžื• ื’ื‘ื™ื ื™, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื›ืจื™ื– ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืขืžื“ื• ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื›ื:",
141
+ "<b>ื—ืœื™ืœ.</b> ืฆืœืžื™ืฆืœื™ืดืฉ ื‘ืœืขืดื–, ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื–ืžืืดืจ, ื•ืงื•ืœื• ื ืฉืžืข ืœืžืจื—ื•ืง. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคื™ืคืจืดื™ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
142
+ "<b>ืฆืœืฆืœ.</b> ืฆืžื‘ืœืดื™ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
143
+ "<b>ืžื›ื•ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื ืžืงื•ื:"
144
+ ],
145
+ [
146
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”.</b> ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืจืง ืžืขื˜ ื“ืฉืŸ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ืงื— ื‘ื—ืคื ื™ื•, ื›ื™ื‘ื“ ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื˜ื ื™:",
147
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื™ื—ื•.</b> ืœื˜ื ื™ ืฉื ื•ื™ืฆื. ืื‘ืœ ืžื™ื“ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ืฆื™ืื•, ืฉื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืชืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื” ื›ืžื• ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื”ืฉืœืžืช ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื•ืื– ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื”ื˜ื ื™ ื•ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ืฉื•ืคื›ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื ื‘ืœืขื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
148
+ "<b>ื•ืžืฆื ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ืžื ื•ืจื” ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืžืขืจื‘ ื”ื™ื ืžื•ื ื—ืช. ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉืžื•ืฆื ื’ื ื”ืฉืืจ ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื, ื•ื ืงื˜ ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžื›ื‘ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ, ื•ืืœื• ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืื ืžืฆืืŸ ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื™ื ื• ืžื›ื‘ืŸ, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื‘ืกื™ืคื ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• ืœืืœื• ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช. ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ, ื•ื‘ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื• ืื™ื ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘:",
149
+ "<b>ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ.</b> ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ืฉืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืžืกื™ืจ ืžื”ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื”ื™ืฉืŸ ื•ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืฉื ื” ื•ื”ื“ืฉืŸ, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื”ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ื–, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื”, ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื•, ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื”. ื•ื”ื ื“ืžืคืกื™ืง ื”ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ื‘ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื˜ื™ื‘ืŸ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ืœืณ) ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื‘ื”ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืœืง ื”ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ืœืฉื ื™ ื‘ืงืจื™ื, ื•ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืชื—ื™ืœ, ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืจื•ื‘ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืฉื™ืชื ื•ื”ื“ืจ ื—ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, [ืื™ืŸ] ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื ืจื•ืช ืคื—ื•ืช [ืžืฉืชื™ื]. ื•ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืก, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง. ืื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืณ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ื“ื•ืœืง ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ื“ืจืš ื ืก, ื‘ื“ืชื ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืคืจื•ื›ืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช, ืขื“ื•ืช ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืฉื•ืจื” ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ, ื–ื• ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื” ืฉืžืŸ ื›ืžื“ืช ื—ื‘ืจื•ืชื™ื” ื•ืžืžื ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืกื™ื™ื, ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื”ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืœื ื”ื ืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ืžื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื•, ื•ืžื ื™ื— ื”ื ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื“ื•ืœืง ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ืฉืžื“ืœื™ืง ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื•ืžืžื ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืง ื›ืœ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ืื—ืจื™ื, ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืฉืืจ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ืžื˜ื™ื‘ื• ื•ืžื“ืฉื ื• ืœื ืจ ื–ื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื•. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ื” ืคื—ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื™ื, ื”ื›ื™ ืขื“ื™ืฃ ื˜ืคื™ ืฉืœื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืื ื ืจ ืื—ื“ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ืœื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื“ื•ืœืง ืฉืœื ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ื• ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘, ื›ื“ื™ ืœืคืจืกื ื”ื ืก ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืœืง ืชืžื™ื“. ื•ืžื” ืฉืžื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ื—ืžืฉ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืชื—ื™ืœื”, ื•ืœื ื—ืžืฉ ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉืชื™ื ืฉืœ ืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžื”ื ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง, ื•ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื›ื™ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื“) ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“ ืžื—ื•ืฅ ืœืคืจื•ื›ืช ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื™ืขืจื•ืš ืื•ืชื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ, ืืžืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ืงื‘ืข ื ืจ ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื• ืฉืืจ ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื–ื” ื–ื” ื ืจ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื—, ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื™ ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™, ื“ื›ื™ ืขื™ื™ืœ ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ื”ื”ื•ื ื ืจ ืคื’ืข ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืขื‘ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื•ืช, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื”ื™ื ืืชื•ืงื ื”ื ืก ื•ื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื•. ื•ื‘ื ืจ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ, ืžืื•ืชื• ื ืจ ืฉืœ ืฆื“ ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ืจ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืงืจื•ื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ:",
150
+ "<b>ืžืฆืืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื•.</b> ื”ืฉืชื™ื ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง:",
151
+ "<b>ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื.</b> ืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ื“ืจืš ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืื™ืŸ ืžื˜ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืคืกื™ืง ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ืœื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ื, ืืœื ืžื“ืฉื ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืžืกื™ืจ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืฉื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืฉื ื”, ื•ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื” ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื ื™ื›ืจ ื™ืคื” ื”ืคืกืง ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื ืจื•ืช ืœืฉืชื™ื. ื•ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืจื•ืช ื“ื•ืœืงื™ื ืžื“ืœื™ืงืŸ ืžืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”:",
152
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉืืจ.</b> ื–ื• ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื—ืžืฉ ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืžื ื™ื—ืŸ ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื•ืช ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ื ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง. ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื“ื”ื›ื ืื™ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืžื“ืฉืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื ื™ื ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื“ืœืขื™ืœ. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืžื“ืฉืŸ [ื”ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช] ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื•ืคืชื™ืœื” ื—ื“ืฉื” ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื” ืขื“ ื”ืขืจื‘ ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื”. ื•ื ืจ ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉืงืจื•ื™ื” ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืžื“ืฉืŸ ื•ืžืกื™ืจ ื”ืฉืžืŸ ื•ื”ืคืชื™ืœื” ื™ืฉื ื” ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื” ืžืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื”ืื—ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ื”ื•ืงื‘ืข ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืง ืžืžื ื• ื ืจื•ืช ืื—ืจื•ืช, ื•ืœื›ืš ื ืžื™ ืžื“ืœื™ืงื” ืื ืžืฆืื” ื›ื‘ื•ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืœื”ื“ืœื™ืงื” ื›ืฉื‘ื ื•ืžื˜ื™ื‘ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”. ื›ืš ืžืฆืืชื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื‘ืจื•ืš ื‘ืจ ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืžื—ื•ื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ื. ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื ื‘ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื• ืชืžื•ื”ื™ื ืžืื“, ื•ื’ื ืžื” ืฉืกื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื˜ื‘ืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื”ื“ืœืงืชืŸ ื•ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื”ื ืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžื ื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื‘, ืคืœื™ืื” ื ืฉื’ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื™ื ื™, ื•ืœื ืฉืžืขืชื™ ื•ืœื ืจืื™ืชื™ ืœืื—ื“ ืžืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืฉืกื•ื‘ืจ ื›ืŸ:",
153
+ "<b>ื•ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ื’ื‘ื•ื”ื” ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืฉืจ ื˜ืคื—ื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืœื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ื’ื‘ื•ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช:",
154
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉืœืฉ ื”ืขืœืื•ืช ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื‘ื”ืขืœื•ืชืš ืืช ื”ื ืจื•ืช, ื•ื”ืขืœื” ืืช ื ืจื•ืชื™ื”, ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“:",
155
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ื ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืื– ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื˜ื ื™. ื•ื›ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื• ื‘ื’ืžืจ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื•ืœื ืขื›ืฉื™ื•, ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ื’ืžืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชืŸ:"
156
+ ]
157
+ ],
158
+ [
159
+ [
160
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืขืฆืžืŸ ืื• ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืจื’ืœื™ื• ืœืขืฆืžืŸ, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ื—ื•ืงื•ืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื, ืฉื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”:",
161
+ "<b>ืืœื ืžืขืงื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•,</b> ื”ื™ื“ ืขื ื”ืจื’ืœ, ื›ืขืงื™ื“ืช ื™ืฆื—ืง:",
162
+ "<b>ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื.</b> ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืš ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืฆืคื•ื ื” ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ื˜ื” ืจืืฉื• ืœื“ืจื•ื ื•ืคื ื™ื• ืœืžืขืจื‘, ืฉืื ื™ืจื‘ื™ืฅ ื’ืœืœื™ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืกืžื•ืš ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
163
+ "<b>ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ.</b> ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ืงืจืŸ ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื‘ื•ืงืจ ืฉืžืฉ ื‘ืžื–ืจื— ื•ื–ื•ืจื—ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ื” ืœืžืขืจื‘, ื•ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื ื™ื ืœื™ื•ื, ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื ื’ื“ ื”ืฉืžืฉ, ืฉื”ืฉืžืฉ ืงืจื•ื™ ื™ื•ื:",
164
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืขืจื‘ื™ื.</b> ืฉื—ืžื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ื•ืžืื™ืจื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ื”ื™ื” ื ืฉื—ื˜ ืขืœ ืงืจืŸ ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช:",
165
+ "<b>ื‘ื˜ื‘ืขืช ืฉื ื™ื”.</b> ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืŸ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื’ื‘ื•ื” ื•ืžืืคื™ืœ ื›ื•ืœื•. ื•ื™ื•ื—ื ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืชืงื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื” ืกื“ืจื™ื ืฉืœ ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช, ื‘ื›ืœ ืกื“ืจ ืืจื‘ืข ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช, ืœืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืžืฉืžืจื•ืช ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื•ื”ื™ื• ืงื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื‘ืจืฆืคื” ืขืฉื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืงืฉืช, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื›ื•ืคืชื™ื ืืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืงื™ืŸ, ื”ื™ื• ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™ืŸ ืฆื•ืืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขื•ืช ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื” ื•ื ื•ืขืฆื™ื ืจืืฉ ื”ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื‘ืืจืฅ:",
166
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืชื—ื™ืœื”.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืฉื—ื˜ ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจ ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืฆื“ ืžื–ืจื— ื•ืขื•ืžื“ ื‘ืืจืฅ ื•ื–ื•ืจืง ื”ื“ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืœืžื˜ื” ืžืŸ [ื—ื•ื˜] ื”ืกืงืจื ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืžืชื ื•ืช ืฉื”ืŸ ืืจื‘ืข, ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช, ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช. ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืื—ืช ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืชื™ื ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช:"
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ.</b> ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื˜ื‘ื—ื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืฉืžื—ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืจื’ืœ ืขื ื”ืขื•ืจ ืฉื‘ื•, ืืœื ื ื•ืงื‘ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืช ื”ืืจื›ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื ืžื›ืจืช ืขื ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ืชื•ืœื” ื‘ื• ื•ืžืคืฉื™ื˜ ื”ืจื’ืœ ืขื ืฉืืจ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื”. ื•ื”ื ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ื”ื›ืจืขื™ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ืŸ:",
170
+ "<b>ืขืจื›ื•ื‘ื•.</b> ื›ืžื• ืืจื›ื•ื‘ื•:",
171
+ "<b>ืžื™ืจืง ืืช ื”ื”ืคืฉื˜.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื”ื•ืคืฉื˜ ืืœื ืขื“ ื”ื—ื–ื” ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืจ ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ื•:",
172
+ "<b>ื ื˜ืœ ื”ืคื“ืจ.</b> ื”ื—ืœื‘:",
173
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื• ืขืœ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”.</b> ื•ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื” ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ืœื›ืœื•ืš ื“ื ื”ืฉื—ื™ื˜ื”:",
174
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื›ืจืก ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื”.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืคืจืฉ ืฉื‘ืชื•ื›ื”, ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื”:",
175
+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืœืฉื›ื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืœื ืžื“ื™ื—ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ืขื ืฉืืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืฉืœื ืชื˜ื ืคื:",
176
+ "<b>ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืจืขื™ ื™ื•ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื“ื•ื—ืง ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ื“ืงื™ื:",
177
+ "<b>ื‘ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ื”.</b> ืœื›ืœ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช. ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื”ื“ื™ื—ืŸ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœืฉื” ืคืขืžื™ื, ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ:"
178
+ ],
179
+ [
180
+ "<b>ื•ืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ื“:",
181
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ื™ื–ื”.</b> ืœืืฆื‘ืข ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ืžืžืงื•ืžื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ืขื ื”ืขื•ืงืฅ ื•ื”ืืœื™ื”, ื•ื”ื›ื‘ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืขื ื”ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื”ื™ืžื ื™, ื•ื”ืจืื™ื” ืขื ื”ื’ื™ืจื” ื•ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืขืžื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš:",
182
+ "<b>ื“ื•ืคืŸ ื™ืžื ื™,</b> ื—ื•ืชืš ืกืžื•ืš ืœืฉื“ืจื”, ืืœื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ื— ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืœืžืขืœื” ืืœ ื”ืฉื“ืจื” ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ืฆืœืขื•ืช ืœืžื˜ื”:",
183
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืžืืœื•.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื”ื•ืœื›ืช ืื‘ืจื™ื ืœื›ื‘ืฉ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ื‘ืฉืžืืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžืขื›ื‘ืช ื›ืคืจื”, ืฉืจื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉืžืืœ, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื™ื•ืžื:",
184
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื™ืช ืขื•ืจื• ืœื—ื•ืฅ.</b> ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉืžืคืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื”ืขื•ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืจืืฉื™ ื”ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช:",
185
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืš.</b> ืชืจื’ื•ื ื›ืฃ ืื—ืช, ื‘ื–ื™ื›ื ื—ื“ื:",
186
+ "<b>ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ื‘ืกื•ืœืช.</b> ืœืžื ื—ืช ื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉืขื ื”ืชืžื™ื“:",
187
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ.</b> ืžื ื—ืช ืžื—ื‘ืช ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ื‘ืงืจ ื•ืžื—ืฆื™ืชื” ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉืžืงืจื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืืคืกืงื™ื” ืœื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืœืช ืœื ืกื›ื™ื ืฉื”ืŸ ืฆืจื›ื™ ืชืžื™ื“, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื•ืœืช ื•ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ืฉื ืžื ื—ื” ืœื›ืš ืคื™ืจืฉืŸ ื™ื—ื“:",
188
+ "<b>ืžื—ืฆื™ ื›ื‘ืฉ ื•ืœืžื˜ื” ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื•.</b> ื•ืœื ืžื—ืฆื™ื• ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื™ื›ืจืช ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ื” ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืฉื™ื—ื–ืจื• ืžืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ื—ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืื‘ืจื™ ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ ืœืฆื“ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื”, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช, ื“ืฉืœ ืžื•ืกืคื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืขืจื‘, ื”ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ ื‘ืžื–ืจื—, ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื›ื” ืคืจืง ื”ื—ืœื™ืœ:",
189
+ "<b>ืœืงืจื•ืช ืืช ืฉืžืข.</b> ื•ื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื:"
190
+ ]
191
+ ],
192
+ [
193
+ [
194
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ื•ื›ื•ืณ ื‘ืคืจืง ืงืžื ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื ืื”ื‘ื” ืจื‘ื”.</b> ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ืื™ืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ื–ืจื—ื” ื”ื—ืžื” ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืจ. ื•ืกื“ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ืžืขื›ื‘:",
195
+ "<b>ืงืจืื• ืขืฉืจืช ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืชื•ืจื”. ื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืืฃ ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื, ืืœื ืฉื‘ื™ื˜ืœื•ื ืžืคื ื™ ืชืจืขื•ืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืืœื• ืœื‘ื“ื ื ื™ืชื ื• ื‘ืกื™ื ื™ ื•ืœื ืฉืืจ ื”ืชื•ืจื”:",
196
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื ื‘ืจื›ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช, ืืžืช ื•ื™ืฆื™ื‘, ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ื•ืœื ื ืฉื™ืืช ื›ืคื™ื, ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื ื•ืฉืื™ื ืืช ื›ืคื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืœืื—ืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจืงื, ื•ื”ืื™ื“ื ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ื ืš ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืžืงื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ืคื˜ืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืš ืžืชืคืœืช ืฉืžื•ื ื” ืขืฉืจื”:",
197
+ "<b>ืžื•ืกื™ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ืฉืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืžืจ ืœืžืฉืžืจ ื”ื ื›ื ืก, ืžื™ ืฉืฉื™ื›ืŸ ืืช ืฉืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื™ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื›ื ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ืื—ื•ื” ืฉืœื•ื ื•ืจื™ืขื•ืช, ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช ื”ื™ื” ื ื›ื ืก ืžืฉืžืจ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ืฉืขื‘ืจ:"
198
+ ],
199
+ [
200
+ "<b>ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื–ื›ื” ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ื• ื™ื‘ื•ื ื•ื™ืคื™ืก. ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ื” ืคืขื ืื—ืช ืœืฉื ื•ืช ื‘ื”, ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืžืขืฉืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื™ืณ) ื™ืฉื™ืžื• ืงื˜ื•ืจื” ื‘ืืคืš ื•ื’ื•ืณ ื‘ืจืš ื”ืณ ื—ื™ืœื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืœืฉื ื•ืช ื‘ื” ืื“ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœ ืžืชืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืžืชื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื‘ื”:",
201
+ "<b>ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืขื ื™ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื“ื•ืงื, ืืžืจ ื”ื›ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื’ื ื™ืฉื ื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ืคืขืžื™ื ืื—ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื™ ืฉืœื ื–ื›ื” ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•:",
202
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ืื•ืชื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื›ืืŸ ืคื™ื™ืก. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘:"
203
+ ],
204
+ [
205
+ "<b>ืžืกืจื•ื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื.</b> ืื•ืชื ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื”ื›ื™ื ื• ืขืฆืžื ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื• ื‘ืคื™ื™ืก ื•ื”ื™ื• ืœื‘ื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื”, ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืกืจื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœื—ื–ื ื™ื, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื”ืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืกืงื™ื ื‘ืฆืจื›ื™ ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืคืฉื™ื˜ื•ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื”ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉืขืœื™ื”ื:",
206
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ืืœื ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“.</b> ื•ืœื•ื‘ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื—ื•ืœ ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžืคืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื”ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื›ืœ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ ื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆืื™ื:",
207
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ื›ืœื™ื.</b> ื”ื—ืœื•ื ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืžื›ื ืกื™ื, ื•ืืช ืฉื‘ื”ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื ืช ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื ืคืช ื•ืื‘ื ื˜. ื•ืกื“ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืฉืช ื”ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื, ื”ืžื›ื ืกื™ื ืชื—ืœื” ืœื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ:ื’ืณ) ื•ืžื›ื ืกื™ ื‘ื“ ื™ืœื‘ืฉ ืขืœ ื‘ืฉืจื•, ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืœืžื›ื ืกื™ื, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื”ื›ืชื•ื ืช, ื•ืื—ืดื› ื—ื•ื’ืจ ื‘ืื‘ื ื˜, ื•ืื—ืดื› ืฆื•ื ืฃ ื‘ืžืฆื ืคืช:"
208
+ ],
209
+ [
210
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื‘ื–ืš.</b> ื›ืฃ ืงื˜ืŸ:",
211
+ "<b>ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช.</b> ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืฉืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงื˜ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืžืชืคื–ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืœืืจืฅ ื‘ื”ื•ืœื›ืชื•. ื•ื‘ื›ืฃ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืœื‘ื“ ืœื ืกื’ื™, ื“ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ื•ื ื›ืœืคื™ ืžืขืœื” ืœืขืจื•ืช ืžื›ืฃ ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื”ืงื˜ืจื”:",
212
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœื•.</b> ืœื‘ื–ืš:",
213
+ "<b>ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช.</b> ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื˜ื‘ืขืช ื”ื™ื” ืœื›ืกื•ื™ ืžืœืžืขืœื” ืฉืขืœ ื™ื“ื” ืžื˜ืœื˜ืœ ื”ื›ื™ืกื•ื™ ื•ืžืกื™ืจื• ืžืขืœ ื”ื‘ื–ืš. ื•ื‘ืขืจื•ืš ืคื™ืจืฉ, ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช ื—ืชื™ื›ืช ื‘ื’ื“, ื›ืžื• ืœื ื™ืฆื ื”ื’ืžืœ ื‘ืžื˜ื•ื˜ืœืช ื“ืคืจืง ื‘ืžื” ื‘ื”ืžื” ื™ื•ืฆืื”. ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืชื•ืŸ ืขืœ ื›ืกื•ื™ ื”ื‘ื–ืš ื›ืžื™ืŸ ืกื•ื“ืจ ืงื˜ืŸ ืœื ื•ื™:"
214
+ ],
215
+ [
216
+ "<b>ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืžื—ืชื”.</b> ืœื”ื•ืœื™ืš ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘. ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื–ื” ืคื™ื™ืก, ืืœื ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืคื™ื™ืก ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื” ืฉืขืžื• ื–ื›ื” ืขืžื™ ื‘ืžื—ืชื”:",
217
+ "<b>ื•ื—ืชื”.</b> ืžืŸ ื”ืžืื•ื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื”ื›ื, ืฉื”ืŸ ืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ืœื“ืฉืŸ, ื“ืื“ืจื‘ื” ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื’ืกื•ืช ื•ื‘ื•ืขืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื”:",
218
+ "<b>ื•ืขื™ืจืŸ ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืชืงืœืงืœ, ื•ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื—ืกื” ืขืœ ืžืžื•ื ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
219
+ "<b>ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืงื‘ ื’ื—ืœื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื” ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉืœ ื›ืกืฃ ื‘ืช ืืจื‘ืขื” ืงื‘ื™ื ื•ืžืขืจื” ื‘ืฉืœ ื–ื”ื‘ ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉื”. ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื” ืžืœืื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืจื” ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”, ืฉื–ื”ื• ื“ืจืš ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉืœ ืžืขืœื”:",
220
+ "<b>ืžื›ื‘ื“ืŸ ืœืืžื”.</b> ืœืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื‘ืขื–ืจื”. ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื•ื• ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
221
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช.</b> ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœื›ื‘ื•ืช:",
222
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืคื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืคืกื›ืชืจ.</b> ื›ืœื™ ืื—ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืชืจื’ื•ื ืกื™ืจื•ืชื™ื•, ืคืกื›ืชืจื•ื•ืชื™ื”:",
223
+ "<b>ืœืชืš.</b> ื—ืฆื™ ื›ื•ืจ, ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ืกืื™ืŸ, ืฉื”ื›ื•ืจ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ืกืื™ืŸ:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืชื™ ืฉืจืฉืจื•ืช ื”ื™ื•.</b> ื‘ืคืกื›ืชืจ. ืื—ืช ืžืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ืื—ืช ืžืฆื“ ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื• ืžื•ืจื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืกืžื•ืš, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื•ื›ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื“ื• ืžืœื ื“ืฉืŸ ื“ืจืš ืงืจืงืข ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ืคืข ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืžื•ืฉื›ื• ื‘ืฉืจืฉืจืช ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื›ืชืจ ื•ืชื•ืคืก ื‘ืฉืจืฉืจืช ืฉืœืคื ื™ื• ืฉืœื ืชืชื’ืœื’ืœ ื‘ืžื“ืจื•ืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ:",
225
+ "<b>ื•ืขืœ ื”ืฉืจืฅ.</b> ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื›ื•ืคื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืคืกื›ืชืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื˜ืžืื• ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื. ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืžืฉื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ื“ืขืœ ืฉื‘ื•ืช ื›ื–ื” ื’ื–ืจื• ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื›ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ืขื–ืจื”, ืื‘ืœ ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืื• ื‘ืื•ืœื, ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืžื™ื“ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืฉื‘ืช:"
226
+ ],
227
+ [
228
+ "<b>ื”ืžื’ืจืคื”.</b> ื›ืœื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื–ื•ืจืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ืฉืžื™ืข ืงื•ืœ, ื•ื”ืงื•ืœ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืžื ื• ืžืฉืžืฉ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืžื“ืคืจืฉ ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:",
229
+ "<b>ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœื”.</b> ืื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
230
+ "<b>ืจืฅ ื•ื‘ื.</b> ืœื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื•ืช ืขื ืื—ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
231
+ "<b>ื•ืจืืฉ ื”ืžืขืžื“.</b> ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืžืข ืงื•ืœ ื”ืžื’ืจื™ืคื”:",
232
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ ืืช ื”ื˜ืžืื™ื.</b> ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“.",
233
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ืžื–ืจื—.</b> ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื‘ื™ื™ืฉืŸ ื•ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉืžืคื ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืงืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื ืžื ืข ืœืขื‘ื•ื“, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื–ื”ืจ ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช. ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืืžืจื™ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื—ืฉื“, ืฉืœื ื™ื—ืฉื“ื•ื”ื• ืฉืœืžืœืื›ืชื• ื”ืœืš ื•ื”ื ื™ื— ืžืœืขื‘ื•ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื™ื“ืขื• ืฉืžืคื ื™ ื˜ื•ืžืืช ืื•ื ืก ืฉืœ ืฉืจืฅ ืื• ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ ื ืžื ืข ืžืœืขื‘ื•ื“. ื•ื”ืจืžื‘ืดื ื›ืชื‘, ืฉืžืฆื•ืจืขื™ื ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื˜ื”ืจื• ืžืฆืจืขืชื ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ื ื‘ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื–ืจื—, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื–ื•ืžื ื™ื ืœื–ืจื•ืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ื“ื ื”ืืฉื:"
234
+ ]
235
+ ],
236
+ [
237
+ [
238
+ "<b>ื”ื—ืœื•.</b> ืื•ืชื ืฉื–ื›ื• ื‘ื›ืš ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื•ื‘ืžื—ืชื” ืฉืœ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขื•ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ืื•ืœื, ืฉืฉืชื™ื ืขืฉืจื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืœืื•ืœื. ื•ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ื ืœืœื›ืช ืžื™ ืฉื–ื›ื” ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื˜ื ื™ ืฉื”ื ื™ื— ืฉื, ืžืื—ืจ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืชืช ื“ืฉืŸ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื” ื›ืžื• ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ื•ื›ื” ื‘ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื”ืฉืœืžืช ื“ืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”, ื•ืื– ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื”ื˜ื ื™ ื•ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ื– ื•ืฉื•ืคื›ื™ื ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงื“ืžื”:",
239
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืฉืขืชื” ื ื’ืžืจื” ืžืฆื•ืชื•:",
240
+ "<b>ืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืžืช ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื ืก, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ื” ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฆืื• ืฉื›ื‘ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืชืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ื“ืœื™ืงื• ื›ื“ืืžืจืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืคืจืง ืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ืžืžื•ื ื” ืงืžื, ืืขืดืค ืฉืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืžืฆืื• ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ื•ืœืง, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื ืก ืงื™ื™ื, ืžื›ื‘ื”ื• ื•ืžื“ืฉื ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื˜ื‘ืช ืฉืชื™ ื ืจื•ืช ื™ื—ื“:",
241
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื• ืžืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื ืจ ืžืขืจื‘ื™ ืœืขื•ืœื ืืœื ืžืืฉ ืฉืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ืณ) ืืฉ ืชืžื™ื“ ืชื•ืงื“ ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื” ืชืžื™ื“ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื“) ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื ืจ ืชืžื™ื“, ืžืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื—ื™ืฆื•ืŸ ืชื•ืงื“:",
242
+ "<b>ืžืžืขืœื” ืฉื ื™ื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืฉืœืฉ ืžืขืœื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”:",
243
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื” ื•ื™ืฆื.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ื’ืžืจ ืžืฆื•ืชื•:"
244
+ ],
245
+ [
246
+ "<b>ืฆื‘ืจ ืืช ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื.</b> ืฉื‘ืžื—ืชื”:",
247
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช:",
248
+ "<b>ื•ืจื“ื“ืŸ ื‘ืฉื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ืชื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืคื•ืœ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืžืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ื ืžืจืงืขืŸ ื•ืคื•ืฉื˜ืŸ ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืคืขื™ื ืื™ืœืš ื•ืื™ืœืš. ืชืจื’ื•ื ื•ื™ืจืงืขื•, ื•ืจื“ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ, ื•ืœื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื—ืชื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ื— ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื—ืชื” ื•ืขืœื™ื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ, ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืจื™ื“ื•ื“ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื:"
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชื ื•.</b> ืœื›ืฃ:",
252
+ "<b>ืœืื•ื”ื‘ื•.</b> ืฉื‘ื ืฉื ืขืžื• ืœื”ื™ื›ืœ ืœืฆื•ืจืš ื›ืš. ื•ืื ื ืชืคื–ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื‘ื‘ื–ืš ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื‘ื–ืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืœื ื•ื’ื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ื ื•ืคืœ ืžืžื ื• ืœืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืื•ื”ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืชืคื–ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื›ืฃ ื‘ื—ืคื ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ:",
253
+ "<b>ื•ืžืœืžื“ื™ื ืื•ืชื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ ืžืขื•ืœื, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืœืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื”ืคื™ืกื•, ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจื›ื• ืœืœืžื“ื•:",
254
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ืชืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืœื ืชื›ื•ื”.</b> ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืคืš ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ื—ืœื™ื ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืžื ื•, ื•ื›ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชืคื–ืจ ืœืฆื“ ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื™ื” ืฆื•ื‘ืจื•, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื [ื“ืฃ ืžืดื˜] ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ืขืฉื ื” ืฉื•ื”ื” ืœื‘ื•ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉื•ื”ื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”. ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฆื•ื‘ืจ ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื’ืœ ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘, ืฉื›ืฉื‘ื ืœื’ืจื•ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื• ื”ื•ื ืฆื•ื‘ืจื• ืœืฆื“ ืžืขืจื‘ ืจื—ื•ืง ืžืžื ื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืฉืจืฃ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ื”ื’ืœ ืœืคื ื™ื•, ื›ืฉื™ืืกืฃ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉื ืชืคื–ืจ ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื• ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื• ืืฆืœื•, ื ืžืฆื ื–ืจื•ืขื• ื ื›ื•ื” ื‘ืฆื™ื‘ื•ืจ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืฉื•ืจืฃ ืœืคื ื™ื•. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืชื ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืœื• (ืกื•ืฃ ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืฃ ื ืดื‘) ืฆื•ื‘ืจ ืคื ื™ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ืฆื” ืœื•:",
255
+ "<b>ื”ืชื—ื™, ืœ ืžืจื“ื“ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื™ื“ ืฉืจื™ื“ื“ ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื’ื—ืœื™ื ื™ืฆื:",
256
+ "<b>ืคืจืฉื• ื”ืขื.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ื”ืงื˜ื•ืจืช, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜ืดื–) ื•ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ ื‘ื‘ื•ืื• ืœื›ืคืจ ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ื›ืคืจื” ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืื•ื”ืœ ืžื•ืขื“, ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืœ ืคืจ ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื™ื— ื•ืคืจ ื”ืขืœื ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืœ ืฆื™ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื˜ื•ืจืช ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื”ืดื› ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืขืœ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”ื–ื”ื‘, ืืœื ืœืคื ื™ ื•ืœืคื ื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืคืจืฉื• ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืœื ื•ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
257
+ ]
258
+ ],
259
+ [
260
+ [
261
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื›ื ืก ืœื”ืฉืชื—ื•ื•ืช.</b> ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ. ื•ืœื ืžืงืจื™ื ื‘ื™ืื” ืฉืœื ืœืฆื•ืจืš:",
262
+ "<b>ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช.</b> ืฉืขืœ ื›ืชืคื•ืช ื”ืืคื•ื“:",
263
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ืœื• ืืช ื”ืคืจื•ื›ืช.</b> ืฉืชืœื•ื™ ื‘ืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ืœืคืชื—ื• ืฉืœ ืื•ืœื ื“ืœืชื•ืช ื›ืฉืืจ ืคืชื—ื™ื ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืืœื ืคืจื•ื›ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“:"
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "<b>ื‘ืื• ื•ืขืžื“ื•.</b> ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืจื›ื• ื•ืงืจืื• ื•ืขืฉื• ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื•ืช ื”ืืžื•ืจื•ืช ืœืขื™ืœ, ื‘ืื• ืœืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ืื•ืœื:",
267
+ "<b>ืขืžื“ื• ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื.</b> ืืœื• ื”ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื ื—ืžืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ื›ื•ืณ:",
268
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืจื›ื• ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช.</b> ื•ื”ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ื™ื‘ืจื›ืš, ื™ืืจ, ื™ืฉื. ื•ืงืจื™ ืœื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ื” ืื—ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื”ืŸ ืืžืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคืกื•ืง ืœืคืกื•ืง ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื:",
269
+ "<b>ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื•.</b> ื‘ื™ื•ืดื“ ื”ืดื:",
270
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื“ื™ื ื” ื‘ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ื•.</b> ื‘ืืœืดืฃ ื“ืœืดืช. ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืฉื ื›ื›ืชื‘ื• ืืœื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืณ:ื›ืดื) ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ืื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ืฉืžื™ ืื‘ื•ื ืืœื™ืš ื•ื‘ืจื›ืชื™ืš, ืกืจืกื”ื• ื•ื“ืจืฉื”ื•, ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ืื‘ื•ื ืืœื™ืš ื•ื‘ืจื›ืชื™ืš, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืฉื ืื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ืฉืžื™:",
271
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืชืคื•ืชื™ื”ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ื ืฉื™ืืช ื›ืคื™ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ืฉื ืื”ืจืŸ ืืช ื™ื“ื™ื• ืืœ ื”ืขื ื•ื™ื‘ืจื›ื, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—:ื”ืณ) ื”ื•ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ื, ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ืฉื™ืื•ืช ื›ืคื™ื, ืืฃ ื‘ื ื™ื• ื‘ื ืฉื™ืื•ืช ื›ืคื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ื:",
272
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ.</b> ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืืช ื”ืขื ื‘ืฉื ื”ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื•ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืงืฉืจื™ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืชื™ื”ื, ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ื ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืจืืฉื™ื”ื:",
273
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ื™ื” ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื™ืฅ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืฉื ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื•:",
274
+ "<b>ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื”:"
275
+ ],
276
+ [
277
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืงื˜ื™ืจ.</b> ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื˜ื™ืจ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืจืฆื”, ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื—ืœืง ื›ืฉื™ืจืฆื”:",
278
+ "<b>ืœืžื—ืฆื™ืช ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ.</b> ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืชื™ื™ื’ืข ืงืฆืช:",
279
+ "<b>ื•ืกืžืš ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืชื”ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ื”ืงื˜ืจืชื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืืจ ื›ื”ื ื™ื:",
280
+ "<b>ื•ื–ืจืงืŸ.</b> ื›ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื™ืช ืขื•ืœื•ืชื™ืš ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื”ื“ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื–), ืžื” ื“ื ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื” ืืฃ ื‘ืฉืจ ื‘ื–ืจื™ืงื”:",
281
+ "<b>ื ืฉืžื˜ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ื”ืœืš ืœื•.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ืฉืืจ ืฉื ืœืงื‘ืœ ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ื•ืœื™ืชื ืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
282
+ "<b>ื‘ื ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ืจืืฉ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืฉื”ื•ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ื, ืžืงื™ืฃ ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ื“ื›ืœ ืคื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืืชื” ืคื•ื ื” ืœื ื™ื”ื• ืืœื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ, ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ื•ืžืฉื ืœืฆืคื•ื ื™ืช ืžื–ืจื—ื™ืช, ืขื“ ืฉืžื’ื™ืข ืœืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืงื•ื ื”ื ืงื‘ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืžื ืกื›ื™ื ื™ื•ืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืœืฉื™ืชื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืฉื ืขื•ืžื“ ื›ื”ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื•ืžื•ืฉื™ื˜ ืœื• ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืกื›ื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•, ืฉืžื ื™ืชืงืœืงืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉืŸ ื”ืžืขืจื›ื” ื›ืฉืžืงื™ืฃ ืืช ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ื‘ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื™ืฃ, ืžื”ืคืš ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื–ืœื’, ืืช ื”ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื ืชืื›ืœื• ืขืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื›ืฉืขื•ืฉื™ื ื ื™ืกื•ืš ื”ื™ื™ืŸ, ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื“ืจืš ืฉืžืืœ ืžืŸ ื”ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื“ืจื•ืžื™ืช ืžืขืจื‘ื™ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœื›ื‘ืฉ, ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ืคืจืง ืงื“ืฉื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื” ืœืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื, ื ืกื•ืš ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ. ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืžื™ื, ืฉืœื ื™ืชืขืฉื ื•. ื•ืขื•ืœืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื ืžื™, ืฉืœื ืชืžื•ืช ื‘ืขืฉืŸ. ื•ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื“ื•ืžื” ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืœืš ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืคืฅ ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืจืฉืื™ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ืŸ, ื•ื’ืค ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืจืฉื•ืช ืœื”ืคืš ื‘ืฆื ื•ืจื ื‘ืœื ืคื™ื™ืก, ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืœื”ืงื™ืฃ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืœื›ืช ื“ืจืš ื™ืžื™ืŸ:",
283
+ "<b>ื”ืกื’ืŸ ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ืงืจืŸ.</b> ืืฆืœ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ื ืœื ืกืš:",
284
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืกื•ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ื•.</b> ืœื”ื ื™ืฃ ื›ืฉื™ื ืกืš ื”ื›ื”ืŸ. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื“ืขื• ื”ืœื•ื™ื ื•ื™ื“ื‘ืจื• ื‘ืฉื™ืจ, ื•ื™ื“ืข ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื ื•ื™ืงื™ืฉ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ, ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš:",
285
+ "<b>ืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื.</b> ืฉืชื™ ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื• ืฉืœ ื›ื‘ืฉ, ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ื›ืกืฃ ืฉื‘ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ ืฉืจืช, ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ืฉื‘ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ืื‘ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื”ื—ืœื‘ื™ื:",
286
+ "<b>ื‘ืŸ ืืจื–ื.</b> ืฉื ืื“ื ื”ืžืงื™ืฉ ื‘ืฆืœืฆืœ, ืฆืžื‘ืดืœ ื‘ืœืขืดื–:",
287
+ "<b>ื”ื’ื™ืขื• ืœืคืจืง.</b> ืœืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืฉื”:"
288
+ ],
289
+ [
290
+ "<b>ื‘ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื”ืณ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืžืœื•ืื”.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช:",
291
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ืณ</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื—ืœืงื• ื”ืžื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืจืงื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืœืžื™ื:",
292
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืืœื”ื™ื ื ืฆื‘ ื‘ืขื“ืช ืืœ.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ืจืื™ืช ื”ื™ื‘ืฉื” ืฉืขืœื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ื”ื“ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ื™ืŸ:",
293
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืืœ ื ืงืžื•ืช.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจืื• ื”ืฉืžืฉ ื•ื”ื™ืจื— ื•ื”ื›ื•ื›ื‘ื™ื ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘ืดื” ืœื”ื ืงื ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื:",
294
+ "<b>ื‘ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืจื ื™ื ื• ืœืืœื”ื™ื ืขื•ื–ื ื•.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ืฉื”ืจื•ืื” ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืจื ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื‘ื— ืœื‘ื•ืจืื•:",
295
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉืฉื™ ื”ืณ ืžืœืš.</b> ืฉื‘ื• ื ืฉืœืžื” ื”ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื•ื‘ื• ื ื‘ืจื ืื“ื ืฉืžื›ื™ืจ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืฆืจื•:",
296
+ "<b>ืžื ื•ื—ื” ืœื—ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื™ื.</b> ื”ืื™ ืชื ื ืกื‘ืจ ืœื” ื›ืžืดื“ ืฉื™ืชื ืืœืคื™ ืฉื ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ืขืœืžื ื•ื—ื“ ื—ืจื•ื‘, ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื‘ืืœืฃ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ืื ื”ืงื‘ืดื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ื‘ืณ:ื™ืดื) ื•ื ืฉื’ื‘ ื”ืณ ืœื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื, ืœื›ืš ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžื–ืžื•ืจ ืฉื™ืจ ืœื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ืช, ืœืืœืฃ ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™, ืฉื™ื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ื”ืงื‘ืดื” ื”ื•ื ืืœืฃ ืฉื ื”:"
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+ ],
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Temurah",
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+ "versionTitle": "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื•ืจื”",
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+ "text": [
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+ [
22
+ [
23
+ "ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ All persons can cause the seizure of the substitute in holiness together with the original by exchanging a consecrated animal, that seizes the holiness of the exchange of an unconsecrated animal, if he said, โ€œthis is place of that one of something consecrated,โ€ whether by the mouth of men or by the mouth of women, as for example, if woman exchanged/substituted it, it seizes the sanctity of exchange by her mouth. And the word \"ื•ื”ื›ืœ\" /โ€Allโ€ that is taught here includes someone who inherits that if he substituted/exchanged a sacrifice that someone bequeathed to him during his lifetime, his substitution is a substitution.",
24
+ "ืœื ืฉืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืžื™ืจ โ€“ because it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[One may not exchange] or substitute another for it.โ€",
25
+ "ืžื•ืžืจ โ€“ holiness was seized upon it and both of them (i.e., the formerly designated animal that was consecrated and the formerly unconsecrated animal that has just been substituted) are holy.",
26
+ "ื•ืกื•ืคื’ ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื โ€“ he is flogged [for transgressing] the negative commandment (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œor substitute another for it,โ€ and even though it is a negative commandment/prohibition that does not involve an action/ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื”. For we hold that any negative commandment/prohibition that does not involve an action we donโ€™t flog that person except for false conspiring witnesses and [someone who] substitutes an animal for another or someone who curses another (or himself) using the name of God. But if you should say that this is a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment [ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”](unless there is no possibility of fulfilling this positive commandment), as it is written (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œ[If he does make substitution for it,โ€™ then it and its substitute shall both be holy,โ€ but we donโ€™t flog a person or a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment. One can say, that it is different here, as the negative commandment includes more than the positive commandment within it, for everyone who says the word/speaks is whipped, but not every person who says the word does a substitution, for partners and the community do not do substitutions, for since the positive commandment is not equivalent to the negative commandment, it is not called a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment.",
27
+ "ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืืช ืฉืœืŸ โ€“ sacrifices that the Kohen set aside to offer for himself, but if he Kohen substituted for it, it causes the seizure of the substitute/exchange of the animal [to be holy].",
28
+ "ืœื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื‘ืืฉื โ€“ that the Israelite gave him that he sacrifice/offer for him, but if the Kohen substituted another, he doesnโ€™t do that substitution on his own, for he has no portion in it, but rather from the time of the offering of those sacrifices on the altar and onwards, he (i.e., the Kohen) is worthy of the flesh [of the animal], but a person does not cause the seizure of something which is not his (Tractate Temurah 9a).",
29
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ that an Israelite gave him.",
30
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ for doesnโ€™t all of it belong to the Kohen and while it is alive, we give it to him, and the Israelite cannot gain atonement through it.",
31
+ "ืžื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ because it is clearly obvious to us that he Kohanim do not take possession of them other than from offering up of the portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar and beyond.",
32
+ "ืžื” ืœื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื โ€“ that is to say, it is the law that the Kohanim do not make a substitution with the sin-offering and the guilt-offering, etc.",
33
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• โ€“ there is an analogy between substitution to something consecrated itself.",
34
+ "ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” โ€“ on that which is dedicated to the Temple, in the house of the owners.",
35
+ "ืืฃ ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ does not take effect other than in the house of the owners, but in the home of the Kohen it does not take effect completely, therefore, a Kohen cannot substitute for a firstling. But an Israelites, if he made a substitution for it, it is seized in holiness, for it was in domain that sanctification occurs with the firstling. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Akiva."
36
+ ],
37
+ [
38
+ "ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืขืœ ื”ืฆืืŸ ื•ื›ื•'- as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œif one does substitute one animal one for another, [the thing vowed and its substitute shall both be holy],โ€ but sheep and male and female cattle are all called ื‘ื”ืžื”/animals.",
39
+ "ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข โ€“ [that which is] good of unconsecrated [animals], shall not be substituted for [that which is] bad of holy/sanctified [animals], [as it is written (Leviticus 27:10)]: โ€œif one does substitute [one animal for another],โ€so we see that those animals with a blemish (i.e., unfit for the altar) can serve as substitutes. And on anything with a blemish can effectuate substitution, as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œeither good for bad or bad for good,โ€ that implies that an unconsecrated animal with a blemish with a pure sanctified animal.",
40
+ "ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข โ€“ that is to say, what is something bad that is consecrated that effectuates substitution? All that its sanctification preceded its blemish. But if the blemish preceded its sanctification, that sanctification does not take effect upon it, substitution is not made, for it could have been written [in the Torah \"ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข\" /he will not exchange good for bad or \"ืจืข [ื‘ื•]\"/that has something bad in it, and it would imply [ืื• ืจืข] /[or something bad], he should not exchange not with something good and not with something bad, the final, ื˜ื•ื‘/good that the All-Merciful wrote (Leviticus 27:10), why do I need it? To tell you that it should be good from its outset, that at the time that it is sanctified, it was pure and again a blemish befell it, one can do a substitution; if it was bad from the outset, that a blemish befell it prior to its being sanctified, one doesnโ€™t do a substitution.",
41
+ "ืžืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ of an unconsecrated animal with two sanctified [animals], as for example, that he said, โ€œthis one is in place of those.โ€",
42
+ "ื•ืฉื ื™ื โ€“ [and two] unconsecrated [animals for one that is sanctified, as for example, these will be in place of this one.",
43
+ "ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 27:10]: โ€œthe thing [vowed and its substitute shall both be holy].โ€"
44
+ ],
45
+ [
46
+ "ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ limbs of unconsecrated [animals] with consecrated fetuses. For if he said: โ€œmay the foot of this animal be substituted/in exchange for the sanctified fetus that is in the womb of that animal,โ€ the sanctity does not apply upon the limb.",
47
+ "ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ for if he said: โ€œthis fetus that is inside of this unconsecrated animal will be substituted for the foot of this sanctified animal, the fetus is not holy.",
48
+ "ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ of unsanctified [animals] with sanctified peace-offerings.",
49
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ [peace-offerings] of unsanctified [animals] [substituted for] fetuses and/or limbs of a holy [animal].",
50
+ "ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื โ€“ he said, โ€œmay the foot of this unconsecrated animal be in substitution/exchange for this holy animal,โ€ the exchange takes effect on the limb and it spreads throughout the animal, it is totally exchanged/substituted and offered.",
51
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ for there is no power/strength in one limb of a holy animal to perform an exchange/substitution.",
52
+ "ื•ื”ืœื ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ at the beginning of the sanctification when he says, โ€œthe foot of this [animal]is a burnt offering.โ€",
53
+ "ื›ื•ืœื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as we derive from Scripture, as it is written (Leviticus 27:9): โ€œany such that may be given to the LORD shall be holy,โ€ when he says, โ€œthat it shall be holy,โ€ to include all of it. But the Halakha is according to the first Tanna/teacher."
54
+ ],
55
+ [
56
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืžื“ืžืข ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ (that which became subject to the law of Terumah through an admixture, can affect a second mixture only in proportion (i.e., according to the quantity of real Terumah/heave-offering contained therein) โ€“ a SEAH of Terumah that fell in less than one-hundred of unconsecrated produce and it became ื“ืžืข/subject to the law of Terumah, and it fell from this mixture to an other place, we require one-hundred from the unconsecrated produce according to what there is of Terumah in this SEAH of this mixture, but we donโ€™t require one-hundred SEAH corresponding to of all of that SEAH of the mixture of [consecrated] Terumah and unconsecrated produce, for it is not considered all Terumah to prohibit the secondary unconsecrated produce.",
57
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื—ื•ืžืฅ ืžื—ืžืฅ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ (that which contains leaven does not impart the status of leaven [to something else] only by due measure) โ€“ unconsecrated started dough that became leavened in leaven of heave-offering, it is entirely forbidden to foreigners (i.e., non-Kohanim). But if there fell from that started dough into another unconsecrated started dough and it became leavened, it does not forbid it other than according to the due measure [in the prescribed proportion] of the leavened heave-offering that it became combined with, and it does not forbid the last [batch] other than if there fell in from the first [batch] such a large measure that there is in the leaven of the Terumah combined in it enough I order to leaven the last [batch] without the combination/mixture of the unconsecrated produce that was combined with heave-offering.",
58
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ โ€“ a Mikveh/ritual bath which has in it twenty-one SEAH of rain water, we fill up on the shoulder nineteen SEAH (i.e., a SEAH is equal to 144 egg bulks) and we conduct the water to the Mikveh though a channel (see Talmud Temurah 12b) and they are ritually pure. Bug even though three LOG (i.e., a LOG is equal to six egg bulks) of drawn water disqualify the Mikveh/ritual bath, the drawing of the water is kosher when it is done when conducting the water through a channel and there was there at first most of the measurement of the Mikveh which is twenty-one SEAH of rain water, and that is according to the due measure, for the drawn waters do not disqualify the Mikveh when they are accomplished by conducting the water through a channel, unless they are twenty SEAH of drawn water, as there isnโ€™t a majority from rain water in the Mikveh. Such appears to be the explanation of this Mishnah, and so I have explained in the Tractate Terumah (Chapter 5, Mishnah 6), in the chapter, โ€œa SEAH of Terumah,โ€ but in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 12b) this is its explanation, according to the measurement of the utensils, for three LOGS of drawn water do not disqualify the Mikveh until they fell from three utensils or less into the Mikveh, but if there fell from four utensil, or more, they do not disqualify, and this is what it means when it says that drawn water does not disqualify the Mikveh other than according to the due measure, for they calculate the utensils from which fell the LOGIM of water into the Mikveh and they count them, if they are three utensils or less, they invalidate the Mikveh. But if from three utensils and higher, they do not disqualify it. And our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Yosi ben Honi, for he holds that they LOGIM that fell from more than three utensils do not disqualify [the Mikveh], but it is not the Halakh."
59
+ ],
60
+ [
61
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืขื ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ โ€“ at the time when one places in it the ashes [of the red heifer] it becomes the purification waters, therefore, we require that there will be first water in a utensil and afterwards the ashes. But if he placed the ashes first and afterwards the water, it is disqualified, for there was no water there at the time of the placing of the ashes that it would become purification water, and furthermore, it does not become purification water. And there is Scripture as it is written (Numbers 19:17): โ€œand fresh water shall be added to them in a vessel,โ€ that implies that the water is placed in the utensil and not to the ashes, but rather, โ€œื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€œ/shall be added to them โ€“ to warn that after he puts in [the ashes] on the water, he should combine them well with his finger and return the water that is underneath it upon it.",
62
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก (an area in which there uncertainty concerning the location of a grave or a corpse does not make [another field into] a grave area) โ€“ a field that was plowed as a grave, if he returned and plowed a grave area and fields that are around it, we donโ€™t presume that are the rest of the fields is like a grave area and to state that the plough drags the bones to the fields that surround it, that one grave is not made into a grave area, but rather, all that entire field that lost the grave and it is not known where it is, with the turn of the fullness of the plough to here and another turn of the fullness of the plough to there in the same manner that it the people of the value are accustomed to plough their fields, if to the east or west or north or south, for perhaps one of its two heads was the grave and from there the bone rolled into one of the fields that is from this side or that, but the Sages estimated that with the turn of the fullness of the plough it is appropriate for the bones to roll by the plough, more not. And how much is the turn of the fullness of the plough? One-hundred cubits.",
63
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืื—ืจ ืชืจื•ืžื” โ€“ partners who separated Terumah one after the other, the first Terumah/heave-offering is not Terumah, for since the second [person] went back and separated Terumah, he releaved his intention that the first Terumah was not satisfactory to him, and it was for him that the first [person] separated Terumah without the knowledge of his fellow [partner], and similarly, the second. But our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Akiva, and it is not the Halakha. But rather, if the first [person] separated Terumah according to the [appropriate] measure which is one from fifty, the heave-offering of the second [person] is not Terumah. But if the first [person] only separated in a selfish/illiberal manner, as for example, that he separated at one out of sixty, the second personโ€™s heave-offering is Terumah.",
64
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ as Scripture (Leviticus 27:33) stated: โ€œthen it and its substitute shall both be holy: [it cannot be redeemed],โ€ and not the heave-offering of his heave-offering.",
65
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ as Scripture stated (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œthen it,โ€ it and not the offspring.",
66
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” (an offspring [of a consecrated animal] does produce a substitute) โ€“ as Scripture stated (Leviticus 27:33): \"ื•ืชืจื•ืžืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื”-ืงื“ืฉ\" โ€œ[and its substitute] shall [both] be [holy],โ€ to include the offspring. But the Rabbis hold \"ื™ื”ื™ื”\"/โ€shall beโ€ โ€“ to include something done inadvertently as something done willfully, for if he thought [to substitute] black [and he substituted] the white, that regarding Holy Things, he did not sanctity, because it was consecration by error, but regarding substitution, he sanctified it. And the Halakha is according to the Sages. But however, even though substitutions [for a substitute] do not produce a substitute, we hold that we substitute and we go back and substituted with one animal, and even several animals for one sanctified animal, whether at one time or one after the other, all of them are substitutions."
67
+ ],
68
+ [
69
+ "ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€“ but if he exchanged, he should exchange/substitute an animal/ื‘ื”ืžื” for an animal/ื‘ื”ืžื”.",
70
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for concerning exchange/substitution, it is written (Leviticus 27:9): โ€œ(If [the vow concerns] any animal that may be brought) as an offering [to the LORD],โ€ and the Holy Things for the repair of the Temple house are not called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ .",
71
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื” โ€“ Rabbi Shimon holds that the Holy Things for the repair of the Temple are called ืงืจื‘ืŸ/an offering, therefore, we donโ€™t derive it that it produces a substitute other than from here. ",
72
+ "But isnโ€™t the tithe part of this category, in the category of all the Holy Things that produce a substitute/exchange?",
73
+ "ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆื โ€“ as it is written regarding it that it makes a substitution, as it is written regarding a tithe (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œHe must not look out for good as against bad, or make substitution for it.โ€",
74
+ "ืžื” ืžืขืฉืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“ โ€“ and one performs an exchange [with an individual sacrifice], even every sacrifice/offering of an individual one can make a substitution.",
75
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ and those of partners, but the tithe is not have partnership, as we learned in the last chapter of [Tractate] Bekhorot [56b] (it is listed incorrectly in the commentary of Bartenura itself) (Numbers 18:15): โ€œ[The first issue of the womb of every being, man or beast, that is offered to the LORD] shall be yours/ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœืš โ€œ โ€“ but not in partnership.",
76
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ and even though they are called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ as it is written (Numbers 31:50): โ€œSo we have brought as an offering to the LORD such articles of gold as each of us came upon,โ€ it is not the offering of the altar like the tithe. But the Sages stated above that the Holy Things for the Repair of the Temple house are not called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ, as they hold, assuming that it they are called the โ€œoffering of the LORD/ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”' โ€œ(see Numbers 31:50), it is not called a sacrifice to God/ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื”' like the rest of the sacrifices of the Altar."
77
+ ]
78
+ ],
79
+ [
80
+ [
81
+ "ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“. ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื โ€“ for most of them are burnt-offerings and the burnt-offering is a male, but they donโ€™t bring peace-offerings other than the sheep for Atzeret/Shemini Atzeret which are males, and their sin offering is also written in all of them (Numbers 29:38): โ€œand one goat for a purification offering [ - in addition to the regular burnt offering, its grain offering and libation],โ€ (though this expression is also found in verses 22, 28, 31 and 34 as well as Numbers 28:22).",
82
+ "ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชืŸ (for offerings of individuals are they liable to be answerable [replacing animals set aside for he individual if said animals are lost]) โ€“ that is to say, there are from those whose time has been fixed, that even after their appropriate time has passed, one is obligated to offer them, such as, for example, the burnt offering of a woman who gave birth and the sacrifices of a leper, if his eighth day passed, he is obligated to offer them after the [appropriate] time. Bu the sacrifices of the community that have a [designated] time, if their time had passed their sacrifice is nullified.",
83
+ "ืžืฉืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื— โ€“ that if the sacrifice was offered in its [designated] time, but did not offer its libations with it, they are obligated to offer them, even from here until ten days. As it is written in the [Torah] portion of Pinhas in all of them (Numbers 29:18,21 24,27, 30, 33 โ€“ in slightly different forms): โ€œthe grain offerings and libations for the bulls, [rams, and lambs, in the quantities prescribed],โ€ to tell you that the grain offerings and libations of community sacrifices were offered even at night, and even on the next day, if they made the offering at its proper time but they didnโ€™t come to offering the meal offerings and drink-offerings/libations, they would offer them when they had the opportunity even after several days.",
84
+ "ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5)โ€“ which supersede the Sabbath and ritual purity, as it is written regarding them (Leviticus 6:13): โ€œ[a tenth of an ephah of choice flour] as a regular grain offering,โ€ it is for you like the meal- offering of the regular offerings that supersede the Sabbath and ritual impurity. But regarding the daily offering, it is written (Numbers 28:2): โ€œ[Be punctilious in presenting to Me] at stated times/ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื• ,โ€ and we state โ€œat stated times,โ€ even on Shabbat, even in ritual impurity, for if most of the Kohanim are ritually impure, we perform it while [they are] impure [from ritual contact with the dead].",
85
+ "ื•ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”\"ื› โ€“ the bullock of the High Priest.",
86
+ "ืืœื ืฉื–ืžื ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข โ€“ meaning to say, that the reason is not dependent upon other than the fixed time, for every sacrifice whose time is fixed, if the time passed [for offering the sacrifice], he has no indemnity/payment, it supersedes the Sabbath and ritual impurity (but not the community sacrifices or those sacrifices whose time was not fixed). And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Meir."
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ that it was lost and he became expiated through another [animal], and afterwards, the first animal was found.",
90
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ that atoned through another [animal].",
91
+ "ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืชื•ืช โ€“ that sin-offerings left to die (i.e., sin-offerings that were disqualified and consequently can no longer be sacrificed on the altar are confined In an enclosure until they die: the offspring of a sin-offering; an animal substituted for a sin-offering; a sin-offering whose owners have died; a sin-offering whose owners have already gained atonement through an other offering; and a sin offering of sheep or goats that is more than a year old), is a usage dating from Moses as delivered from Sinai (i.e., a traditional law or a traditional interpretation of a written law), and the first Tanna/teacher [of our Mishnah] holds, that for an individual sacrifice it was learned [regarding individual sin-offerings that were disqualified] but not that of the community.",
92
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืžื•ืชื• โ€“ that those of the community were also learned/derived.",
93
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื• โ€“ meaning to say, we hold that five sin-offerings are left to die, that their owners have died, or that their owners acquired expiation through another [animal], or that its year has passed (for sheep and/or goats), the offspring of a sin-offering and the substitution of a sin-offering. For just as that three of them are not derived from that of a community [offering], for we do not have a case found with a community, for there is no feminine sin-offering for a community [offering], and the exchange of a sin-offering also, there is no community offering that one does a substitution/exchange, or that if its owners died, there are no community offerings where it the animals are left to die (see Tractate Temurah 15b).",
94
+ "ืืฃ ืฉื›ืคื™ืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” โ€“ even though it is possible that it may be found in a community, we donโ€™t learn/derive that they died.",
95
+ "ื‘ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื โ€“ that the animals are left to die, but not for a community [offering]. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Shimon."
96
+ ],
97
+ [
98
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ the All-Merciful (i.e., God), said: (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[the thing vowed] and its substitute [shall both be holy],โ€ but not the substitute of the substitute.",
99
+ "ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื ืžืžืจื™ื โ€“ for it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[if one does substitute] one animal for another/ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€ (see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 3).",
100
+ "ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข (for a permanent blemish)(see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2) - that if he substituted an unconsecrated animal with a blemish for an pure sanctified animal, a greater holiness devolves upon it that if he would redeem it, it would go to an unconsecrated state to be sheared and/or labor but rather, according to the laws of Holy Things, that since its sanctification preceded its blemish, that when they redeem them, there is no permission for shearing and working it but rather only a permission of eating, which is not the case with Holy Things, for if their blemish preceded their sanctification, they go out to an unconsecrated state through redemption to be sheared and to labor. But regarding substitution/exchange, Scripture reveals (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[One My not exchange] or substitute another for it, either good for bad, or bad for good,โ€ it did not distinguish between a pure animal and one with a blemish.",
101
+ "ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for if he thought to say, โ€œa black bullock that went out of from my house first will be the exchange in place of that,โ€ and it came out of his lips, โ€œa white bullock,โ€ regarding exchange/substitution, it is sanctified, and he is flogged, for Scripture reveals concerning this (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[the thing vowed and its substitute] shall both be holy;โ€ for the altar it is not sanctified and he is not flogged, for an errant sanctification is not sanctified.",
102
+ "ื”ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ (a cross-bred beast) - that comes from a he-goat and a sheep/ewe.",
103
+ "ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™ื (are not made holy) โ€“ through substitution/exchange. But even though that its holiness occurs in its exchange/substitution [of an animal] with a permanent blemish, it does not occur on these (i.e., cross-bred beasts, a torn animal, one born from the side, a beast lacking clear-cut sexual characteristics and one that has both male and female characteristics).",
104
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื (and do not impart [to a substitute] the status of holiness) โ€“ other things through substitution/exchange, if hey are holy. But something torn is found that it is holy, as for example, if he sanctified an animal and afterwards it became torn, and in this, it was necessary to state that even though it is holy, it does not impart the status of substitute. But mixed-bred animals and beasts lacking clear-cut sexual characteristics and one that has both male and female characteristics , from the beginning of their creation, they have been ruined , and you cannot find sanctity in them other than with the offspring of Holy Things, for their mother was sanctified before she was impregnated, for now of their own they are holy, for they are from the womb of their mother, and through them it was necessary to state that they donโ€™t impart the status of substitute. But according to Rabbi Yehuda who stated that in the rest of the offspring, holy things do impart the status of substitute. But they are not similar to a defect, for [an animal] with a defect there is a sacrifice for its kind, but those which are not of its kind have no sacrifice and they are considered like an impure animal that does not impart the status of substitute. But we hold like Rabbi Yossi the son of Rabbi Eliezer and like Rabbi Eleazar, for o one disputes them in this."
105
+ ]
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ [
109
+ "ืืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื โ€“ in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 17b), the objection is raised, since it taught [in the Mishnah], โ€œtheir offspringโ€ (i.e., their offspring and the substituteโ€™s offspring), why do I need, โ€œthe offspring of their offspring to infinity?โ€ Because our teacher/Tanna heard Rabbi Eliezer who said further on [in this Mishnah] that the offspring of peace-offerings are not offered as peace-offerings, because of this, the Tanna taught, โ€œthe offspring of their offspring to infinity,โ€ meaning to say, not only with their offspring do I not agree with you, (since for him, the young has the law of the mother), but even โ€œto infinity,โ€ I do not agree with you (since even then, the young has the law of the mother).",
110
+ "ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ but rather he brings it in to the vaulted chamber (i.e., closing the barn door without food until they died) and it dies [there]. According to the Rabbis, because of a decree, if you had said the offspring of peace-offerings have a remedy, one would come to delay to the mother until she would give birth and raise a herd from the the offspring, and they would come to have shearing and work.",
111
+ "ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ the Sages agree with Rabbi Eliezer that the offspring of offspring of peace-offerings that it should not be offered, for his intention was known from his actions that he needed to raise a herd/flock. But the legal decision is according to the first Tanna/teacher that the offspring of their offspring until eternity, they are like peace-offerings.",
112
+ "ื”ืขื™ื“ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ and not according to Rabbi Eliezer. And this testimony is true and [the] Halakha.",
113
+ "ื•ืื›ืœื ื• ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื’ โ€“ it is stated on the holiday of Shavuot, for if he would wait and look forward to the holiday of Sukkot (which is the normal meaning of the word, ื—ื’ when used without a modifier), it is found that he would violate a positive commandment (Deuteronomy 12:5-6): โ€œthere you are to go, and here you are to bring [your burnt offerings and other sacrifices],โ€ that implies that on the first Festival that you go there, bring all of the votive offerings that are upon you. However, regarding the negative commandment (Deuteronomy 23:22): โ€œ[When you make a vow to the LORD your God,] do not put off fulfilling it, [for the LORD your God will require it of you, and you will have incurrent guilt],โ€ you do not violate until there has passed over you three Festivals."
114
+ ],
115
+ [
116
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืชื•ื“ื” โ€“ their portions of the sacrifices that are offered on thee altar and the flesh is eaten during the day and at night.",
117
+ "ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 7:12): โ€œโ€™he shall offer together with the sacrifice if thanksgiving unleavened cakes with oil mixed in,โ€ (the quoted sentence fragment โ€“ \"ืขืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืชื•ื“ื”\" does not exist in Scripture) the thanksgiving offering itself requires bread, but not its offspring nor its substitutes require bread.",
118
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as, for example, he substituted a male for a burnt-offering (i.e., instead of a female).",
119
+ "ื•ื•ืœื“ ืชืžื•ืจืชื” โ€“ as, for example, he substituted a female for a burnt-offering, for a female is dedicated in the substitution of a burnt-offering, and it gave birth to the male substitute."
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ the first segment [of the Mishnah] as it is taught: โ€œlo, these are like a burnt-offering regarding the offspring of a substitute,โ€ because of the first dedication that these came all of them were from his own power that he offers them, for it is a male. But here, when he sets aside a female as a burnt-offering, that all of them come from his own power, it is feminine and it is not offered, therefore, it is not like a burnt-offering, but rather, he should sell it and bring a burnt-offering with its monetary value.",
123
+ "ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืืฉื โ€“ but a guilt-offering does not come from a female [beast].",
124
+ "ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘ โ€“ until a blemish befalls it. And in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 19b) it raises the objection: โ€œBut let it be sold, for since it is not fit for anything, that in itself constitutes a blemish, and it is not sanctified other than for its value, it should be sold immediately and then one can purchase a guilt-offering with its proceeds. And it answers, for since the holiness of its value rests on it, there also rests on it bodily consecration and it is for this thing that it requires a blemish.",
125
+ "ืื ืงืจื‘ ืืฉืžื• โ€“ and furthermore, he does not need a guilt-offering.",
126
+ "ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ for the horn-shaped boxes in the Temple to receive the money for sacrifices which are supplied by the Temple authorities that from them they take to bring to the free-will offerings of the community.",
127
+ "ืชืžื›ืจ ืฉืœื ื‘ืžื•ื โ€“ for since it is not appropriate for a guilt-offering, there is no greater blemish from this, for it was not sanctified for the bodily consecration , and it should be immediately sold and he can bring with its proceeds a guilt-offering. But even though that regarding someone who separates a female beast for a burnt-offering, Rabbi Shimon does not dispute that it requires a blemish, there that there is a burnt-offering with a female beast, for we find a female burnt offering with a bird, but a guilt offering with a female beast, we donโ€™t find. Therefore, this this is its blemish and it is not sanctified other than for its monetary value. But the Halakha is not a according to Rabbi Shimon.",
128
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืืฉื ื•ื›' โ€“ all of them are to pasture, for the Halakha is that all that with a sin-offering is left to die, with a guilt-offering it is to pasture [until it develops a blemish and then it is sold], and the substitute for a sin-offering is left to die.",
129
+ "ื•ืžื•ืชื• โ€“ for Rabbi Eliezer holds that just as sin-offering, so too with a guilt-offering; just as a sin-offeringโ€™s substitute is left to die, also, the substitute of a guilt-offering.",
130
+ "ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ which are permissible for an individualโ€™s donation, we we follow, but not for the donation of a community.",
131
+ "ืืฉื ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืฉื›ื™ืคื•ืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืจ โ€“ that with a sin-offering, it should die, but with a guilt-offering, it should pasture until it is blemished [and then sold]."
132
+ ],
133
+ [
134
+ "ื•ื”ืœื ืืฃ ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ [the Mishnah] is explaining what is the difference between them (i.e., the first Tanna/teacher [that the animal should be left out to pasture to develop a blemish, be sold and that its monetary value should be donated to the Temple treasury as a free-will offering] and Rabbi Eleazar [that he should purchase with its proceeds a burnt-offering]).",
135
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ when it is placed upon the individual to over it, he lays his hands upon it, etc. (i.e., he brings drink-offerings/libations on its account, and the libations are from his own funds).",
136
+ "ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ โ€“ he who set aside the guilt-offering and was expiated through another [animal], and the first, an animal dedicated as a guilt-offering, has been condemned to pasture until natural death.",
137
+ "ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” โ€“ of the burnt-offering purchased from the proceeds of that guilt-offering, is his, and he himself offers and takes the hide, and even if it is not from the priestly watch of that week.",
138
+ "ืื™ื ื• ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื” โ€“ for it is the free-will donation of the community which does not have the laying of the hands.",
139
+ "ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” ืœืื ืฉื™ ืžืฉืžืจ โ€“ for it is of the community, and a Kohen from a different priestly watch is not permitted to offer it up, as it is written (Deuteronomy 18:8): โ€œ[They shall receive equal shares of the dues,] without regard to personal gifts or patrimonies,โ€ what the patrimonies sold to each other, you take on your Shabbat, and I will take on my Shabbat. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
140
+ ],
141
+ [
142
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืžืขืฉืจ โ€“ like the sanctity of the firstling and the tithe of the cattle, which are not slaughtered in the booths of a mercantile fair/bazaar.",
143
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ (see Tractate Bekhorot, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1) โ€“ because there is no benefit for something sanctified in the salle, for the proceeds of a firstling go to a Kohen, and the proceeds of a tithe go to the owners, and because of their benefit, we donโ€™t treat them lightly.",
144
+ "ื•ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืฉืจ (see Tractate Bekhorot, Chapter 9, Mishnah 1) โ€“ for they donโ€™t come ab initio from outside the land of Israel, as the reason is explained beyond. But if they came as pure animals, they are sacrificed.",
145
+ "",
146
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ื˜ืขื โ€“ that the firstling and the tithe do not come from outside the Land of Israel like the other Holy Things.",
147
+ "ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคืจื ืกื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ โ€“ they have repair in their places that [the animals] will go out to pasture until they become unfit for sacrifices and their owners will consume them with their blemishes.",
148
+ "ื•ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื โ€“ even though a blemish befell them, they are in their sanctity, you need to redeem them and to elevate their monetary value and to offer them up., for since their end is to elevate their monetary value, they should raise them themselves and offer them up. But the legal decision is, that a firstling and a tithe that were pure that came up from outside the Land [of Israel] should not be offered up, as it is written (Deuteronomy 14:23): โ€œYou shall consume the tithes of your new grain and wine and oil, in the presence of the LORD your God,โ€ from the place that you raise up tithes and grain, you raise up the firstling, and from the place that you donโ€™t raise up the tithe of your new grain, you donโ€™t raise up the firstling. And the tithe of cattle is also made an analogy to the tithe of your new grain."
149
+ ]
150
+ ],
151
+ [
152
+ [
153
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” โ€“ it is not appropriate to sacrifice it as a sin-offering, for it is written (Numbers 15:27): โ€œ[In case it is an individual who has sinned unwittingly, he shall offer a she-goat] in its first year as a purification offering (i.e., sin-offering).โ€ However, because of this disqualification alone it does not die, but rather, it should be sent out to pasture until it develops a blemish until there are two causes for suspicion/unfavorable conditions, that one year passed and it was lost, or that it was lost and it was found with a blemish. And this is how the Mishnah is resolved in the Gemara (Tractate Temura 22a), and that which was lost, as it is taught, counts both here, and there. And this is what it means: that its year had passed (i.e., the animal now being older than one-year) and that which was lost and when it was found there was a blemish in it.",
154
+ "ืื ืžืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ if after this (i.e., animal) was found, the owners effected atonement with another.",
155
+ "ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ and even according to the Rabbis who dispute Rabbi [Judah the Prince] further on in our chapter (see the concluding clause of Mishnah 3), who states, that the sin-offering did not die, but rather that it was found after the owners effected atonement, in this they admit, for since there are two causes for unfavorable conditions, that its [first] year had passed and that it was lost, or that it was lost, and it was found to have a blemish. But if it was only lost, since it was found prior to atonement, even though after it was found, the owners had effected atonement with another [animal], it does not die but rather is put out to pasture.",
156
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ according to the Rabbis.",
157
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ โ€“ if they benefitted from them, they are exempt from the sacrifice of misappropriation (or religious sacrilege), for since neither it nor its monetary value is offered [as a sacrifice], its holiness departs [from it].",
158
+ "ื•ืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ and they did not want to be atoned with another [animal].",
159
+ "ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ โ€“ this refers to and its year had passed (i.e., it was now older than a year), for that where it was lost and it was found with a blemish, it is sold immediately and he purchases another with its monetary value.",
160
+ "ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for since its monetary value stands to be offered, for something that stands in order that it should sent out to pasture and develop a blemish makes for an exchange/substitution."
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ "ื•ืื—\"ื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ this sin-offering that its owners were expiated through another.",
164
+ "ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื— โ€“ whenever there would be a sin-offering, there would be a death, money/coins also go to the Dead Sea (literally: the Sea of Salt)."
165
+ ],
166
+ [
167
+ "ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื•ืžืืœื• โ€“ that he should mix them together. For since he brings from both of them, it is not a case of a sin-offering where its owners were expiated with another. But if he brought [only] from one of them, the other is made inoperative, for they have the monetary value of the sin-offering that its owners were expiated with another.",
168
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื™ืคืœื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ this would be like the rest of those leftovers of sin-offerings that go to free-will donation.",
169
+ "ื•ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื โ€“ but if the sin-offering [that had been originally been lost] was pure, it should be offered and the monies [that would have been used to replace it] should go to the Dead Sea, since the owners were expiated with another. And all of these are according to Rabbi [Judah the Prince] who said, it was lost at the time of it being separated, such as these monies, and they were found prior to atonement, they go to the Dead Sea.",
170
+ "ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืชืžื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื™ ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•' โ€“ everyone agrees that when one is expiated by that which is not lost, that the lost one (i.e., animal that had been set aside) dies. They did not dispute other where he was expiated with a lost [object], for Rabbi [Judah the Prince] holds that a person who set something aside to be lost is like it is lost, meaning to say, one who sets aside [another] in place of the lost sacrifice, its law is like something lost. And just as if it the person was expiated with that which was not lost, the lost [object] that remains, when it is found, its law is that it should die. Similarly, here also , when he was expiated with one of them, and even with those that were lost, those that were not lost should go to the Dead Sea. But the Rabbis state, we did not state that a person sets something aside to become lost is like it is lost. And especially when a person is expiated with something that is not lost and the lost [object] remains, the lost object โ€œdiesโ€ and even though it is found prior to atonement. But if he was expiated with a lost object and there remained [an animal] that was not lost, it does not die, but rather it should be put to pasture until it develops a blemish. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "ืžื•ื›ืจื” ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช โ€“ for when he sold it (i.e., the sin-offering) to another, it is considered as if it doesnโ€™t exist. But all the while that it is under its owner at the time that he is atoning with another [animal], it should die. But Rabbi Eleazar the son of Rabbi Shimon holds, that all the time that it is alive after the owners were expiated with another, whether it is under [the control of its owner] or in the hand of others, it should die. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eleazar the son of Rabbi Shimon."
174
+ ]
175
+ ],
176
+ [
177
+ [
178
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ to cancel the obligation/release it (i.e., the firstling) from the Kohen and to sacrifice it for his own obligation.",
179
+ "ื™ืœื“ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for a firstling is not holy other than in the womb, and since ab initio, it takes effect in another holiness, furthermore, the holiness of its being a firstling no long takes effect with it.",
180
+ "ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ we are not speaking about a female beast, for the female is not holy with the firstling that one needs to make a deception on it. But the sanctified beast, that if it is sin-offering and she became pregnant and one wants to make a deception so that it will not go to die, for the offspring of a sin-offering goes to its death, one can change it it to another sanctity. [And this comes to inform us] that the offspring of Holy Things, while they are born holy and not in the wombs of their mother, for since they had not yet been sanctified with the holiness of their mothers, one is able to engraft upon them another holiness, so that when they are born, they will not be a sin-offering."
181
+ ],
182
+ [
183
+ "ื™ืœื“ื” ืฉื ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื โ€“ we are speaking about an unconsecrated animal, if the animal was dedicated, how was something that was sanctified as a burnt-offering let it be a burnt-offering, for the other one refers to the sanctity of its mother. But it is certainly an unconsecrated animal, and therefore, this one whose monetary value was not sanctified is unconsecrated. But however, on both of them, the holiness of a burnt-offering exists. For since he stated that if [he born animal] is a male, it is a burnt-offering, and because he did not vow other than for one, therefore, he should offer the one for his vow, and the second he should sell for the needs of a burnt-offering and its monetary value/worth is unconsecrated.",
184
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ for the offspring become holy because they are holy [at the time of their existence] and not from the belly of their mother, and since that these when they leave [their motherโ€™s womb] are not appropriate for sacrifice, they are not holy. But the Sages dispute Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel as they hold that the offspring are holy and exist through the holiness of their mother [from the womb]. And the Halakha is not according to Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel (see Talmud Temurah 25a)."
185
+ ],
186
+ [
187
+ "ื”ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ on the offspring of a pregnant animal.",
188
+ "ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ for the holiness of the offspring takes precedence. But if he said in the first clause [of the Mishnah] that it is a peace-offering, she and that which she has in her is sanctified, and it is like one is sanctifying two animals for peace offerings, for if he retracted and stated that her offspring is a burnt-offering, the offspring is a peace-offspring. But here, it does not belong to state that while they are in the belly of their mother, for when we state that they exist and they are not in the belly of their mother, these words apply when it was sanctified [first] and at the end she became pregnant, for he did not deposit to the fetus any holiness, but rather it is sanctified from the holiness of its mother. But when one sanctifies a pregnant woman, it is considered that the fetus receives the holiness. But Rabbi Meir holds (see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1) that the first language takes hold.",
189
+ "ืื ืœื›ืš ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืœื” โ€“ when he said that she (i.e., the mother) is a peace-offering, he did not intend [to speak] about her offspring.",
190
+ "ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ ืืฉืคืจ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช โ€“ the mouth is unable to say two things at the same time.",
191
+ "ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ that even at the conclusion of his words, the person is made responsible.",
192
+ "ื ืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ even though he retracted in as much time as is needed for an utterance and he stated that her offspring is a burnt-offering, he didnโ€™t say anything, for since that at the time when he dedicated its mother as a peace-offering, he didnโ€™t intend that the offspring would be a burnt-offering. Because we establish that every time as is needed for an utterance is like something spoken, except from one who dedicates and commands and blasphemes and worships idolatry and betroths and divorces, for these six [things] no retraction has any effect in them, even though he retracted in as much time as is needed for an utterance. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
193
+ ],
194
+ [
195
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ we have the reading, but we donโ€™t have the reading, โ€œand the substitute of peace offerings.โ€",
196
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for the first language takes hold.",
197
+ "ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ and half of it is the substitute for a burnt-offering and half of it is the substitute of a peace-offering. And that which he didnโ€™t state, the substitute for a burnt-offering and peace offering, ut he stated a substitute for both of them, because he (i.e., Rabbi Yossi) holds that if I stated the substitute of a burnt-offering and a peace-offering, it will be holy and not offered, according to the law that a person who states that half of it will be a burnt-offering and half of it a piece offering, that it is holy and not offered. And he erred in this and held that a lamb can be a substitute on each one of them just as it should be completely sanctified to be offered up, therefore, even though he stated it in this language, he intended it for both, but it should sent out to pasture until it develops a blemish and it should be sold and then he can bring with its monetary value half for a burnt-offering and with the monetary value of the [other] half a peace-offering, and in this we are dealing, as for example, that there were before him a burnt-offering and a peace-offering, when he substituted this for them. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
198
+ ],
199
+ [
200
+ "ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ื—ืœื™ืคื™ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื–ื• โ€“ all of them are the language of substitution/exchange.",
201
+ "ืžื—ื•ืœืœืช โ€“ it is the language of desecration/defamation. And he didnโ€™t say anything, for a sacred pure animal goes out to unconsecrated purposes.",
202
+ "ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ even though it is not worth like that of a consecrated animal with a blemish, according to the Torah, even something sanctified that is worth one-hundred Maneh that was redeemed for the equivalent of a penny, it is redeemed. And even though it went out to an unconsecrated purpose from the Torah, one must, according to the Rabbis make money, meaning to say, to pay the money so that the sanctified thing will not become overcharged, but from the Torah, there is no overreaching for that which is sanctified, as it is written (Leviticus 25:14): โ€œyou shall not wrong one another,โ€ your brother/another person, but not that which is sanctified."
203
+ ],
204
+ [
205
+ "ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืชื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ he stated anonymously but did not state in place of this sin-offering or this burnt-offering.",
206
+ "ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œOne may not exchange or substitute another for it,โ€ until the sanctified thing is known and special when one substitutes for it.",
207
+ "ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื• โ€“ and that sin-offering was standing before him.",
208
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื” โ€“ which implies for the monetary value of the burnt-offering, for if they themselves want to offer it, he would say, โ€œlo, these are a burnt-offering.โ€"
209
+ ]
210
+ ],
211
+ [
212
+ [
213
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— (all [animals] which are prohibited for the altar โ€“ that they are invalid for offering as a sacrifice. And you consider them and further.",
214
+ "ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ (prohibit in any number at all [animals among which they are confused]) โ€“ and even if they were combined one in one-thousand, all of them are forbidden to the altar, if it was not known. And all of them are found that they are not known, except for the torn animal which is not found and is not known other that, as for example, the lion or the wolf attacked that are mixed with the vital organ perforated by a thorn.",
215
+ "ื”ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื”ื ืจื‘ืข ื•ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“ โ€“ they are ineligible for the altar. As it states in Scripture (Leviticus 22:25): โ€œfor they are mutilated, they have a defect,โ€ and it is taught in a Baraitha, every place where it states, โ€œthey are mutilated,โ€ is none other than unchastity and idolatry. Unchastity, as it is written (Genesis 6:12): โ€œfor all flesh had corrupted its ways on earth.โ€ Idolatry, as it is written (Deuteronomy 4:16): โ€œnot to act wickedly and make for yourselves a sculptured image [in any likeness whatever: the form of a man or a woman].โ€ The one (i.e., animal) that has sexual relations with a human being and the one (i.e., animal) with whom a human being has sexual relations that is taught in our Mishnah, as for example that he had sex or has sexual relations with an animal with one witness or by the owners, and is not stoned in this, but they are disqualified from being a sacrifice.",
216
+ "ืžื•ืงืฆื” โ€“ an animal that was set aside for idolatry. And it is not disqualified for being offed up until they should do with it an act for the purposes of idolatry, as for example, that the [non-Jewish] priests served it if it was a bull or sheared it if it was a sheep.",
217
+ "ื•ื ืขื‘ื“ โ€“ it is not prohibited to derive benefit even though he worshipped it, for living creatures are not prohibited to derive benefit when we serve them, but they are disqualified to the altar.",
218
+ "ื•ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ (and the harlotโ€™s hire and the price of a dog) โ€“ Scripture specifically disqualifies them (Deuteronomy 23:19): โ€œYou shall not bring the fee of a whore or the pay of a dog [into the house of the LORD your God in fulfillment of any vow, for both are abhorrent to the LORD your God].โ€",
219
+ "ื•ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ a he-goat that comes upon a ewe.",
220
+ "ื•ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” โ€“ as it is written regarding tithes (Leviticus 27:32): โ€œ[All tithes of the herd or the flock] โ€“ of all that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff,โ€ excluding the torn animal that does not pass [under the shepherdโ€™s staff] and the sacrifice of the altar is derived from the tithe of cattle.",
221
+ "ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ โ€“ that its mother was torn and they removed the fetus through the caesarian section, and we exclude it from Scripture as it is written (Leviticus 22:27): โ€œ[When an ox or a sheep or a goat] is bornโ€, excluding through caesarian section.",
222
+ "ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ โ€“ for the altar.",
223
+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจ โ€“ for that is not worshipped.",
224
+ "ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืืกื•ืจ โ€“ it is prohibited for the altar, but is permitted even for eating, as it will be mentioned nearby. But what is upon it, the jewelry that is upon it are prohibited from deriving benefit for they were worshipped and they have on them the grasp of a human hand."
225
+ ],
226
+ [
227
+ "ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื” โ€“ whether she is a heathen woman or an Israelite woman, and it shall be one of those liable for violating a negative commandment and one doesnโ€™t have to say from one who is liable for extirpation and death by the Jewish court. But the hire of a harlot of a free woman, and she is an Israelite, is not disqualified for the Altar, for this is not the hire of a harlot, for she is not forbidden from marrying into the priesthood with this sexual act. And similarly, the hire [of a harlot] that was given as wife to a man is not disqualified, but a male hire, is disqualified.",
228
+ "ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื โ€“ he made a condition with her to give her one lamb as her hire and sent her even one-hundred, we donโ€™t say that one that I will give with her will be a hire [for harlot] and these others are all a gift, but all of them are considered hire for harlot and prohibited [as an offering].",
229
+ "ื•ืชืœื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ืชืš ืืฆืœ ืขื‘ื“ื™ โ€“ we are speaking of my Hebrew slave who does not have a wife and children, for his master does not have permission to provides to him a Canaanite maid servant to beget from her slaves because he didnโ€™t have a wife from the outset. Therefore, her being a hire for harlotry is prohibited according to the words of the Sages. But Rabbi [Judah the Prince] who stated that it is not the hire of a harlot, he doesnโ€™t hold this reasoning, for certainly even if he lacks a wife and children, his master provides for him a Canaanite maid servant. Alternatively, even if he holds this reasoning, he holds that since a Hebrew slave was permitted from its general rule with a Canaanite maid servant, it is not considered a hire of a harlot. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi [Judah the Prince]."
230
+ ],
231
+ [
232
+ "ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืขืฉืจื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืชืฉืขื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื›ืœื‘ โ€“ corresponding to the ten lambs that his fellow took, the ten lambs that correspond to the nine [lambs] and the dog, all are prohibited [to the Temple] because of the price of a dog. But the nine [lambs] that are with the dog are permitted. But in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 30a) it raises the question, why that which corresponds with the dog, all of them are prohibited? We should remove one for this dog, and these [lambs] all of them should be permitted. And it answers: Here we are dealing with a case where the value of the dog was greater of any one [of the corresponding lambs] and this additional amount is distributed over all [the corresponding lambs] (where not one of the corresponding lambs is of equal value to the dog, some of the additional value of the dog is extended to each of the lambs), and now the value of the dog belongs to all of them. As for example, those [lambs] that are corresponding are each worth one Denar โ€“ which is ten Denarim, and those nine [lambs] that are with him (i.e., the dog) are each worth a Denar minus a Mโ€™ah, which are nine Denarim less nine Mโ€™ot, but the dog is worth a Denar and nine Meot, it is found that those ten [lambs] corresponding to the nine [lambs] and the they have nine, for in each one of them there is Mโ€™ah the price of a dog, and the tenth is entirely the price of a dog.",
233
+ "ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” โ€“ both of them (see Deuteronomy 23:19 โ€“ โ€œfor both/ืฉื ื™ื”ื are abhorrent to the LORD your Godโ€) as it is written in Scripture they divide it as if it is written as โ€œtwo.โ€ โ€œTwoโ€ teaches us specifically the hire for a harlot and the price of a dog, and not four โ€“ the price of a dog and the fee for a harlot, and they are, implying them, but not their offspring."
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ื›ืคื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื โ€“ [he gave the whore pieces of silver] โ€“ to purchase with them an animal for a sacrifice and fine flour for meal-offerings.",
237
+ "ื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ื ื•ืกืœืชื•ืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื โ€“ but wheat [as hire] and she made it into flour; olives and she made it into olive oil, grapes and she made it into wine, these are permitted, for we expound โ€œboth of themโ€/ืฉื ื™ื”ื (Deuteronomy 23:19) but not their products and not their offspring (see Talmud Temurah 30b according to the School of Hillel).",
238
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื โ€“ as for example, he separated a lamb for his Passover offering and after some time, said to the harlot: โ€œHave sexual relations with me and I will transmit my share on my Passover offering with your hiring [of a harlot].โ€ You might think I would say that since a person is permitted to appoint others over his Passover offering, he is appointed, but I would say that to cause upon her [a harlot] for hire, it comes to teach us that this is not the case, since Scripture states (Deuteronomy 23:19): โ€œin fulfillment of any vow,โ€ to exclude that which is already vowed.",
239
+ "ืขื•ืคื•ืช โ€“ of unconsecrated [fowl].",
240
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• โ€“ disqualified for offering as a sacrifice for the hire [of a whore] and the pay [of a dog] fall upon them.",
241
+ "ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ as Scripture states (Leviticus 22:19): โ€œ[it must, to be acceptable in your favor,] be a male without blemish [from cattle] or sheep [or goats],โ€ but there are not pure or male with fowl.",
242
+ "ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ โ€“ all, to include the fowl, for it too comes with a vow, for the fee [of a whore] or the pay [of a dog] occur upon it."
243
+ ],
244
+ [
245
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ such as an female animal that copulated [with a human male] unnaturally when it is unconsecrated and afterwards became pregnant, the offspring are permitted as a sacrifice, for the permitted male [animal] that comes upon this animal, and this female animal is forbidden, both of them caused the offspring that would come and both of them caused it, it is permitted. But if she engaged in unnatural copulation when she was pregnant, the offspring is disqualified for a sacrifice, for she and her offspring engaged in unnatural copulation.",
246
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” โ€“ should not be offered. But for the lay person, everyone says that it is permitted, for it is not from her body that it comes. And there is a dispute in the chapter โ€œWhich are the torn animals?โ€ (Tractate Hullin 58a). There is according to one who states that the torn animal gives birth, and there is according to the one who states that a torn animal does not give birth. According to the one who states that a torn animal gives birth, it is found regarding her as for example, that it became torn, and at the end became pregnant, and in this they dispute, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that both the โ€œparentsโ€ caused this prohibition, but the Rabbis hold that both the โ€œparentsโ€ caused it to be permitted. But according to the one who states that the torn animal does not give birth, we find concerning it, as for example, that she became pregnant, and then at the end became torn, and in this they disagree, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that the fetus is the descendant of the mother, but the Rabbis hold that the fetus is not the descendant of the mother. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer.",
247
+ "ื›ืฉืจื” ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืคืกื•ืœื” โ€“ all that day that she suckled during the time of twenty-four astronomical hours, she is disqualified for being offered as a sacrifice, for since she was able to exist on that milk without other consumption, and does not eat from her belly until he completes the twenty-four astronomical hours. But after that he ate from her belly, Rabbi Hananiah admits that she is fit/kosher, and even an animal that became fattened with idolatrous vetches/horse-bean everyone admits that he is fit for the Altar. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Haninah ben Antigonus (see Talmud Temurah 31a).",
248
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื โ€“ that consecrated animals that had been disqualified that were redeemed, as it is written (Deuteronomy 12:15): โ€œyou may slaughter and eat meat [in any of your settlements],โ€ and we expound, โ€œyou may slaughterโ€ but not shearing; โ€œand eatโ€ but not to your dogs; โ€œmeatโ€ but not milk."
249
+ ]
250
+ ],
251
+ [
252
+ [
253
+ "ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ and specifically animals of the Holy Things of the Altar. But fowl and meal-offerings we donโ€™t make substitutions/exchanges. And the Holy Things consecrated for Temple maintenance, we donโ€™t make substitutions, above at the end of the first chapter [of Tractate Temurah, Mishnah 6], we exclude from Holy Things consecrated for Temple maintenance from Biblical verses and we donโ€™t make/produce substitutions.",
254
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ all of them are written with regard to peace-offerings, and peace-offerings were included within all of the Holy Things, and why were they excluded, to make an analogy with them, to tell you, just as peace-offerings are special Holy Things of the Altar, so too are all Holy Things of the Altar.",
255
+ "ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื•ื—ืœื‘ืŸ ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ (see Tractate Hullin, Chapter 10, Mishnah 2) โ€“ their milk, as it is written (Deuteronomy 12:15): โ€œ[you may slaughter and eat] meat/ื‘ืฉืจ [in any of your settlements,]โ€ but not milk. And their offspring, such as if she became pregnant before their redemption but gave birth after their redemption, for they donโ€™t have a remedy to offer them as a sacrifice, for out of the power of holiness that is superseded/suspended, it comes, to remove them, the matter is not strong enough to have their redemption occur. But if they became pregnant after their redemption, they are like the offspring of a deer and a ram and are permitted. But regarding the Holy Things for Temple maintenance, even if it (i.e., the animal) became pregnant before their redemption, they are permitted, for they were not sanctified other than for their monetary value and their sanctification is not so much.",
256
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžื”ื โ€“ from the Holy Things of the Altar.",
257
+ "ืœืื•ืžื ื™ื (see Tractate Shekalim, Chapter 4, Mishnayot 5-6) โ€“ that build at the Temple.",
258
+ "ื‘ืฉื›ืจืŸ โ€“ that they take salary from the Holy Things for Temple maintenance, for the All-Merciful stated (Exodus 25:8): โ€œAnd let them make Me a sanctuary [that I may dwell among them],โ€ \"ืœื™\"/for Me, from what is Mine, which is from the Holy Things for Temple Maintenance."
259
+ ],
260
+ [
261
+ "ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืœ (apply to anything) โ€“ and even to an impure animal and to stones.",
262
+ "ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื•ืœื™ื”ืŸ (laws of sacrilege apply to that produced by them/what has grown from them)โ€“ see Tractate Meilah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 5) โ€“ an individual who sanctifies an animal for Temple maintenance commits sacrilege through its milk, and if he dedicated a chicken, he commits sacrilege through use of its eggs, which is not the case regarding that which is sanctified to the Temple, for the milk of sanctified things and the eggs of turtle-doves one does not not derive benefit nor does not commit sacrilege.",
263
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ื”ื ืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ but the Holy Things of the Altar they (i.e., the priests) have of them, as the meat is eaten by the Kohanim and there are those of them who benefit from the hide [of the animal, except for the tithe of cattle and the Passover offering]."
264
+ ],
265
+ [
266
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื” โ€“ the Holy Things of the Altar one should not make peace-offerings into burnt-offerings nor burnt-offerings into peace-offerings, and similarly, something sanctified for the maintenance of the hall containing the golden altar should not change them to the maintenance of the altar, and everything in a similar manner.",
267
+ "ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ it refers to things dedicated to the altar.",
268
+ "ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™ (consecration of value to be applied to the repair/maintenance of the Temple) (see Tractate Arakhin, Chapter 8, Mishnah - they sanctify โ€“ in the case of of animals sanctified for the altar โ€“ their estimate value as a sanctified thing โ€“ see Talmud Temurah 32a) โ€“ as for example, if he said regarding a burnt-offering, lo, this is for the maintenance of the Temple, they offer it up on the altar in funds, according to what he has in it and gives it to the Treasurer as it is taught in [Tractate] Arakhin [Chapter 8, Mishnah 7]: โ€œA person declares HEREM/renounces things he has declared holy [whether they are in the status of the Most Holy Things or Lesser Holy Things], if it is a vow, he gives its value; if it is a freewill offering, he gives what it is wroth to him,โ€ meaning to say, if this animal was a vow, as, for example, that he said: โ€œThis will be a burnt-offering upon me,โ€ and he separated this for his vow, since if it died or was stolen, he is liable for its surety (i.e., property which may be resorted to in the event of non-payment), if its found, all of it is his, and he gives all of its monetary value to proerty set apart for the Temple or the priest to the Kohen. And the same law applies also if he designated it to the upkeep of the Temple. If he made a freewill donation, that he said, โ€œthis will be a burnt-offering,โ€ that if it died, he is not liable for its surety, it is found that he had no portion in it other than the benefit of discretion that he is permitted to take a small thing in order that he would give this burnt-offering to the Kohen who is the son of his daughter, and that benefit of discretion he gives to the maintenance of the Temple.hHHh",
269
+ "ื•ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ if he renounced (i.e., put into HEREM) the Holy Things of the Altar, he gives to the Kohen the , he gives to the Kohen the valuation as has been explained (see Tractate Temurah 32a). But the Holy Things for the maintenance of the Temple that he designated whether for the Holy Things of the Altar or those renounced things of the priests, he didnโ€™t do anything, for they are not his, for a person does not sanctify/dedicate something that is not his. This is what Maimonides wrote.",
270
+ "ื•ืื ืžืชื• โ€“ the animals that are the Holy Things of the Altar, even after they suffered a blemish, but still had not been redeemed.",
271
+ "ื™ืงื‘ืจื• โ€“ and he is not able to redeem them and/or to feed them to the dogs. And een the one wo holds that we redeem the Holy Things to feed them to dogs, these words apply when it was torn, for it is possible for it (i.e., the animal) to be placed (before the priest) and evaluated (see Leviticus 27:11-12), but when it died where it is impossible to fulfill with them placing them (before the priest) and his evaluating them, we donโ€™t redeem them.",
272
+ "ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื ืžืชื• ื™ืคื“ื• โ€“ for Rabbi Shimon holds that it doesnโ€™t say โ€œhe placed before the priest and evaluatedโ€ (see Leviticus 27:11-12 โ€“โ€œthe animal shall be presented before the priest, and the priest shall assess itโ€) other than Holy Things of the Altar, but not Holy Things for the maintenance of the Temple. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ these are because of the prohibition of deriving benefit.",
276
+ "ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืฉืœื™ื ืชืงื‘ืจ โ€“ for there is no after-birth/placenta without the offspring.",
277
+ "ื•ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ โ€“ for if the hair of the Nazirite was pure when he shaves on the day of his fulfillment of the days of his Nazirite [vow], it is through burning and not through burial.",
278
+ "ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ because they exchange Holy Things that occurred to them disqualifying defilement or the disqualification of a remnant, and they errored to state regarding them also that they should be buried, but we derive from what is written regarding a sin-offering/purification offering (Leviticus 6:23): โ€œ[But no purification offering may be eaten from which any blood is brought into the Tent of Meeting for expiation in the sanctuary;] any such shall be consumed in fire,โ€ that teaches on all the disqualified things that are in holiness that they are burned, therefore, non-consecrated animals that were slaughtered in the Temple courtyard are also through burning.",
279
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ and even though that wildlife one does not make a decree about for perhaps they erred to bury disqualified Holy Things, for the entire world knows that there is no wildlife among the Holy Things, and they donโ€™t come to be exchanged, even such should be burned. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
280
+ ],
281
+ [
282
+ "ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื— โ€“ Our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Yehuda who stated [Tractate Pesahim 28b/see Tractate Pesahim, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1 where the Sages argue that the Hametz should be thrown to the wind or cast to the sea, and the Halakha is according to the Sages, though interestingly, we burn the Hametz ceremonially on the eve of Passover], remnant [from the Passover sacrifice] is forbidden (see Exodus 12:10: โ€œYou shall not leave any of it over until morning; if any of it is left until morning, you shall burn it.โ€) and Hametz/leaven is prohibited through leaving it over (see Exodus 12:15: โ€œSeven days you shall eat unleavened bread; on the first day you shall remove leaven from your houses, for whoever eats leavened bread from the first day to the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from Israelโ€ and Exodus 12:19: โ€œNo leaven shall be found in your houses for seven days. For whoever eats what is leavened, that person shall be cut off rom the community of Israel.โ€), just as remnant [is destroyed] by burning, so even leaven [is destroyed] by burning. But it is not the Halakha.",
283
+ "ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” โ€“ as it is written (Numbers 18:8): โ€œ[The LORD spoke further to Aaron:] I hereby give you charge of My gifts,โ€ the Biblical verse speaks of two gifts/ืชืจื•ืžืชื™ , one a pure tithe and another an impure tithe, and it is written ืœืš/ โ€œto you,โ€ yours that would be for kindling underneath your meal.",
284
+ "ืขืจืœื” โ€“ it is derived from food crops in a vineyard (Deuteronomy 22:9): ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ[You shall not sow your vineyard with a second kind of seed] else the crop โ€“ from the seed you have sown โ€“ [and the yield of the vineyard may not be used],โ€ is burned with fire.",
285
+ "ืืช ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ โ€“ it is referring to Orlah (i.e., fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted) and fruit crops in a vineyard (see Deuteronomy 22:9 above), foodstuffs of Orlah and fruit crops in a vineyard that are usually burned should be burned; liquids that are not usually burned are buried.",
286
+ "ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” โ€“ because it includes impure heave-offering with leaven on Passover and fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted/Orlah with fruit crops in a vineyard beause they are prohibitions of deriving benefit, for just as one should not error to say that impure heave-offering is prohibited to derive benefit from it, the Tanna/teacher retracted and they kindle [a flame] to benefit from [unclean] bread and oil of unclean heave-offering."
287
+ ],
288
+ [
289
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ โ€“ on condition of eating them outside their [appropriate] time or outside of their [appropriate] place.",
290
+ "ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 6:23): โ€œ[But no purification offering (i.e., sin-offering) may be eaten from which any blood is brought into the Tent of Meeting for expiation in the sanctuary;] any such shall be consumed by fire,โ€ which teaches about all those disqualified things that are in a holy state, that they are burned.",
291
+ "ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ โ€“ if he slaughtered it but prior to the sprinkling of its blood, it became known to hm that he didnโ€™t sin, for now it is an unconsecrated [animal] in the Temple courtyard.",
292
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง โ€“ as, for a example, a woman who had an abortion, it is doubtfully an offspring, and doubtfully a spirit/soul, since the sin-offering for a woman giving birth is from the birds, as it is written (Leviticus 12:6): โ€œ[On the completion of her period of purification, for either a son or a daughter, she shall bring at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, a lamb in its first year for a burnt-offering,] and a pigeon or a turtledove for a purification (i.e., sin-offering) offering,โ€ she brings it on the doubt, for it does not rise up in smoke (i.e., through offering incense), it does not matter to us if he sprinkled the blood on this doubtful [sacrifice, and it is not eaten, for lest it was not an offspring and it was an unconsecrated animal or something that died of itself, for unconsecrated animals are not eaten through the pinching of the neck, and it should burn, for it is like all other disqualified Holy Things.",
293
+ "ื™ื˜ื™ืœื ื” ืœืืžื” โ€“ a canal was passing in the Temple and it goes out to the Kidron valley stream, and we are speaking of a young bird that gradually decays/softens in the continuous flow of water.",
294
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื‘ืจื• โ€“ for perhaps a person would die and find them and eat them.",
295
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ because everything that is buried, its ashes are forbidden. But all of things that are burned such as leaven/Hametz, and tithe and mixed seats, its ashes are permitted for the washing of clothing. And similarly, all of the dedicated things that are burned, also their ashes are permitted, except for the removal of the ashes from the altar, as the All-Merciful wrote (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œ[and he shall take up the ashes to which the fire has reduced the burnt offering on the altar] and place them beside the altar.โ€ And it is taught in a Baraitha: โ€œand he shall place themโ€/ื•ืฉืžื• โ€“ gently, โ€œand he shall place themโ€ โ€“ all of it, โ€œand he shall place themโ€ โ€“ so that it doesnโ€™t scatter.",
296
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda in each of the three segments of our Mishnah."
297
+ ]
298
+ ]
299
+ ],
300
+ "sectionNames": [
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+ "text": [
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+ [
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+ [
9
+ "ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ All persons can cause the seizure of the substitute in holiness together with the original by exchanging a consecrated animal, that seizes the holiness of the exchange of an unconsecrated animal, if he said, โ€œthis is place of that one of something consecrated,โ€ whether by the mouth of men or by the mouth of women, as for example, if woman exchanged/substituted it, it seizes the sanctity of exchange by her mouth. And the word \"ื•ื”ื›ืœ\" /โ€Allโ€ that is taught here includes someone who inherits that if he substituted/exchanged a sacrifice that someone bequeathed to him during his lifetime, his substitution is a substitution.",
10
+ "ืœื ืฉืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืžื™ืจ โ€“ because it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[One may not exchange] or substitute another for it.โ€",
11
+ "ืžื•ืžืจ โ€“ holiness was seized upon it and both of them (i.e., the formerly designated animal that was consecrated and the formerly unconsecrated animal that has just been substituted) are holy.",
12
+ "ื•ืกื•ืคื’ ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื โ€“ he is flogged [for transgressing] the negative commandment (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œor substitute another for it,โ€ and even though it is a negative commandment/prohibition that does not involve an action/ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื”. For we hold that any negative commandment/prohibition that does not involve an action we donโ€™t flog that person except for false conspiring witnesses and [someone who] substitutes an animal for another or someone who curses another (or himself) using the name of God. But if you should say that this is a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment [ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”](unless there is no possibility of fulfilling this positive commandment), as it is written (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œ[If he does make substitution for it,โ€™ then it and its substitute shall both be holy,โ€ but we donโ€™t flog a person or a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment. One can say, that it is different here, as the negative commandment includes more than the positive commandment within it, for everyone who says the word/speaks is whipped, but not every person who says the word does a substitution, for partners and the community do not do substitutions, for since the positive commandment is not equivalent to the negative commandment, it is not called a prohibition that after its violation is transformed into a positive commandment.",
13
+ "ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืืช ืฉืœืŸ โ€“ sacrifices that the Kohen set aside to offer for himself, but if he Kohen substituted for it, it causes the seizure of the substitute/exchange of the animal [to be holy].",
14
+ "ืœื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื‘ืืฉื โ€“ that the Israelite gave him that he sacrifice/offer for him, but if the Kohen substituted another, he doesnโ€™t do that substitution on his own, for he has no portion in it, but rather from the time of the offering of those sacrifices on the altar and onwards, he (i.e., the Kohen) is worthy of the flesh [of the animal], but a person does not cause the seizure of something which is not his (Tractate Temurah 9a).",
15
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ that an Israelite gave him.",
16
+ "ื•ื›ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ for doesnโ€™t all of it belong to the Kohen and while it is alive, we give it to him, and the Israelite cannot gain atonement through it.",
17
+ "ืžื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ because it is clearly obvious to us that he Kohanim do not take possession of them other than from offering up of the portions of the sacrifices offered on the altar and beyond.",
18
+ "ืžื” ืœื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื โ€“ that is to say, it is the law that the Kohanim do not make a substitution with the sin-offering and the guilt-offering, etc.",
19
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• โ€“ there is an analogy between substitution to something consecrated itself.",
20
+ "ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” โ€“ on that which is dedicated to the Temple, in the house of the owners.",
21
+ "ืืฃ ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ does not take effect other than in the house of the owners, but in the home of the Kohen it does not take effect completely, therefore, a Kohen cannot substitute for a firstling. But an Israelites, if he made a substitution for it, it is seized in holiness, for it was in domain that sanctification occurs with the firstling. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Akiva."
22
+ ],
23
+ [
24
+ "ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืขืœ ื”ืฆืืŸ ื•ื›ื•'- as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œif one does substitute one animal one for another, [the thing vowed and its substitute shall both be holy],โ€ but sheep and male and female cattle are all called ื‘ื”ืžื”/animals.",
25
+ "ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข โ€“ [that which is] good of unconsecrated [animals], shall not be substituted for [that which is] bad of holy/sanctified [animals], [as it is written (Leviticus 27:10)]: โ€œif one does substitute [one animal for another],โ€so we see that those animals with a blemish (i.e., unfit for the altar) can serve as substitutes. And on anything with a blemish can effectuate substitution, as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œeither good for bad or bad for good,โ€ that implies that an unconsecrated animal with a blemish with a pure sanctified animal.",
26
+ "ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข โ€“ that is to say, what is something bad that is consecrated that effectuates substitution? All that its sanctification preceded its blemish. But if the blemish preceded its sanctification, that sanctification does not take effect upon it, substitution is not made, for it could have been written [in the Torah \"ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข\" /he will not exchange good for bad or \"ืจืข [ื‘ื•]\"/that has something bad in it, and it would imply [ืื• ืจืข] /[or something bad], he should not exchange not with something good and not with something bad, the final, ื˜ื•ื‘/good that the All-Merciful wrote (Leviticus 27:10), why do I need it? To tell you that it should be good from its outset, that at the time that it is sanctified, it was pure and again a blemish befell it, one can do a substitution; if it was bad from the outset, that a blemish befell it prior to its being sanctified, one doesnโ€™t do a substitution.",
27
+ "ืžืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ โ€“ of an unconsecrated animal with two sanctified [animals], as for example, that he said, โ€œthis one is in place of those.โ€",
28
+ "ื•ืฉื ื™ื โ€“ [and two] unconsecrated [animals for one that is sanctified, as for example, these will be in place of this one.",
29
+ "ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 27:10]: โ€œthe thing [vowed and its substitute shall both be holy].โ€"
30
+ ],
31
+ [
32
+ "ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ limbs of unconsecrated [animals] with consecrated fetuses. For if he said: โ€œmay the foot of this animal be substituted/in exchange for the sanctified fetus that is in the womb of that animal,โ€ the sanctity does not apply upon the limb.",
33
+ "ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ for if he said: โ€œthis fetus that is inside of this unconsecrated animal will be substituted for the foot of this sanctified animal, the fetus is not holy.",
34
+ "ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื โ€“ of unsanctified [animals] with sanctified peace-offerings.",
35
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ [peace-offerings] of unsanctified [animals] [substituted for] fetuses and/or limbs of a holy [animal].",
36
+ "ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื โ€“ he said, โ€œmay the foot of this unconsecrated animal be in substitution/exchange for this holy animal,โ€ the exchange takes effect on the limb and it spreads throughout the animal, it is totally exchanged/substituted and offered.",
37
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ for there is no power/strength in one limb of a holy animal to perform an exchange/substitution.",
38
+ "ื•ื”ืœื ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ at the beginning of the sanctification when he says, โ€œthe foot of this [animal]is a burnt offering.โ€",
39
+ "ื›ื•ืœื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as we derive from Scripture, as it is written (Leviticus 27:9): โ€œany such that may be given to the LORD shall be holy,โ€ when he says, โ€œthat it shall be holy,โ€ to include all of it. But the Halakha is according to the first Tanna/teacher."
40
+ ],
41
+ [
42
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืžื“ืžืข ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ (that which became subject to the law of Terumah through an admixture, can affect a second mixture only in proportion (i.e., according to the quantity of real Terumah/heave-offering contained therein) โ€“ a SEAH of Terumah that fell in less than one-hundred of unconsecrated produce and it became ื“ืžืข/subject to the law of Terumah, and it fell from this mixture to an other place, we require one-hundred from the unconsecrated produce according to what there is of Terumah in this SEAH of this mixture, but we donโ€™t require one-hundred SEAH corresponding to of all of that SEAH of the mixture of [consecrated] Terumah and unconsecrated produce, for it is not considered all Terumah to prohibit the secondary unconsecrated produce.",
43
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื—ื•ืžืฅ ืžื—ืžืฅ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ (that which contains leaven does not impart the status of leaven [to something else] only by due measure) โ€“ unconsecrated started dough that became leavened in leaven of heave-offering, it is entirely forbidden to foreigners (i.e., non-Kohanim). But if there fell from that started dough into another unconsecrated started dough and it became leavened, it does not forbid it other than according to the due measure [in the prescribed proportion] of the leavened heave-offering that it became combined with, and it does not forbid the last [batch] other than if there fell in from the first [batch] such a large measure that there is in the leaven of the Terumah combined in it enough I order to leaven the last [batch] without the combination/mixture of the unconsecrated produce that was combined with heave-offering.",
44
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ โ€“ a Mikveh/ritual bath which has in it twenty-one SEAH of rain water, we fill up on the shoulder nineteen SEAH (i.e., a SEAH is equal to 144 egg bulks) and we conduct the water to the Mikveh though a channel (see Talmud Temurah 12b) and they are ritually pure. Bug even though three LOG (i.e., a LOG is equal to six egg bulks) of drawn water disqualify the Mikveh/ritual bath, the drawing of the water is kosher when it is done when conducting the water through a channel and there was there at first most of the measurement of the Mikveh which is twenty-one SEAH of rain water, and that is according to the due measure, for the drawn waters do not disqualify the Mikveh when they are accomplished by conducting the water through a channel, unless they are twenty SEAH of drawn water, as there isnโ€™t a majority from rain water in the Mikveh. Such appears to be the explanation of this Mishnah, and so I have explained in the Tractate Terumah (Chapter 5, Mishnah 6), in the chapter, โ€œa SEAH of Terumah,โ€ but in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 12b) this is its explanation, according to the measurement of the utensils, for three LOGS of drawn water do not disqualify the Mikveh until they fell from three utensils or less into the Mikveh, but if there fell from four utensil, or more, they do not disqualify, and this is what it means when it says that drawn water does not disqualify the Mikveh other than according to the due measure, for they calculate the utensils from which fell the LOGIM of water into the Mikveh and they count them, if they are three utensils or less, they invalidate the Mikveh. But if from three utensils and higher, they do not disqualify it. And our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Yosi ben Honi, for he holds that they LOGIM that fell from more than three utensils do not disqualify [the Mikveh], but it is not the Halakh."
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืขื ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ โ€“ at the time when one places in it the ashes [of the red heifer] it becomes the purification waters, therefore, we require that there will be first water in a utensil and afterwards the ashes. But if he placed the ashes first and afterwards the water, it is disqualified, for there was no water there at the time of the placing of the ashes that it would become purification water, and furthermore, it does not become purification water. And there is Scripture as it is written (Numbers 19:17): โ€œand fresh water shall be added to them in a vessel,โ€ that implies that the water is placed in the utensil and not to the ashes, but rather, โ€œื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€œ/shall be added to them โ€“ to warn that after he puts in [the ashes] on the water, he should combine them well with his finger and return the water that is underneath it upon it.",
48
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก (an area in which there uncertainty concerning the location of a grave or a corpse does not make [another field into] a grave area) โ€“ a field that was plowed as a grave, if he returned and plowed a grave area and fields that are around it, we donโ€™t presume that are the rest of the fields is like a grave area and to state that the plough drags the bones to the fields that surround it, that one grave is not made into a grave area, but rather, all that entire field that lost the grave and it is not known where it is, with the turn of the fullness of the plough to here and another turn of the fullness of the plough to there in the same manner that it the people of the value are accustomed to plough their fields, if to the east or west or north or south, for perhaps one of its two heads was the grave and from there the bone rolled into one of the fields that is from this side or that, but the Sages estimated that with the turn of the fullness of the plough it is appropriate for the bones to roll by the plough, more not. And how much is the turn of the fullness of the plough? One-hundred cubits.",
49
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืื—ืจ ืชืจื•ืžื” โ€“ partners who separated Terumah one after the other, the first Terumah/heave-offering is not Terumah, for since the second [person] went back and separated Terumah, he releaved his intention that the first Terumah was not satisfactory to him, and it was for him that the first [person] separated Terumah without the knowledge of his fellow [partner], and similarly, the second. But our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Akiva, and it is not the Halakha. But rather, if the first [person] separated Terumah according to the [appropriate] measure which is one from fifty, the heave-offering of the second [person] is not Terumah. But if the first [person] only separated in a selfish/illiberal manner, as for example, that he separated at one out of sixty, the second personโ€™s heave-offering is Terumah.",
50
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ as Scripture (Leviticus 27:33) stated: โ€œthen it and its substitute shall both be holy: [it cannot be redeemed],โ€ and not the heave-offering of his heave-offering.",
51
+ "ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ as Scripture stated (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œthen it,โ€ it and not the offspring.",
52
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” (an offspring [of a consecrated animal] does produce a substitute) โ€“ as Scripture stated (Leviticus 27:33): \"ื•ืชืจื•ืžืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื”-ืงื“ืฉ\" โ€œ[and its substitute] shall [both] be [holy],โ€ to include the offspring. But the Rabbis hold \"ื™ื”ื™ื”\"/โ€shall beโ€ โ€“ to include something done inadvertently as something done willfully, for if he thought [to substitute] black [and he substituted] the white, that regarding Holy Things, he did not sanctity, because it was consecration by error, but regarding substitution, he sanctified it. And the Halakha is according to the Sages. But however, even though substitutions [for a substitute] do not produce a substitute, we hold that we substitute and we go back and substituted with one animal, and even several animals for one sanctified animal, whether at one time or one after the other, all of them are substitutions."
53
+ ],
54
+ [
55
+ "ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€“ but if he exchanged, he should exchange/substitute an animal/ื‘ื”ืžื” for an animal/ื‘ื”ืžื”.",
56
+ "ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for concerning exchange/substitution, it is written (Leviticus 27:9): โ€œ(If [the vow concerns] any animal that may be brought) as an offering [to the LORD],โ€ and the Holy Things for the repair of the Temple house are not called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ .",
57
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืœื ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื” โ€“ Rabbi Shimon holds that the Holy Things for the repair of the Temple are called ืงืจื‘ืŸ/an offering, therefore, we donโ€™t derive it that it produces a substitute other than from here. ",
58
+ "But isnโ€™t the tithe part of this category, in the category of all the Holy Things that produce a substitute/exchange?",
59
+ "ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆื โ€“ as it is written regarding it that it makes a substitution, as it is written regarding a tithe (Leviticus 27:33): โ€œHe must not look out for good as against bad, or make substitution for it.โ€",
60
+ "ืžื” ืžืขืฉืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“ โ€“ and one performs an exchange [with an individual sacrifice], even every sacrifice/offering of an individual one can make a substitution.",
61
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ and those of partners, but the tithe is not have partnership, as we learned in the last chapter of [Tractate] Bekhorot [56b] (it is listed incorrectly in the commentary of Bartenura itself) (Numbers 18:15): โ€œ[The first issue of the womb of every being, man or beast, that is offered to the LORD] shall be yours/ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœืš โ€œ โ€“ but not in partnership.",
62
+ "ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช โ€“ and even though they are called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ โ€“ as it is written (Numbers 31:50): โ€œSo we have brought as an offering to the LORD such articles of gold as each of us came upon,โ€ it is not the offering of the altar like the tithe. But the Sages stated above that the Holy Things for the Repair of the Temple house are not called an offering/ืงืจื‘ืŸ, as they hold, assuming that it they are called the โ€œoffering of the LORD/ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”' โ€œ(see Numbers 31:50), it is not called a sacrifice to God/ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื”' like the rest of the sacrifices of the Altar."
63
+ ]
64
+ ],
65
+ [
66
+ [
67
+ "ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“. ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื โ€“ for most of them are burnt-offerings and the burnt-offering is a male, but they donโ€™t bring peace-offerings other than the sheep for Atzeret/Shemini Atzeret which are males, and their sin offering is also written in all of them (Numbers 29:38): โ€œand one goat for a purification offering [ - in addition to the regular burnt offering, its grain offering and libation],โ€ (though this expression is also found in verses 22, 28, 31 and 34 as well as Numbers 28:22).",
68
+ "ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชืŸ (for offerings of individuals are they liable to be answerable [replacing animals set aside for he individual if said animals are lost]) โ€“ that is to say, there are from those whose time has been fixed, that even after their appropriate time has passed, one is obligated to offer them, such as, for example, the burnt offering of a woman who gave birth and the sacrifices of a leper, if his eighth day passed, he is obligated to offer them after the [appropriate] time. Bu the sacrifices of the community that have a [designated] time, if their time had passed their sacrifice is nullified.",
69
+ "ืžืฉืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื— โ€“ that if the sacrifice was offered in its [designated] time, but did not offer its libations with it, they are obligated to offer them, even from here until ten days. As it is written in the [Torah] portion of Pinhas in all of them (Numbers 29:18,21 24,27, 30, 33 โ€“ in slightly different forms): โ€œthe grain offerings and libations for the bulls, [rams, and lambs, in the quantities prescribed],โ€ to tell you that the grain offerings and libations of community sacrifices were offered even at night, and even on the next day, if they made the offering at its proper time but they didnโ€™t come to offering the meal offerings and drink-offerings/libations, they would offer them when they had the opportunity even after several days.",
70
+ "ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ (see Tractate Zevakhim, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5)โ€“ which supersede the Sabbath and ritual purity, as it is written regarding them (Leviticus 6:13): โ€œ[a tenth of an ephah of choice flour] as a regular grain offering,โ€ it is for you like the meal- offering of the regular offerings that supersede the Sabbath and ritual impurity. But regarding the daily offering, it is written (Numbers 28:2): โ€œ[Be punctilious in presenting to Me] at stated times/ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื• ,โ€ and we state โ€œat stated times,โ€ even on Shabbat, even in ritual impurity, for if most of the Kohanim are ritually impure, we perform it while [they are] impure [from ritual contact with the dead].",
71
+ "ื•ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”\"ื› โ€“ the bullock of the High Priest.",
72
+ "ืืœื ืฉื–ืžื ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข โ€“ meaning to say, that the reason is not dependent upon other than the fixed time, for every sacrifice whose time is fixed, if the time passed [for offering the sacrifice], he has no indemnity/payment, it supersedes the Sabbath and ritual impurity (but not the community sacrifices or those sacrifices whose time was not fixed). And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Meir."
73
+ ],
74
+ [
75
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ that it was lost and he became expiated through another [animal], and afterwards, the first animal was found.",
76
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ that atoned through another [animal].",
77
+ "ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืชื•ืช โ€“ that sin-offerings left to die (i.e., sin-offerings that were disqualified and consequently can no longer be sacrificed on the altar are confined In an enclosure until they die: the offspring of a sin-offering; an animal substituted for a sin-offering; a sin-offering whose owners have died; a sin-offering whose owners have already gained atonement through an other offering; and a sin offering of sheep or goats that is more than a year old), is a usage dating from Moses as delivered from Sinai (i.e., a traditional law or a traditional interpretation of a written law), and the first Tanna/teacher [of our Mishnah] holds, that for an individual sacrifice it was learned [regarding individual sin-offerings that were disqualified] but not that of the community.",
78
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืžื•ืชื• โ€“ that those of the community were also learned/derived.",
79
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื• โ€“ meaning to say, we hold that five sin-offerings are left to die, that their owners have died, or that their owners acquired expiation through another [animal], or that its year has passed (for sheep and/or goats), the offspring of a sin-offering and the substitution of a sin-offering. For just as that three of them are not derived from that of a community [offering], for we do not have a case found with a community, for there is no feminine sin-offering for a community [offering], and the exchange of a sin-offering also, there is no community offering that one does a substitution/exchange, or that if its owners died, there are no community offerings where it the animals are left to die (see Tractate Temurah 15b).",
80
+ "ืืฃ ืฉื›ืคื™ืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” โ€“ even though it is possible that it may be found in a community, we donโ€™t learn/derive that they died.",
81
+ "ื‘ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื โ€“ that the animals are left to die, but not for a community [offering]. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Shimon."
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ the All-Merciful (i.e., God), said: (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[the thing vowed] and its substitute [shall both be holy],โ€ but not the substitute of the substitute.",
85
+ "ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื ืžืžืจื™ื โ€“ for it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[if one does substitute] one animal for another/ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€ (see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 3).",
86
+ "ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข (for a permanent blemish)(see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 2) - that if he substituted an unconsecrated animal with a blemish for an pure sanctified animal, a greater holiness devolves upon it that if he would redeem it, it would go to an unconsecrated state to be sheared and/or labor but rather, according to the laws of Holy Things, that since its sanctification preceded its blemish, that when they redeem them, there is no permission for shearing and working it but rather only a permission of eating, which is not the case with Holy Things, for if their blemish preceded their sanctification, they go out to an unconsecrated state through redemption to be sheared and to labor. But regarding substitution/exchange, Scripture reveals (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[One My not exchange] or substitute another for it, either good for bad, or bad for good,โ€ it did not distinguish between a pure animal and one with a blemish.",
87
+ "ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for if he thought to say, โ€œa black bullock that went out of from my house first will be the exchange in place of that,โ€ and it came out of his lips, โ€œa white bullock,โ€ regarding exchange/substitution, it is sanctified, and he is flogged, for Scripture reveals concerning this (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œ[the thing vowed and its substitute] shall both be holy;โ€ for the altar it is not sanctified and he is not flogged, for an errant sanctification is not sanctified.",
88
+ "ื”ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ (a cross-bred beast) - that comes from a he-goat and a sheep/ewe.",
89
+ "ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™ื (are not made holy) โ€“ through substitution/exchange. But even though that its holiness occurs in its exchange/substitution [of an animal] with a permanent blemish, it does not occur on these (i.e., cross-bred beasts, a torn animal, one born from the side, a beast lacking clear-cut sexual characteristics and one that has both male and female characteristics).",
90
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื (and do not impart [to a substitute] the status of holiness) โ€“ other things through substitution/exchange, if hey are holy. But something torn is found that it is holy, as for example, if he sanctified an animal and afterwards it became torn, and in this, it was necessary to state that even though it is holy, it does not impart the status of substitute. But mixed-bred animals and beasts lacking clear-cut sexual characteristics and one that has both male and female characteristics , from the beginning of their creation, they have been ruined , and you cannot find sanctity in them other than with the offspring of Holy Things, for their mother was sanctified before she was impregnated, for now of their own they are holy, for they are from the womb of their mother, and through them it was necessary to state that they donโ€™t impart the status of substitute. But according to Rabbi Yehuda who stated that in the rest of the offspring, holy things do impart the status of substitute. But they are not similar to a defect, for [an animal] with a defect there is a sacrifice for its kind, but those which are not of its kind have no sacrifice and they are considered like an impure animal that does not impart the status of substitute. But we hold like Rabbi Yossi the son of Rabbi Eliezer and like Rabbi Eleazar, for o one disputes them in this."
91
+ ]
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ [
95
+ "ืืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื โ€“ in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 17b), the objection is raised, since it taught [in the Mishnah], โ€œtheir offspringโ€ (i.e., their offspring and the substituteโ€™s offspring), why do I need, โ€œthe offspring of their offspring to infinity?โ€ Because our teacher/Tanna heard Rabbi Eliezer who said further on [in this Mishnah] that the offspring of peace-offerings are not offered as peace-offerings, because of this, the Tanna taught, โ€œthe offspring of their offspring to infinity,โ€ meaning to say, not only with their offspring do I not agree with you, (since for him, the young has the law of the mother), but even โ€œto infinity,โ€ I do not agree with you (since even then, the young has the law of the mother).",
96
+ "ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ but rather he brings it in to the vaulted chamber (i.e., closing the barn door without food until they died) and it dies [there]. According to the Rabbis, because of a decree, if you had said the offspring of peace-offerings have a remedy, one would come to delay to the mother until she would give birth and raise a herd from the the offspring, and they would come to have shearing and work.",
97
+ "ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ the Sages agree with Rabbi Eliezer that the offspring of offspring of peace-offerings that it should not be offered, for his intention was known from his actions that he needed to raise a herd/flock. But the legal decision is according to the first Tanna/teacher that the offspring of their offspring until eternity, they are like peace-offerings.",
98
+ "ื”ืขื™ื“ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ and not according to Rabbi Eliezer. And this testimony is true and [the] Halakha.",
99
+ "ื•ืื›ืœื ื• ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื’ โ€“ it is stated on the holiday of Shavuot, for if he would wait and look forward to the holiday of Sukkot (which is the normal meaning of the word, ื—ื’ when used without a modifier), it is found that he would violate a positive commandment (Deuteronomy 12:5-6): โ€œthere you are to go, and here you are to bring [your burnt offerings and other sacrifices],โ€ that implies that on the first Festival that you go there, bring all of the votive offerings that are upon you. However, regarding the negative commandment (Deuteronomy 23:22): โ€œ[When you make a vow to the LORD your God,] do not put off fulfilling it, [for the LORD your God will require it of you, and you will have incurrent guilt],โ€ you do not violate until there has passed over you three Festivals."
100
+ ],
101
+ [
102
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืชื•ื“ื” โ€“ their portions of the sacrifices that are offered on thee altar and the flesh is eaten during the day and at night.",
103
+ "ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 7:12): โ€œโ€™he shall offer together with the sacrifice if thanksgiving unleavened cakes with oil mixed in,โ€ (the quoted sentence fragment โ€“ \"ืขืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืชื•ื“ื”\" does not exist in Scripture) the thanksgiving offering itself requires bread, but not its offspring nor its substitutes require bread.",
104
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ as, for example, he substituted a male for a burnt-offering (i.e., instead of a female).",
105
+ "ื•ื•ืœื“ ืชืžื•ืจืชื” โ€“ as, for example, he substituted a female for a burnt-offering, for a female is dedicated in the substitution of a burnt-offering, and it gave birth to the male substitute."
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ "ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ the first segment [of the Mishnah] as it is taught: โ€œlo, these are like a burnt-offering regarding the offspring of a substitute,โ€ because of the first dedication that these came all of them were from his own power that he offers them, for it is a male. But here, when he sets aside a female as a burnt-offering, that all of them come from his own power, it is feminine and it is not offered, therefore, it is not like a burnt-offering, but rather, he should sell it and bring a burnt-offering with its monetary value.",
109
+ "ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืืฉื โ€“ but a guilt-offering does not come from a female [beast].",
110
+ "ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘ โ€“ until a blemish befalls it. And in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 19b) it raises the objection: โ€œBut let it be sold, for since it is not fit for anything, that in itself constitutes a blemish, and it is not sanctified other than for its value, it should be sold immediately and then one can purchase a guilt-offering with its proceeds. And it answers, for since the holiness of its value rests on it, there also rests on it bodily consecration and it is for this thing that it requires a blemish.",
111
+ "ืื ืงืจื‘ ืืฉืžื• โ€“ and furthermore, he does not need a guilt-offering.",
112
+ "ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ for the horn-shaped boxes in the Temple to receive the money for sacrifices which are supplied by the Temple authorities that from them they take to bring to the free-will offerings of the community.",
113
+ "ืชืžื›ืจ ืฉืœื ื‘ืžื•ื โ€“ for since it is not appropriate for a guilt-offering, there is no greater blemish from this, for it was not sanctified for the bodily consecration , and it should be immediately sold and he can bring with its proceeds a guilt-offering. But even though that regarding someone who separates a female beast for a burnt-offering, Rabbi Shimon does not dispute that it requires a blemish, there that there is a burnt-offering with a female beast, for we find a female burnt offering with a bird, but a guilt offering with a female beast, we donโ€™t find. Therefore, this this is its blemish and it is not sanctified other than for its monetary value. But the Halakha is not a according to Rabbi Shimon.",
114
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืืฉื ื•ื›' โ€“ all of them are to pasture, for the Halakha is that all that with a sin-offering is left to die, with a guilt-offering it is to pasture [until it develops a blemish and then it is sold], and the substitute for a sin-offering is left to die.",
115
+ "ื•ืžื•ืชื• โ€“ for Rabbi Eliezer holds that just as sin-offering, so too with a guilt-offering; just as a sin-offeringโ€™s substitute is left to die, also, the substitute of a guilt-offering.",
116
+ "ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ which are permissible for an individualโ€™s donation, we we follow, but not for the donation of a community.",
117
+ "ืืฉื ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืฉื›ื™ืคื•ืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืจ โ€“ that with a sin-offering, it should die, but with a guilt-offering, it should pasture until it is blemished [and then sold]."
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "ื•ื”ืœื ืืฃ ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ [the Mishnah] is explaining what is the difference between them (i.e., the first Tanna/teacher [that the animal should be left out to pasture to develop a blemish, be sold and that its monetary value should be donated to the Temple treasury as a free-will offering] and Rabbi Eleazar [that he should purchase with its proceeds a burnt-offering]).",
121
+ "ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ื—ื•ื‘ื” โ€“ when it is placed upon the individual to over it, he lays his hands upon it, etc. (i.e., he brings drink-offerings/libations on its account, and the libations are from his own funds).",
122
+ "ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ โ€“ he who set aside the guilt-offering and was expiated through another [animal], and the first, an animal dedicated as a guilt-offering, has been condemned to pasture until natural death.",
123
+ "ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” โ€“ of the burnt-offering purchased from the proceeds of that guilt-offering, is his, and he himself offers and takes the hide, and even if it is not from the priestly watch of that week.",
124
+ "ืื™ื ื• ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื” โ€“ for it is the free-will donation of the community which does not have the laying of the hands.",
125
+ "ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” ืœืื ืฉื™ ืžืฉืžืจ โ€“ for it is of the community, and a Kohen from a different priestly watch is not permitted to offer it up, as it is written (Deuteronomy 18:8): โ€œ[They shall receive equal shares of the dues,] without regard to personal gifts or patrimonies,โ€ what the patrimonies sold to each other, you take on your Shabbat, and I will take on my Shabbat. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
126
+ ],
127
+ [
128
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืžืขืฉืจ โ€“ like the sanctity of the firstling and the tithe of the cattle, which are not slaughtered in the booths of a mercantile fair/bazaar.",
129
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ (see Tractate Bekhorot, Chapter 5, Mishnah 1) โ€“ because there is no benefit for something sanctified in the salle, for the proceeds of a firstling go to a Kohen, and the proceeds of a tithe go to the owners, and because of their benefit, we donโ€™t treat them lightly.",
130
+ "ื•ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืฉืจ (see Tractate Bekhorot, Chapter 9, Mishnah 1) โ€“ for they donโ€™t come ab initio from outside the land of Israel, as the reason is explained beyond. But if they came as pure animals, they are sacrificed.",
131
+ "",
132
+ "ืืžืจ ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ื˜ืขื โ€“ that the firstling and the tithe do not come from outside the Land of Israel like the other Holy Things.",
133
+ "ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคืจื ืกื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ โ€“ they have repair in their places that [the animals] will go out to pasture until they become unfit for sacrifices and their owners will consume them with their blemishes.",
134
+ "ื•ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื โ€“ even though a blemish befell them, they are in their sanctity, you need to redeem them and to elevate their monetary value and to offer them up., for since their end is to elevate their monetary value, they should raise them themselves and offer them up. But the legal decision is, that a firstling and a tithe that were pure that came up from outside the Land [of Israel] should not be offered up, as it is written (Deuteronomy 14:23): โ€œYou shall consume the tithes of your new grain and wine and oil, in the presence of the LORD your God,โ€ from the place that you raise up tithes and grain, you raise up the firstling, and from the place that you donโ€™t raise up the tithe of your new grain, you donโ€™t raise up the firstling. And the tithe of cattle is also made an analogy to the tithe of your new grain."
135
+ ]
136
+ ],
137
+ [
138
+ [
139
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” โ€“ it is not appropriate to sacrifice it as a sin-offering, for it is written (Numbers 15:27): โ€œ[In case it is an individual who has sinned unwittingly, he shall offer a she-goat] in its first year as a purification offering (i.e., sin-offering).โ€ However, because of this disqualification alone it does not die, but rather, it should be sent out to pasture until it develops a blemish until there are two causes for suspicion/unfavorable conditions, that one year passed and it was lost, or that it was lost and it was found with a blemish. And this is how the Mishnah is resolved in the Gemara (Tractate Temura 22a), and that which was lost, as it is taught, counts both here, and there. And this is what it means: that its year had passed (i.e., the animal now being older than one-year) and that which was lost and when it was found there was a blemish in it.",
140
+ "ืื ืžืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ if after this (i.e., animal) was found, the owners effected atonement with another.",
141
+ "ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ and even according to the Rabbis who dispute Rabbi [Judah the Prince] further on in our chapter (see the concluding clause of Mishnah 3), who states, that the sin-offering did not die, but rather that it was found after the owners effected atonement, in this they admit, for since there are two causes for unfavorable conditions, that its [first] year had passed and that it was lost, or that it was lost, and it was found to have a blemish. But if it was only lost, since it was found prior to atonement, even though after it was found, the owners had effected atonement with another [animal], it does not die but rather is put out to pasture.",
142
+ "ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ according to the Rabbis.",
143
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ โ€“ if they benefitted from them, they are exempt from the sacrifice of misappropriation (or religious sacrilege), for since neither it nor its monetary value is offered [as a sacrifice], its holiness departs [from it].",
144
+ "ื•ืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ and they did not want to be atoned with another [animal].",
145
+ "ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ โ€“ this refers to and its year had passed (i.e., it was now older than a year), for that where it was lost and it was found with a blemish, it is sold immediately and he purchases another with its monetary value.",
146
+ "ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ for since its monetary value stands to be offered, for something that stands in order that it should sent out to pasture and develop a blemish makes for an exchange/substitution."
147
+ ],
148
+ [
149
+ "ื•ืื—\"ื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืชืžื•ืช โ€“ this sin-offering that its owners were expiated through another.",
150
+ "ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื— โ€“ whenever there would be a sin-offering, there would be a death, money/coins also go to the Dead Sea (literally: the Sea of Salt)."
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ "ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื•ืžืืœื• โ€“ that he should mix them together. For since he brings from both of them, it is not a case of a sin-offering where its owners were expiated with another. But if he brought [only] from one of them, the other is made inoperative, for they have the monetary value of the sin-offering that its owners were expiated with another.",
154
+ "ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื™ืคืœื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื” โ€“ this would be like the rest of those leftovers of sin-offerings that go to free-will donation.",
155
+ "ื•ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื โ€“ but if the sin-offering [that had been originally been lost] was pure, it should be offered and the monies [that would have been used to replace it] should go to the Dead Sea, since the owners were expiated with another. And all of these are according to Rabbi [Judah the Prince] who said, it was lost at the time of it being separated, such as these monies, and they were found prior to atonement, they go to the Dead Sea.",
156
+ "ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืชืžื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื™ ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•' โ€“ everyone agrees that when one is expiated by that which is not lost, that the lost one (i.e., animal that had been set aside) dies. They did not dispute other where he was expiated with a lost [object], for Rabbi [Judah the Prince] holds that a person who set something aside to be lost is like it is lost, meaning to say, one who sets aside [another] in place of the lost sacrifice, its law is like something lost. And just as if it the person was expiated with that which was not lost, the lost [object] that remains, when it is found, its law is that it should die. Similarly, here also , when he was expiated with one of them, and even with those that were lost, those that were not lost should go to the Dead Sea. But the Rabbis state, we did not state that a person sets something aside to become lost is like it is lost. And especially when a person is expiated with something that is not lost and the lost [object] remains, the lost object โ€œdiesโ€ and even though it is found prior to atonement. But if he was expiated with a lost object and there remained [an animal] that was not lost, it does not die, but rather it should be put to pasture until it develops a blemish. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
157
+ ],
158
+ [
159
+ "ืžื•ื›ืจื” ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช โ€“ for when he sold it (i.e., the sin-offering) to another, it is considered as if it doesnโ€™t exist. But all the while that it is under its owner at the time that he is atoning with another [animal], it should die. But Rabbi Eleazar the son of Rabbi Shimon holds, that all the time that it is alive after the owners were expiated with another, whether it is under [the control of its owner] or in the hand of others, it should die. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eleazar the son of Rabbi Shimon."
160
+ ]
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ [
164
+ "ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ โ€“ to cancel the obligation/release it (i.e., the firstling) from the Kohen and to sacrifice it for his own obligation.",
165
+ "ื™ืœื“ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for a firstling is not holy other than in the womb, and since ab initio, it takes effect in another holiness, furthermore, the holiness of its being a firstling no long takes effect with it.",
166
+ "ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ we are not speaking about a female beast, for the female is not holy with the firstling that one needs to make a deception on it. But the sanctified beast, that if it is sin-offering and she became pregnant and one wants to make a deception so that it will not go to die, for the offspring of a sin-offering goes to its death, one can change it it to another sanctity. [And this comes to inform us] that the offspring of Holy Things, while they are born holy and not in the wombs of their mother, for since they had not yet been sanctified with the holiness of their mothers, one is able to engraft upon them another holiness, so that when they are born, they will not be a sin-offering."
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "ื™ืœื“ื” ืฉื ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื โ€“ we are speaking about an unconsecrated animal, if the animal was dedicated, how was something that was sanctified as a burnt-offering let it be a burnt-offering, for the other one refers to the sanctity of its mother. But it is certainly an unconsecrated animal, and therefore, this one whose monetary value was not sanctified is unconsecrated. But however, on both of them, the holiness of a burnt-offering exists. For since he stated that if [he born animal] is a male, it is a burnt-offering, and because he did not vow other than for one, therefore, he should offer the one for his vow, and the second he should sell for the needs of a burnt-offering and its monetary value/worth is unconsecrated.",
170
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ for the offspring become holy because they are holy [at the time of their existence] and not from the belly of their mother, and since that these when they leave [their motherโ€™s womb] are not appropriate for sacrifice, they are not holy. But the Sages dispute Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel as they hold that the offspring are holy and exist through the holiness of their mother [from the womb]. And the Halakha is not according to Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel (see Talmud Temurah 25a)."
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "ื”ืื•ืžืจ โ€“ on the offspring of a pregnant animal.",
174
+ "ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ for the holiness of the offspring takes precedence. But if he said in the first clause [of the Mishnah] that it is a peace-offering, she and that which she has in her is sanctified, and it is like one is sanctifying two animals for peace offerings, for if he retracted and stated that her offspring is a burnt-offering, the offspring is a peace-offspring. But here, it does not belong to state that while they are in the belly of their mother, for when we state that they exist and they are not in the belly of their mother, these words apply when it was sanctified [first] and at the end she became pregnant, for he did not deposit to the fetus any holiness, but rather it is sanctified from the holiness of its mother. But when one sanctifies a pregnant woman, it is considered that the fetus receives the holiness. But Rabbi Meir holds (see Tractate Temurah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 1) that the first language takes hold.",
175
+ "ืื ืœื›ืš ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืœื” โ€“ when he said that she (i.e., the mother) is a peace-offering, he did not intend [to speak] about her offspring.",
176
+ "ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ ืืฉืคืจ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช โ€“ the mouth is unable to say two things at the same time.",
177
+ "ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ that even at the conclusion of his words, the person is made responsible.",
178
+ "ื ืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ even though he retracted in as much time as is needed for an utterance and he stated that her offspring is a burnt-offering, he didnโ€™t say anything, for since that at the time when he dedicated its mother as a peace-offering, he didnโ€™t intend that the offspring would be a burnt-offering. Because we establish that every time as is needed for an utterance is like something spoken, except from one who dedicates and commands and blasphemes and worships idolatry and betroths and divorces, for these six [things] no retraction has any effect in them, even though he retracted in as much time as is needed for an utterance. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
179
+ ],
180
+ [
181
+ "ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ we have the reading, but we donโ€™t have the reading, โ€œand the substitute of peace offerings.โ€",
182
+ "ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ for the first language takes hold.",
183
+ "ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ and half of it is the substitute for a burnt-offering and half of it is the substitute of a peace-offering. And that which he didnโ€™t state, the substitute for a burnt-offering and peace offering, ut he stated a substitute for both of them, because he (i.e., Rabbi Yossi) holds that if I stated the substitute of a burnt-offering and a peace-offering, it will be holy and not offered, according to the law that a person who states that half of it will be a burnt-offering and half of it a piece offering, that it is holy and not offered. And he erred in this and held that a lamb can be a substitute on each one of them just as it should be completely sanctified to be offered up, therefore, even though he stated it in this language, he intended it for both, but it should sent out to pasture until it develops a blemish and it should be sold and then he can bring with its monetary value half for a burnt-offering and with the monetary value of the [other] half a peace-offering, and in this we are dealing, as for example, that there were before him a burnt-offering and a peace-offering, when he substituted this for them. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yossi."
184
+ ],
185
+ [
186
+ "ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ื—ืœื™ืคื™ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื–ื• โ€“ all of them are the language of substitution/exchange.",
187
+ "ืžื—ื•ืœืœืช โ€“ it is the language of desecration/defamation. And he didnโ€™t say anything, for a sacred pure animal goes out to unconsecrated purposes.",
188
+ "ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ even though it is not worth like that of a consecrated animal with a blemish, according to the Torah, even something sanctified that is worth one-hundred Maneh that was redeemed for the equivalent of a penny, it is redeemed. And even though it went out to an unconsecrated purpose from the Torah, one must, according to the Rabbis make money, meaning to say, to pay the money so that the sanctified thing will not become overcharged, but from the Torah, there is no overreaching for that which is sanctified, as it is written (Leviticus 25:14): โ€œyou shall not wrong one another,โ€ your brother/another person, but not that which is sanctified."
189
+ ],
190
+ [
191
+ "ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืชื—ืช ืขื•ืœื” โ€“ he stated anonymously but did not state in place of this sin-offering or this burnt-offering.",
192
+ "ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 27:10): โ€œOne may not exchange or substitute another for it,โ€ until the sanctified thing is known and special when one substitutes for it.",
193
+ "ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื• โ€“ and that sin-offering was standing before him.",
194
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื” โ€“ which implies for the monetary value of the burnt-offering, for if they themselves want to offer it, he would say, โ€œlo, these are a burnt-offering.โ€"
195
+ ]
196
+ ],
197
+ [
198
+ [
199
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— (all [animals] which are prohibited for the altar โ€“ that they are invalid for offering as a sacrifice. And you consider them and further.",
200
+ "ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ (prohibit in any number at all [animals among which they are confused]) โ€“ and even if they were combined one in one-thousand, all of them are forbidden to the altar, if it was not known. And all of them are found that they are not known, except for the torn animal which is not found and is not known other that, as for example, the lion or the wolf attacked that are mixed with the vital organ perforated by a thorn.",
201
+ "ื”ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื”ื ืจื‘ืข ื•ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“ โ€“ they are ineligible for the altar. As it states in Scripture (Leviticus 22:25): โ€œfor they are mutilated, they have a defect,โ€ and it is taught in a Baraitha, every place where it states, โ€œthey are mutilated,โ€ is none other than unchastity and idolatry. Unchastity, as it is written (Genesis 6:12): โ€œfor all flesh had corrupted its ways on earth.โ€ Idolatry, as it is written (Deuteronomy 4:16): โ€œnot to act wickedly and make for yourselves a sculptured image [in any likeness whatever: the form of a man or a woman].โ€ The one (i.e., animal) that has sexual relations with a human being and the one (i.e., animal) with whom a human being has sexual relations that is taught in our Mishnah, as for example that he had sex or has sexual relations with an animal with one witness or by the owners, and is not stoned in this, but they are disqualified from being a sacrifice.",
202
+ "ืžื•ืงืฆื” โ€“ an animal that was set aside for idolatry. And it is not disqualified for being offed up until they should do with it an act for the purposes of idolatry, as for example, that the [non-Jewish] priests served it if it was a bull or sheared it if it was a sheep.",
203
+ "ื•ื ืขื‘ื“ โ€“ it is not prohibited to derive benefit even though he worshipped it, for living creatures are not prohibited to derive benefit when we serve them, but they are disqualified to the altar.",
204
+ "ื•ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ (and the harlotโ€™s hire and the price of a dog) โ€“ Scripture specifically disqualifies them (Deuteronomy 23:19): โ€œYou shall not bring the fee of a whore or the pay of a dog [into the house of the LORD your God in fulfillment of any vow, for both are abhorrent to the LORD your God].โ€",
205
+ "ื•ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ a he-goat that comes upon a ewe.",
206
+ "ื•ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” โ€“ as it is written regarding tithes (Leviticus 27:32): โ€œ[All tithes of the herd or the flock] โ€“ of all that passes under the shepherdโ€™s staff,โ€ excluding the torn animal that does not pass [under the shepherdโ€™s staff] and the sacrifice of the altar is derived from the tithe of cattle.",
207
+ "ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ โ€“ that its mother was torn and they removed the fetus through the caesarian section, and we exclude it from Scripture as it is written (Leviticus 22:27): โ€œ[When an ox or a sheep or a goat] is bornโ€, excluding through caesarian section.",
208
+ "ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ โ€“ for the altar.",
209
+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจ โ€“ for that is not worshipped.",
210
+ "ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืืกื•ืจ โ€“ it is prohibited for the altar, but is permitted even for eating, as it will be mentioned nearby. But what is upon it, the jewelry that is upon it are prohibited from deriving benefit for they were worshipped and they have on them the grasp of a human hand."
211
+ ],
212
+ [
213
+ "ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื” โ€“ whether she is a heathen woman or an Israelite woman, and it shall be one of those liable for violating a negative commandment and one doesnโ€™t have to say from one who is liable for extirpation and death by the Jewish court. But the hire of a harlot of a free woman, and she is an Israelite, is not disqualified for the Altar, for this is not the hire of a harlot, for she is not forbidden from marrying into the priesthood with this sexual act. And similarly, the hire [of a harlot] that was given as wife to a man is not disqualified, but a male hire, is disqualified.",
214
+ "ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื โ€“ he made a condition with her to give her one lamb as her hire and sent her even one-hundred, we donโ€™t say that one that I will give with her will be a hire [for harlot] and these others are all a gift, but all of them are considered hire for harlot and prohibited [as an offering].",
215
+ "ื•ืชืœื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ืชืš ืืฆืœ ืขื‘ื“ื™ โ€“ we are speaking of my Hebrew slave who does not have a wife and children, for his master does not have permission to provides to him a Canaanite maid servant to beget from her slaves because he didnโ€™t have a wife from the outset. Therefore, her being a hire for harlotry is prohibited according to the words of the Sages. But Rabbi [Judah the Prince] who stated that it is not the hire of a harlot, he doesnโ€™t hold this reasoning, for certainly even if he lacks a wife and children, his master provides for him a Canaanite maid servant. Alternatively, even if he holds this reasoning, he holds that since a Hebrew slave was permitted from its general rule with a Canaanite maid servant, it is not considered a hire of a harlot. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi [Judah the Prince]."
216
+ ],
217
+ [
218
+ "ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืขืฉืจื” ื•ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืชืฉืขื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื›ืœื‘ โ€“ corresponding to the ten lambs that his fellow took, the ten lambs that correspond to the nine [lambs] and the dog, all are prohibited [to the Temple] because of the price of a dog. But the nine [lambs] that are with the dog are permitted. But in the Gemara (Tractate Temurah 30a) it raises the question, why that which corresponds with the dog, all of them are prohibited? We should remove one for this dog, and these [lambs] all of them should be permitted. And it answers: Here we are dealing with a case where the value of the dog was greater of any one [of the corresponding lambs] and this additional amount is distributed over all [the corresponding lambs] (where not one of the corresponding lambs is of equal value to the dog, some of the additional value of the dog is extended to each of the lambs), and now the value of the dog belongs to all of them. As for example, those [lambs] that are corresponding are each worth one Denar โ€“ which is ten Denarim, and those nine [lambs] that are with him (i.e., the dog) are each worth a Denar minus a Mโ€™ah, which are nine Denarim less nine Mโ€™ot, but the dog is worth a Denar and nine Meot, it is found that those ten [lambs] corresponding to the nine [lambs] and the they have nine, for in each one of them there is Mโ€™ah the price of a dog, and the tenth is entirely the price of a dog.",
219
+ "ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” โ€“ both of them (see Deuteronomy 23:19 โ€“ โ€œfor both/ืฉื ื™ื”ื are abhorrent to the LORD your Godโ€) as it is written in Scripture they divide it as if it is written as โ€œtwo.โ€ โ€œTwoโ€ teaches us specifically the hire for a harlot and the price of a dog, and not four โ€“ the price of a dog and the fee for a harlot, and they are, implying them, but not their offspring."
220
+ ],
221
+ [
222
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ื›ืคื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื โ€“ [he gave the whore pieces of silver] โ€“ to purchase with them an animal for a sacrifice and fine flour for meal-offerings.",
223
+ "ื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ื ื•ืกืœืชื•ืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื โ€“ but wheat [as hire] and she made it into flour; olives and she made it into olive oil, grapes and she made it into wine, these are permitted, for we expound โ€œboth of themโ€/ืฉื ื™ื”ื (Deuteronomy 23:19) but not their products and not their offspring (see Talmud Temurah 30b according to the School of Hillel).",
224
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื โ€“ as for example, he separated a lamb for his Passover offering and after some time, said to the harlot: โ€œHave sexual relations with me and I will transmit my share on my Passover offering with your hiring [of a harlot].โ€ You might think I would say that since a person is permitted to appoint others over his Passover offering, he is appointed, but I would say that to cause upon her [a harlot] for hire, it comes to teach us that this is not the case, since Scripture states (Deuteronomy 23:19): โ€œin fulfillment of any vow,โ€ to exclude that which is already vowed.",
225
+ "ืขื•ืคื•ืช โ€“ of unconsecrated [fowl].",
226
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• โ€“ disqualified for offering as a sacrifice for the hire [of a whore] and the pay [of a dog] fall upon them.",
227
+ "ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ โ€“ as Scripture states (Leviticus 22:19): โ€œ[it must, to be acceptable in your favor,] be a male without blemish [from cattle] or sheep [or goats],โ€ but there are not pure or male with fowl.",
228
+ "ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ โ€“ all, to include the fowl, for it too comes with a vow, for the fee [of a whore] or the pay [of a dog] occur upon it."
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— โ€“ such as an female animal that copulated [with a human male] unnaturally when it is unconsecrated and afterwards became pregnant, the offspring are permitted as a sacrifice, for the permitted male [animal] that comes upon this animal, and this female animal is forbidden, both of them caused the offspring that would come and both of them caused it, it is permitted. But if she engaged in unnatural copulation when she was pregnant, the offspring is disqualified for a sacrifice, for she and her offspring engaged in unnatural copulation.",
232
+ "ื•ืœื“ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” โ€“ should not be offered. But for the lay person, everyone says that it is permitted, for it is not from her body that it comes. And there is a dispute in the chapter โ€œWhich are the torn animals?โ€ (Tractate Hullin 58a). There is according to one who states that the torn animal gives birth, and there is according to the one who states that a torn animal does not give birth. According to the one who states that a torn animal gives birth, it is found regarding her as for example, that it became torn, and at the end became pregnant, and in this they dispute, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that both the โ€œparentsโ€ caused this prohibition, but the Rabbis hold that both the โ€œparentsโ€ caused it to be permitted. But according to the one who states that the torn animal does not give birth, we find concerning it, as for example, that she became pregnant, and then at the end became torn, and in this they disagree, for Rabbi Eliezer holds that the fetus is the descendant of the mother, but the Rabbis hold that the fetus is not the descendant of the mother. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Eliezer.",
233
+ "ื›ืฉืจื” ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืคืกื•ืœื” โ€“ all that day that she suckled during the time of twenty-four astronomical hours, she is disqualified for being offered as a sacrifice, for since she was able to exist on that milk without other consumption, and does not eat from her belly until he completes the twenty-four astronomical hours. But after that he ate from her belly, Rabbi Hananiah admits that she is fit/kosher, and even an animal that became fattened with idolatrous vetches/horse-bean everyone admits that he is fit for the Altar. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Haninah ben Antigonus (see Talmud Temurah 31a).",
234
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื โ€“ that consecrated animals that had been disqualified that were redeemed, as it is written (Deuteronomy 12:15): โ€œyou may slaughter and eat meat [in any of your settlements],โ€ and we expound, โ€œyou may slaughterโ€ but not shearing; โ€œand eatโ€ but not to your dogs; โ€œmeatโ€ but not milk."
235
+ ]
236
+ ],
237
+ [
238
+ [
239
+ "ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื” โ€“ and specifically animals of the Holy Things of the Altar. But fowl and meal-offerings we donโ€™t make substitutions/exchanges. And the Holy Things consecrated for Temple maintenance, we donโ€™t make substitutions, above at the end of the first chapter [of Tractate Temurah, Mishnah 6], we exclude from Holy Things consecrated for Temple maintenance from Biblical verses and we donโ€™t make/produce substitutions.",
240
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื โ€“ all of them are written with regard to peace-offerings, and peace-offerings were included within all of the Holy Things, and why were they excluded, to make an analogy with them, to tell you, just as peace-offerings are special Holy Things of the Altar, so too are all Holy Things of the Altar.",
241
+ "ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื•ื—ืœื‘ืŸ ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ (see Tractate Hullin, Chapter 10, Mishnah 2) โ€“ their milk, as it is written (Deuteronomy 12:15): โ€œ[you may slaughter and eat] meat/ื‘ืฉืจ [in any of your settlements,]โ€ but not milk. And their offspring, such as if she became pregnant before their redemption but gave birth after their redemption, for they donโ€™t have a remedy to offer them as a sacrifice, for out of the power of holiness that is superseded/suspended, it comes, to remove them, the matter is not strong enough to have their redemption occur. But if they became pregnant after their redemption, they are like the offspring of a deer and a ram and are permitted. But regarding the Holy Things for Temple maintenance, even if it (i.e., the animal) became pregnant before their redemption, they are permitted, for they were not sanctified other than for their monetary value and their sanctification is not so much.",
242
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžื”ื โ€“ from the Holy Things of the Altar.",
243
+ "ืœืื•ืžื ื™ื (see Tractate Shekalim, Chapter 4, Mishnayot 5-6) โ€“ that build at the Temple.",
244
+ "ื‘ืฉื›ืจืŸ โ€“ that they take salary from the Holy Things for Temple maintenance, for the All-Merciful stated (Exodus 25:8): โ€œAnd let them make Me a sanctuary [that I may dwell among them],โ€ \"ืœื™\"/for Me, from what is Mine, which is from the Holy Things for Temple Maintenance."
245
+ ],
246
+ [
247
+ "ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืœ (apply to anything) โ€“ and even to an impure animal and to stones.",
248
+ "ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื•ืœื™ื”ืŸ (laws of sacrilege apply to that produced by them/what has grown from them)โ€“ see Tractate Meilah, Chapter 3, Mishnah 5) โ€“ an individual who sanctifies an animal for Temple maintenance commits sacrilege through its milk, and if he dedicated a chicken, he commits sacrilege through use of its eggs, which is not the case regarding that which is sanctified to the Temple, for the milk of sanctified things and the eggs of turtle-doves one does not not derive benefit nor does not commit sacrilege.",
249
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ื”ื ืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื โ€“ but the Holy Things of the Altar they (i.e., the priests) have of them, as the meat is eaten by the Kohanim and there are those of them who benefit from the hide [of the animal, except for the tithe of cattle and the Passover offering]."
250
+ ],
251
+ [
252
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื” โ€“ the Holy Things of the Altar one should not make peace-offerings into burnt-offerings nor burnt-offerings into peace-offerings, and similarly, something sanctified for the maintenance of the hall containing the golden altar should not change them to the maintenance of the altar, and everything in a similar manner.",
253
+ "ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ it refers to things dedicated to the altar.",
254
+ "ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™ (consecration of value to be applied to the repair/maintenance of the Temple) (see Tractate Arakhin, Chapter 8, Mishnah - they sanctify โ€“ in the case of of animals sanctified for the altar โ€“ their estimate value as a sanctified thing โ€“ see Talmud Temurah 32a) โ€“ as for example, if he said regarding a burnt-offering, lo, this is for the maintenance of the Temple, they offer it up on the altar in funds, according to what he has in it and gives it to the Treasurer as it is taught in [Tractate] Arakhin [Chapter 8, Mishnah 7]: โ€œA person declares HEREM/renounces things he has declared holy [whether they are in the status of the Most Holy Things or Lesser Holy Things], if it is a vow, he gives its value; if it is a freewill offering, he gives what it is wroth to him,โ€ meaning to say, if this animal was a vow, as, for example, that he said: โ€œThis will be a burnt-offering upon me,โ€ and he separated this for his vow, since if it died or was stolen, he is liable for its surety (i.e., property which may be resorted to in the event of non-payment), if its found, all of it is his, and he gives all of its monetary value to proerty set apart for the Temple or the priest to the Kohen. And the same law applies also if he designated it to the upkeep of the Temple. If he made a freewill donation, that he said, โ€œthis will be a burnt-offering,โ€ that if it died, he is not liable for its surety, it is found that he had no portion in it other than the benefit of discretion that he is permitted to take a small thing in order that he would give this burnt-offering to the Kohen who is the son of his daughter, and that benefit of discretion he gives to the maintenance of the Temple.hHHh",
255
+ "ื•ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ โ€“ if he renounced (i.e., put into HEREM) the Holy Things of the Altar, he gives to the Kohen the , he gives to the Kohen the valuation as has been explained (see Tractate Temurah 32a). But the Holy Things for the maintenance of the Temple that he designated whether for the Holy Things of the Altar or those renounced things of the priests, he didnโ€™t do anything, for they are not his, for a person does not sanctify/dedicate something that is not his. This is what Maimonides wrote.",
256
+ "ื•ืื ืžืชื• โ€“ the animals that are the Holy Things of the Altar, even after they suffered a blemish, but still had not been redeemed.",
257
+ "ื™ืงื‘ืจื• โ€“ and he is not able to redeem them and/or to feed them to the dogs. And een the one wo holds that we redeem the Holy Things to feed them to dogs, these words apply when it was torn, for it is possible for it (i.e., the animal) to be placed (before the priest) and evaluated (see Leviticus 27:11-12), but when it died where it is impossible to fulfill with them placing them (before the priest) and his evaluating them, we donโ€™t redeem them.",
258
+ "ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื ืžืชื• ื™ืคื“ื• โ€“ for Rabbi Shimon holds that it doesnโ€™t say โ€œhe placed before the priest and evaluatedโ€ (see Leviticus 27:11-12 โ€“โ€œthe animal shall be presented before the priest, and the priest shall assess itโ€) other than Holy Things of the Altar, but not Holy Things for the maintenance of the Temple. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
259
+ ],
260
+ [
261
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ these are because of the prohibition of deriving benefit.",
262
+ "ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืฉืœื™ื ืชืงื‘ืจ โ€“ for there is no after-birth/placenta without the offspring.",
263
+ "ื•ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ โ€“ for if the hair of the Nazirite was pure when he shaves on the day of his fulfillment of the days of his Nazirite [vow], it is through burning and not through burial.",
264
+ "ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ because they exchange Holy Things that occurred to them disqualifying defilement or the disqualification of a remnant, and they errored to state regarding them also that they should be buried, but we derive from what is written regarding a sin-offering/purification offering (Leviticus 6:23): โ€œ[But no purification offering may be eaten from which any blood is brought into the Tent of Meeting for expiation in the sanctuary;] any such shall be consumed in fire,โ€ that teaches on all the disqualified things that are in holiness that they are burned, therefore, non-consecrated animals that were slaughtered in the Temple courtyard are also through burning.",
265
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื” โ€“ and even though that wildlife one does not make a decree about for perhaps they erred to bury disqualified Holy Things, for the entire world knows that there is no wildlife among the Holy Things, and they donโ€™t come to be exchanged, even such should be burned. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
266
+ ],
267
+ [
268
+ "ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื— โ€“ Our Mishnah is according to Rabbi Yehuda who stated [Tractate Pesahim 28b/see Tractate Pesahim, Chapter 2, Mishnah 1 where the Sages argue that the Hametz should be thrown to the wind or cast to the sea, and the Halakha is according to the Sages, though interestingly, we burn the Hametz ceremonially on the eve of Passover], remnant [from the Passover sacrifice] is forbidden (see Exodus 12:10: โ€œYou shall not leave any of it over until morning; if any of it is left until morning, you shall burn it.โ€) and Hametz/leaven is prohibited through leaving it over (see Exodus 12:15: โ€œSeven days you shall eat unleavened bread; on the first day you shall remove leaven from your houses, for whoever eats leavened bread from the first day to the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from Israelโ€ and Exodus 12:19: โ€œNo leaven shall be found in your houses for seven days. For whoever eats what is leavened, that person shall be cut off rom the community of Israel.โ€), just as remnant [is destroyed] by burning, so even leaven [is destroyed] by burning. But it is not the Halakha.",
269
+ "ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” โ€“ as it is written (Numbers 18:8): โ€œ[The LORD spoke further to Aaron:] I hereby give you charge of My gifts,โ€ the Biblical verse speaks of two gifts/ืชืจื•ืžืชื™ , one a pure tithe and another an impure tithe, and it is written ืœืš/ โ€œto you,โ€ yours that would be for kindling underneath your meal.",
270
+ "ืขืจืœื” โ€“ it is derived from food crops in a vineyard (Deuteronomy 22:9): โ€œ[You shall not sow your vineyard with a second kind of seed] else the crop โ€“ from the seed you have sown โ€“ [and the yield of the vineyard may not be used],โ€ is burned with fire.",
271
+ "ืืช ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ โ€“ it is referring to Orlah (i.e., fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted) and fruit crops in a vineyard (see Deuteronomy 22:9 above), foodstuffs of Orlah and fruit crops in a vineyard that are usually burned should be burned; liquids that are not usually burned are buried.",
272
+ "ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” โ€“ because it includes impure heave-offering with leaven on Passover and fruit that grows during the first three years after a tree was planted/Orlah with fruit crops in a vineyard beause they are prohibitions of deriving benefit, for just as one should not error to say that impure heave-offering is prohibited to derive benefit from it, the Tanna/teacher retracted and they kindle [a flame] to benefit from [unclean] bread and oil of unclean heave-offering."
273
+ ],
274
+ [
275
+ "ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ โ€“ on condition of eating them outside their [appropriate] time or outside of their [appropriate] place.",
276
+ "ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ as it is written (Leviticus 6:23): โ€œ[But no purification offering (i.e., sin-offering) may be eaten from which any blood is brought into the Tent of Meeting for expiation in the sanctuary;] any such shall be consumed by fire,โ€ which teaches about all those disqualified things that are in a holy state, that they are burned.",
277
+ "ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™ โ€“ if he slaughtered it but prior to the sprinkling of its blood, it became known to hm that he didnโ€™t sin, for now it is an unconsecrated [animal] in the Temple courtyard.",
278
+ "ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง โ€“ as, for a example, a woman who had an abortion, it is doubtfully an offspring, and doubtfully a spirit/soul, since the sin-offering for a woman giving birth is from the birds, as it is written (Leviticus 12:6): โ€œ[On the completion of her period of purification, for either a son or a daughter, she shall bring at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, a lamb in its first year for a burnt-offering,] and a pigeon or a turtledove for a purification (i.e., sin-offering) offering,โ€ she brings it on the doubt, for it does not rise up in smoke (i.e., through offering incense), it does not matter to us if he sprinkled the blood on this doubtful [sacrifice, and it is not eaten, for lest it was not an offspring and it was an unconsecrated animal or something that died of itself, for unconsecrated animals are not eaten through the pinching of the neck, and it should burn, for it is like all other disqualified Holy Things.",
279
+ "ื™ื˜ื™ืœื ื” ืœืืžื” โ€“ a canal was passing in the Temple and it goes out to the Kidron valley stream, and we are speaking of a young bird that gradually decays/softens in the continuous flow of water.",
280
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื‘ืจื• โ€“ for perhaps a person would die and find them and eat them.",
281
+ "ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืฉืจืคื• โ€“ because everything that is buried, its ashes are forbidden. But all of things that are burned such as leaven/Hametz, and tithe and mixed seats, its ashes are permitted for the washing of clothing. And similarly, all of the dedicated things that are burned, also their ashes are permitted, except for the removal of the ashes from the altar, as the All-Merciful wrote (Leviticus 6:3): โ€œ[and he shall take up the ashes to which the fire has reduced the burnt offering on the altar] and place them beside the altar.โ€ And it is taught in a Baraitha: โ€œand he shall place themโ€/ื•ืฉืžื• โ€“ gently, โ€œand he shall place themโ€ โ€“ all of it, โ€œand he shall place themโ€ โ€“ so that it doesnโ€™t scatter.",
282
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda in each of the three segments of our Mishnah."
283
+ ]
284
+ ]
285
+ ],
286
+ "versions": [
287
+ [
288
+ "Sefaria Community Translation",
289
+ "https://www.sefaria.org"
290
+ ],
291
+ [
292
+ "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
293
+ "sefaria.org"
294
+ ]
295
+ ],
296
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื•ืจื”",
297
+ "categories": [
298
+ "Mishnah",
299
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
300
+ "Bartenura",
301
+ "Seder Kodashim"
302
+ ],
303
+ "sectionNames": [
304
+ "Chapter",
305
+ "Mishnah",
306
+ "Comment"
307
+ ]
308
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Temurah/Hebrew/On Your Way.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,309 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "language": "he",
3
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Temurah",
4
+ "versionSource": "http://mobile.tora.ws/",
5
+ "versionTitle": "On Your Way",
6
+ "status": "locked",
7
+ "priority": 1.0,
8
+ "license": "Public Domain",
9
+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื•ื‘ืœื›ืชืš ื‘ื“ืจืš",
10
+ "actualLanguage": "he",
11
+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
12
+ "isBaseText": true,
13
+ "isSource": true,
14
+ "isPrimary": true,
15
+ "direction": "rtl",
16
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื•ืจื”",
17
+ "categories": [
18
+ "Mishnah",
19
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
20
+ "Bartenura",
21
+ "Seder Kodashim"
22
+ ],
23
+ "text": [
24
+ [
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืžืชืคื™ืกื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืฉืชื•ืคืกืช ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืื ืืžืจ ื–ื• ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืื ืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื ืฉื™ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืžื™ืจื” ืืฉื” ืชื•ืคืกืช ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ืคื™ื”. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ื”ื›ื, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื™ื•ืจืฉ ืฉืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžื•ืจื™ืฉื• ื‘ื—ื™ื™ื•, ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ืชืžื•ืจื”: ",
27
+ "<b>ืœื ืฉืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืžื™ืจ</b> ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ:",
28
+ "<b>ืžื•ืžืจ.</b> ื ืชืคืกืช ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื•ืช:",
29
+ "<b>ื•ืกื•ืคื’ ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ืœื•ืงื” ืขืœ ืœืื• ื“ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ, ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื•ื. ื“ืงื™ื™ืดืœ ื›ืœ ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื” ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืžื™ืžืจ ื•ืžืงืœืœ ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื‘ืฉื: ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”. ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ืฉืื ื™ ื”ื›ื ืฉื”ืœืื• ื›ื•ืœืœ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืขืฉื” ืฉื‘ื•, ืฉื›ืœ ืžื™ืžืจ ืœื•ืงื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื™ืžืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ื•ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื” ืœืœืื• ืœื ืžืงืจื™ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”:",
30
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืืช ืฉืœื”ืŸ.</b> ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœืขืฆืžื•, ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืชืคื™ืก ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
31
+ "<b>ืœื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื‘ืืฉื.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื•, ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื•, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื—ืœืง ื‘ื•, ืืœื ืžืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื–ื•ื›ื” ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืชืคื™ืก ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•:",
32
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
33
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืœื ื›ื•ืœื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื—ื™ื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ื•:",
34
+ "<b>ืžื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืคืฉื™ื˜ื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื–ื•ื›ื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืžื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš:",
35
+ "<b>ืžื” ืœื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื›ื•ืณ:",
36
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื•.</b> ืžืงื™ืฉ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขืฆืžื•:",
37
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื”.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
38
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ืœื ืชื—ื•ืœ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื•, ื ืชืคืก ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ืจืฉื•ืชื• ื—ืœื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:"
39
+ ],
40
+ [
41
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืขืœ ื”ืฆืืŸ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื•ืฆืืŸ ื•ื‘ืงืจ ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืงืจื•:",
42
+ "<b>ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข.</b> ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืจืข ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืื ื”ืžืจ ื™ืžื™ืจ ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ืืœืžื ื‘ืขืœื™ ืžื•ืžื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืื• ืจืข ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืชื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
43
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืจืข ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื“ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื›ืœ ืฉืงื“ื ื”ืงื“ืฉื• ืืช ืžื•ืžื•. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ื ืžื•ืžื• ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื• ื“ืœื ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืžื“ื”ื•ื” ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข ืื• ืจืข [ื‘ื•], ื•ื”ื•ื” ืžืฉืžืข [ืื• ืจืข] ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืœื ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ืœื ื‘ืจืข, ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื ื“ื›ืชื‘ ืจื—ืžื ื ืœืžื” ืœื™, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื˜ื•ื‘ ืžืขื™ืงืจื•, ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืชื ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ื ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื, ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืจืข ืžืขื™ืงืจื•, ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ, ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
44
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชื—ืช ืืœื•:",
45
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ื“ ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืชื—ืช ื–ื•:",
46
+ "<b>ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
47
+ ],
48
+ [
49
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืจื™ื ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ. ืฉืื ืืžืจ ืชื”ื ืจื’ืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ืžืขื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื•, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ืจ:",
50
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื–ื•, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ: ",
51
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ: ",
52
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื</b> ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
53
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื.</b> ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืจื’ืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื–ื•, ื—ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ืจ ื•ืคืฉื˜ื” ืœื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื•ื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ืงืจื™ื‘ื”:",
54
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ื›ื— ื‘ืื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
55
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืจื’ืœื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
56
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืœื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื˜ืณ) ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืชืŸ ืžืžื ื• ืœื”ืณ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื›ื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื:"
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืžื“ืžืข ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืกืื” ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืฉื ืคืœื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžืื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื ื“ืžืขื•, ื•ื ืคืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืœืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ, ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžืื” ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืกืื” ื–ื• ืฉืœ ื“ืžื•ืข, ื•ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžืื” ืกืื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืกืื” ืฉืœ ื“ืžื•ืข, ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืฉื‘ืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืชืจื•ืžื” ืœืืกื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื™ื:",
60
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื—ื•ืžืฅ ืžื—ืžืฅ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืขื™ืกื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืชื—ืžืฆื” ื‘ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื”ืจื™ ื›ื•ืœื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื–ืจื™ื. ื•ืื ื ืคืœ ืžืื•ืชื” ืขื™ืกื” ืœืชื•ืš ืขื™ืกื” ืื—ืจืช ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื—ืžืฆืชื”, ืื™ื ื” ืื•ืกืจืชื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”, ื•ืœื ืžืชืกืจื ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื ืคืœ ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ ื‘ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื—ืžืฅ ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื‘ืœื ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ื”ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืขื™ื:",
61
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืžืงื•ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืื™ื ืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื, ืžืžืœื ื‘ื›ืชืฃ ืชืฉืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืกืื™ืŸ ื•ืคื•ืชืงืŸ ืœืžืงื•ื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ื•ื”ืŸ ื˜ื”ื•ืจื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื”, ื”ืฉืื™ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืจื•ื‘ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืกืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ื”ืžืงื•ื” ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื”ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืื™ื ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื ืจื•ื‘ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื” ืžืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื. ื›ืš ื ืจืื” ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉืชื™ื” ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ืคืจืง ืกืื” ืชืจื•ืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื, ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื›ืœื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื ืคืœื• ืœืžืงื•ื” ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ืคืœื• ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืœื™ื, ืื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื™ื ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืืžืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ื›ืœื™ื ืฉืžื”ืŸ ื ืคืœื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืœืžืงื•ื”, ื•ืžื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ, ืื ื”ื ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื”. ื•ืื ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ื ื“ื”ื•ื ืกื‘ืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืคืœื• ืžื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:"
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืขื ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ืืคืจ ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืคืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืชืŸ ืืคืจ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžื™ื, ืคืกื•ืœ, ื“ื”ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืชื• ืœื ืžื™ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื˜:ื™ืดื–) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื, ืœื ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืืคืจ, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื ืืœ ื›ืœื™, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื”ืžื™ื ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืืœ ื”ื›ืœื™ ื•ืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืืœ [ื”ืืคืจ], ืืœื, ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื•, ืœื”ื–ื”ื™ืจ ืฉืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืชืŸ [ื”ืืคืจ] ืขืœ ื”ืžื™ื ื™ืขืจื‘ื ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขื• ื™ืคื” ื•ื™ื—ื–ื™ืจ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืชื—ืชื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•:",
65
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืฉื ื—ืจืฉ ื‘ื” ืงื‘ืจ, ืื ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื—ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ื•ืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืชื™ื•, ืœื ืžื—ื–ืงื™ื ืŸ ืœืฉืืจ ืฉื“ื•ืช ื›ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ืžื—ืจื™ืฉื” ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื” ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืœืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืชื™ื”, ื“ืงื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก. ืืœื ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื“ื” ืฉืื‘ื“ ื‘ื” ื”ืงื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ื•ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืœื›ืืŸ ื•ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืœื›ืืŸ ืœืื•ืชื• ื“ืจืš ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื‘ืงืขื” ืœื—ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืœืžื–ืจื— ื•ืžืขืจื‘ ืื• ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื“ืจื•ื, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื—ื“ ืžืฉื ื™ ืจืืฉื™ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื‘ืจ ื•ืžืฉื ื ืชื’ืœื’ืœ ื”ืขืฆื ืœืชื•ืš ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื“ืžืœื•ื ื”ืžืขื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื•ืช ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืœื™ื’ืœื’ืœ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืžื—ืจื™ืฉื”, ื˜ืคื™ ืœื. ื•ื›ืžื” ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืžืื” ืืžื”:",
66
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืื—ืจ ืชืจื•ืžื”.</b> ื”ืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ืฉืชืจืžื• ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ืชืจื, ื’ืœื™ ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื‘ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืชื•ืจื ืฉืœื ืžื“ืขืช ื—ื‘ื™ืจื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™. ื•ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื”ื™ื, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”. ืืœื ืื ืชืจื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžื—ืžืฉื™ื, ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ืื ืœื ืชืจื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืขื™ืŸ ืจืขื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืจื ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืฉื™ื, ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชืจื•ืžื”:",
67
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืœื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืชืžื•ืจืชื•:",
68
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“:",
69
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื™ื”ื™ื”, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื”ื•ืœื“. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ื™ื”ื™ื”, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“, ืฉืื ืกื‘ืจ [ืœื”ืžื™ืจ] ืฉื—ื•ืจ [ื•ื”ืžื™ืจ] ืืช ื”ืœื‘ืŸ, ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืžื” ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืขืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”:"
70
+ ],
71
+ [
72
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”.</b> ื•ืื ื”ืžืจ ื™ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
73
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืื™ืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
74
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืœื ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื”.</b> ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœืŸ ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืืœื ืžื”ื›ื:",
75
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื”.</b> ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื“ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
76
+ "<b>ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื ื™ื‘ืงืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืจืข ื•ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจื ื•:",
77
+ "<b>ืžื” ืžืขืฉืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“.</b> ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืืฃ ื›ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
78
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืฉื•ืชืคื™ืŸ. ื“ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ื‘ืชืจื ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช [ื“ืฃ ื›ืดื•], ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœืš ื•ืœื ืฉืœ ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช:",
79
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื›ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื) ื•ื ืงืจื‘ ืืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืณ ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ืžืฆื ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘, ืื™ื ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืžืขืฉืจ. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืกื‘ืจื™, ื ื”ื™ ื“ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืณ ืืงืจื•, ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื”ืณ ืœื ืืงืจื• ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืžื–ื‘ื—:"
80
+ ]
81
+ ],
82
+ [
83
+ [
84
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“.</b> ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื. ื“ืจื•ื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืืœื ื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช ื“ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื”ืŸ, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœื”ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืฉืขื™ืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ื“:",
85
+ "<b>ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื™ืฉ ืžืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื”ืŸ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืื ืขื‘ืจ ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ืฉืœื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื–ืžืŸ, ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ ื‘ื˜ืœ ืงืจื‘ื ืŸ:",
86
+ "<b>ืžืฉืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉืื ืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืœื ืงืจื‘ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื• ืขืžื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืขื“ ืขืฉืจื” ื™ืžื™ื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืคื ื—ืก ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื•ืžื ื—ืชื ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื”ื ืœืคืจื™ื, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ืžื ื—ืชื ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืงืจื‘ื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืžื—ืจ, ืื ืงืจื‘ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื‘ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืœื ื ื–ื“ืžื ื• ืœื”ื ืžื ื—ื•ืช ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื, ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืฉื™ื–ื“ืžื ื• ืœื”ืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื:",
87
+ "<b>ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื“ื•ื—ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ืžื ื—ืช ืชืžื™ื“, ื”ืจื™ ืœืš ื›ืžื ื—ื” ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื“ื‘ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื• ืืฃ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ืืฃ ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืฉืื ื”ื™ื• ืจื•ื‘ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”:",
88
+ "<b>ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ืคืจื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
89
+ "<b>ืืœื ืฉื–ืžื ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ืขื ืชืœื•ื™ ืืœื ื‘ืงื‘ื™ืขื•ืช ื”ื–ืžืŸ, ื“ื›ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื–ืžื ื• ืงื‘ื•ืข ื•ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ื, ื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืžืื™ืจ:"
90
+ ],
91
+ [
92
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”:",
93
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
94
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืชื•ืช.</b> ื“ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ืžืชื•ืช ื”ืœื›ื” ืœืžืฉื” ืžืกื™ื ื™ ื”ื™ื, ื•ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืชื ื ืงืžื ื“ืœื™ื—ื™ื“ ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื•ืœื ืœืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ:",
95
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื ืžื™ ื’ืžื™ืจื™:",
96
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืžืชื•ืช, ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื”, ื•ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”, ื•ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืชืœืช ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ืœืื• ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื’ืžื™ืจื™, ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”ื• ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื•ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืžืชื™ื:",
97
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืคืฉืจ ื“ืžืฉืชื›ื—ื™ ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืœื ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื“ืžืชื•ืช:",
98
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื“ืžืชื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
99
+ ],
100
+ [
101
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื ื•ืœื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืชืžื•ืจืชื•:",
102
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื ืžืžื™ืจื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘:",
103
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข.</b> ืฉืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืชืžื™ืžื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืžื•ืจื” ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืฉืื ื™ืคื“ื•ื” ืœื ืชืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื’ื–ื– ื•ืœื™ืขื‘ื“ ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืงื“ื ื”ืงื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ืžื•ืžืŸ ืฉื›ืฉืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืืœื ื”ื™ืชืจ ืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืื ืงื“ื ืžื•ืžืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืขืดื™ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœื™ื’ื–ื– ื•ืœื™ืขื‘ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื” ื’ืœื™ ืงืจื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข ืื• ืจืข ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘, ืœื ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืชื ืœื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื:",
104
+ "<b>ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ืฉืื ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื•ืจ ืฉื—ื•ืจ ืฉื™ืฆื ืžื‘ื™ืชื™ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื™ื”ื ืชืžื•ืจื” ืชื—ืช ื–ื•, ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืคื™ื• ืฉื•ืจ ืœื‘ืŸ, ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ื’ืœื™ ื‘ื™ื” ืงืจื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื ื ืœืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืื ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื”ื•ื, ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
105
+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœืื™ื.</b> ื”ื‘ื ืžืชื™ืฉ ื•ืจื—ืœ:",
106
+ "<b>ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืชืžื•ืจื” ื—ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื” ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข, ืื™ื ื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœ ืืœื•:",
107
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื.</b> ืื—ืจื™ื ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืื ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื. ื•ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ื˜ืจืคื”, ื•ื‘ื–ื• ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืืขืดืค ืฉืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื”ื™ื, ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืœืื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก, ืžืชื—ืœืช ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชืŸ ื ืชืงืœืงืœื• ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื•ืฆื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืืœื ื‘ื•ืœื“ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืฉืงื“ืฉื” ืืžื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืžืืœื™ื”ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื“ื™ืจืš ืืžืŸ ื”ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืืœื™ื‘ื ื“ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื•ืœื“ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื, ื“ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฉ ื‘ืžื™ื ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ืš ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื›ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ, ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืžืืŸ ื“ืคืœื™ื’ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ื”ื:"
108
+ ]
109
+ ],
110
+ [
111
+ [
112
+ "<b>ืืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื•ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื. ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืชื ื™ ื•ื•ืœื“ืŸ, ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœืžื” ืœื™. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืžืขื™ื” ืชื ื ื“ื™ื“ืŸ ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื, ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืชื ื ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืœื ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ื ื‘ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ืœืš, ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ืœืš:",
113
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืืœื ื›ื•ื ืกื• ืœื›ื™ืคื” ื•ืžืช. ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ. ืžืฉื•ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื”, ื“ืื™ ืืžืจืช ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืชืงื ื”, ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•ื™ื™ ืœืื ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“ ื•ื™ื’ื“ืœ ืขื“ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื•ืืชื• ื‘ื”ื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
114
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ืชื• ื ื™ื›ืจืช ืžืชื•ืš ืžืขืฉื™ื• ื“ืœื’ื“ืœ ืขื“ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื™. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื ืฉื•ืœื“ (ื•ืœื“) ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
115
+ "<b>ื”ืขื™ื“ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ืœื ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ. ื•ืขื“ื•ืช ื–ื” ืืžืช ื•ื”ืœื›ื”:",
116
+ "<b>ื•ืื›ืœื ื• ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื’.</b> ื‘ื—ื’ ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ื•ืžืฆืคื” ืœื—ื’ ื”ืกื•ื›ื•ืช, ื ืžืฆื ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ-ื•ืณ) ื•ื‘ืืช ืฉืžื” ื•ื”ื‘ืืชื ืฉืžื”, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืจื’ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืชื‘ื•ื ืฉืžื”, ืชื‘ื™ื ื›ืœ ื ื“ืจื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ืš. ืžื™ื”ื• ื‘ืœืื• ื“ืœื ืชืื—ืจ ืื™ื ื• ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขื‘ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืจื’ืœื™ื:"
117
+ ],
118
+ [
119
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืชื•ื“ื”.</b> ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื”ืŸ ืงืจื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื ืื›ืœ ืœื™ื•ื ื•ืœื™ืœื”:",
120
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืชื•ื“ื”, ื”ืชื•ื“ื” ืขืฆืžื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืœื—ื, ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื” ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ืœื—ื:",
121
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื™ืจ ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืขื•ืœื”:",
122
+ "<b>ื•ื•ืœื“ ืชืžื•ืจืชื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื™ืจ ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื ืงื‘ื” ืžืชืงื“ืฉืช ื‘ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื™ืœื“ื” ื”ืชืžื•ืจื” ื–ื›ืจ:"
123
+ ],
124
+ [
125
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื•ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืขื•ืœื” ื’ื‘ื™ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืื• ืืœื• ื›ื•ืœื ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื”ื•ื ืงืจื‘, ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื‘ืื™ื ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื ืงื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ื›ืขื•ืœื” ืืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
126
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืืฉื.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ื‘ื ืžืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ื”:",
127
+ "<b>ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘.</b> ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื•ืœ ื‘ื” ืžื•ื. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ื‘ืœื ืžื•ื, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœืžืœืชื™ื” ืžื•ื ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื–ื” ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™, ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืืฉื. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื—ืช ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื, ื ื—ืชื” ืœื” ื ืžื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ืœื”ื ืžืœืชื ื“ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžื•ื:",
128
+ "<b>ืื ืงืจื‘ ืืฉืžื•.</b> ื•ืชื• ืœื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืืฉื:",
129
+ "<b>ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ืœืฉื•ืคืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืฉืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ: ",
130
+ "<b>ืชืžื›ืจ ืฉืœื ื‘ืžื•ื</b> ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ืžื•ื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื–ื”, ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืืฉื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืขื•ืœื” ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืจืดืฉ ื“ื‘ืขื™ื ืžื•ื, ื”ืชื ื”ื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืฉื ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื ืงื‘ื”, ื“ืืฉื›ื—ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืฃ, ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ื ืงื‘ื” ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื•ืžื ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืฉ:",
131
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืืฉื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ืจืขื•, ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื”ื™ื ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ื‘ืืฉื ืจื•ืขื”, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื”:",
132
+ "<b>ื™ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืดื ื›ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืืฉื, ืžื” ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ืืฃ ื‘ืืฉื ืžืชื”:",
133
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ื“ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืื–ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ:",
134
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืจ.</b> ื“ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื•ืช, ื•ื‘ืืฉื ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘:"
135
+ ],
136
+ [
137
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ืืฃ ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ ืงืžืคืจืฉ ืžืื™ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•:",
138
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ื˜ืœืช ืขืœ ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื”. ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื” ื›ื•ืณ:",
139
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชื• ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืืฉื ื•ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจ ื•ื ืชืงื• ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืจืขื™ื™ื”:",
140
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืงื ื•ื™ื” ืžื“ืžื™ ืื•ืชื• ืืฉื, ืฉืœื• ื”ื™ื, ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื” ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ืขื•ืจ, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื‘ืช:",
141
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื”.</b> ื“ื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกืžื™ื›ื”:",
142
+ "<b>ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” ืœืื ืฉื™ ืžืฉืžืจ.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžืฉืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—) ืœื‘ื“ ืžืžื›ืจื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ืžื” ืฉืžื›ืจื• ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื˜ื•ืœ ืืชื” ืืช ืฉื‘ืชืš ื•ืื ื™ ืื˜ื•ืœ ืืช ืฉื‘ืชื™. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
143
+ ],
144
+ [
145
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื ืฉื—ื˜ื™ื ื‘ืื™ื˜ืœื™ืก, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืฉื•ืง ืฉืžื•ื›ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื•ื ื•ื ืคื“ื•:",
146
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืจื”, ื“ื“ืžื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ื“ืžื™ ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื ืื” ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืœื ืžื–ืœื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
147
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื ืœืงืžืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื‘ืื• ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ื•:",
148
+ "<b>ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
149
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ื˜ืขื.</b> ืฉื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ื›ืฉืืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
150
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคืจื ืกื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ.</b> ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืชืงื ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืจืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘ื• ื•ื™ืื›ืœื• ื‘ืžื•ืžืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
151
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื•ื ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืŸ, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืืชื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชืŸ ื•ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืกื•ืคืŸ ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ, ื™ืขืœื• ื”ืŸ ืขืฆืžืŸ ื•ื™ืงืจื‘ื•. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืœื• ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื“:ื›ืดื’) ื•ืื›ืœืช ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ ืืœื”ื™ืš ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ื ืš ืชื™ืจื•ืฉืš ื•ื™ืฆื”ืจืš ื•ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืงืจืš ื•ืฆืื ืš, ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ืžืขืฉืจ ื•ื“ื’ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ืจ, ื•ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื ืžื™ ืืชืงืฉ ืœืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ืŸ:"
152
+ ]
153
+ ],
154
+ [
155
+ [
156
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”. ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ื—ื˜ืืช, ื“ื‘ืช ืฉื ืชื” ื›ืชื™ื‘. ืžื™ื”ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื”ืื™ ืคืกื•ืœื ืœื—ื•ื“ื™ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื”, ืืœื ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ ืขื“ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ืœืจื™ืขื•ืชื, ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžืชืจืฅ ืœืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ื“ื”ืื™ ื•ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื“ืงืชื ื™, ืขื•ืœื” ืœื›ืืŸ ื•ืœื›ืืŸ, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ื•ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ื” ืžื•ื:",
157
+ "<b>ืื ืžืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ืื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ื–ืืช ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
158
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืขืœื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื•ืืžืจื™ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ืืœื ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื“ื•, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ืœืจื™ืขื•ืชื, ื“ืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื‘ื“ื” ืœื—ื•ื“ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”, ืืขืดื’ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื” ืืœื ืชืจืขื”:",
159
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ:",
160
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ื ื”ื ื• ืžื”ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื ืžืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ื” ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืื–ืœื ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื”:",
161
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ืฉืœื ืจืฆื• ืœื”ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
162
+ "<b>ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘.</b> ื•ืืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ืงืื™. ื“ืื•ืชื” ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื, ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช:",
163
+ "<b>ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื“ืžื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื™ืงืจื‘. ื“ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืจืขื” ื•ื™ืกืชืื‘ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:"
164
+ ],
165
+ [
166
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
167
+ "<b>ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ ื”ื•ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื•ื™ื ืžืชื”, ืžืขื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืื–ืœื™ ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—:"
168
+ ],
169
+ [
170
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื•ืžืืœื•.</b> ื™ืขืจื‘ื ื™ื—ื“. ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื™ื™ืชื™, ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช ืื‘ืœ ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืžื—ื“ ืžื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžื“ื—ื• ืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื“ื”ื•ื• ืœื”ื• ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
171
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื™ืคืœื• ืœื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื• ื›ืฉืืจ ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื“ืื–ืœื™ ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
172
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื”, ืชื™ืงืจื‘ ื”ื™ื ื•ื”ืžืขื•ืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ืืœื™ื‘ื ื“ืจื‘ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืžืขื•ืช ื“ื ืžืฆืื• ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”, ืื–ืœื™ ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—:",
173
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืชืžื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื™ ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ืฉืื‘ื•ื“ื” ืžืชื”. ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ื‘ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืกื‘ืจ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืœืื‘ื•ื“ ื›ืื‘ื•ื“ ื“ืžื™, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืชื—ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื‘ื•ื“, ื“ื™ื ื• ื›ืื‘ื•ื“. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื• ืื‘ื•ื“, ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื›ืฉื™ืžืฆื ื“ื™ื ื• ืฉื™ืžื•ืช. ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ื›ื™ ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื™ื, ื™ืœื›ื• ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ื•ื“ื™ื ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืœืื‘ื•ื“ ื›ืื‘ื•ื“ ื“ืžื™. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื”ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื ืฉืืจื”, ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ืžืชื” ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื”, ืืœื ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
174
+ ],
175
+ [
176
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ืจื” ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช.</b> ื“ืžื›ื™ ืžื›ืจื” ืœืื—ืจ, ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื™ื ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื‘ืขืœื” ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืกื‘ืจ, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื‘ืขืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ ืื—ืจื™ื, ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
177
+ ]
178
+ ],
179
+ [
180
+ [
181
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืœื”ืคืงื™ืขื• ืžื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื•:",
182
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืœื ืžืจื—ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ืืชืคืกื™ื” ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื, ืชื• ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื”:",
183
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืœืื• ื‘ืžื‘ื›ืจืช ืžื™ื™ืจื™, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจื” ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืขืจื•ืžื™ ืขืœื”. ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื“ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื ื•ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ื•ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืขืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืœืš ืœืžื™ืชื”, ื“ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื™ืชื” ืื–ื™ืœ, ื™ืฉื ื”ื• ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจืช. [ื•ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ] ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืงื“ืฉื• ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžืŸ, ืžืฆื™ ืœืืจื›ื•ื‘ื™ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™, ื“ืœื›ื™ ืžืชื™ืœื™ื“ ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช:"
184
+ ],
185
+ [
186
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“ื” ืฉื ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื.</b> ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžื™ื™ืจื™. ื“ืื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ื™ืืš ื“ืืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ื•ื™ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืื™ื“ืš ืงืื™ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื” ื“ืืžื™ื”. ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืžื™ื• ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื”ื ืืžืจ ืื ื–ื›ืจ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ื ื“ืจ ืืœื ื—ื“ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืงืจื‘ ื”ืื—ื“ ืœื ื“ืจื• ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืฆืจื›ื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื“ืžื™ื• ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
187
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืœื ืžืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื ืš ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื—ื ืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืขืœ ืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื•ืกื‘ืจื™ ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžืŸ ืงื™ื™ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ:"
188
+ ],
189
+ [
190
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช:",
191
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื•ืœื“ ืงื“ืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ืืžืจ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ืœื” ื•ืœื›ืœ ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืืงื“ืฉื”, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืœืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”, ื”ื•ื™ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ืฉื™ื™ืš ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื•ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื“ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ืืชืคืกื™ื” ืœืขื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืืœื ืžืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžื™ื” ืงื ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืœืงื‘ื•ืœื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื”. ื•ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืชืคื•ืก ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ: ",
192
+ "<b>ืื ืœื›ืš ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืœื”</b> ื›ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื•ืœื“ื”:",
193
+ "<b>ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืคื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืื—ืช:",
194
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืฃ ื‘ื’ืžืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืื“ื ื ืชืคืก:",
195
+ "<b>ื ืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืžื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืœื”. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื›ืœ ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื›ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื“ืžื™, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืžื™ืžืจ ื•ืžื’ื“ืฃ ื•ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื•ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืžื’ืจืฉ, ื“ื”ื ืš ืฉืฉื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื–ืจื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
196
+ ],
197
+ [
198
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
199
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื“ืชืคื•ืก ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ:",
200
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืงืืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื•ืืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ ืืžื™ื ื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ืชื”ื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืœื ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื•ื˜ืขื” ื‘ื”ื›ื™ ื•ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื’ืžื•ืจื” ืœื™ืงืจื‘, ื”ืœื›ืš ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืžืจ ื›ื™ ื”ืื™ ืœื™ืฉื ื, ืœืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื•ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื‘ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื‘ื”ื›ื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื›ืฉื”ืžื™ืจ ืืช ื–ื• ื‘ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
201
+ ],
202
+ [
203
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ื—ืœื™ืคืช ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื–ื•.</b> ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ื”ืŸ:",
204
+ "<b>ืžื—ื•ืœืœืช.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื™ืœื•ืœ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืชืžื™ืžื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
205
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ื” ื›ืžื• ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื. ื“ื“ื‘ืจ ืชื•ืจื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื•ื” ืžืื” ืžื ื” ืฉื—ืœืœื• ืขืœ ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžื—ื•ืœืœ. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื”, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืชืื ื” ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืื‘ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื ืื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื”:ื™ืดื“) ืืœ ืชื•ื ื• ืื™ืฉ ืืช ืื—ื™ื•, ืื—ื™ื• ื•ืœื ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
206
+ ],
207
+ [
208
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื• ืื• ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื•:",
209
+ "<b>ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื–) ืœื ื™ื—ืœื™ืคื ื• ื•ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืื•ืชื•, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื•ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ ื›ืฉืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื•:",
210
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื•.</b> ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœืคื ื™ื•:",
211
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืœื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื”. ื“ืื™ ืื™ื ื”ื• ื’ื•ืคื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืงืจื•ื‘ื™, ื”ื•ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืขื•ืœื”:"
212
+ ]
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ [
216
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื”ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”. ื•ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:",
217
+ "<b>ืื•ืกืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืœืฃ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืื ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ื›ืจ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื“ืื™ืŸ ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื“ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื™ื›ืจืช ืืœื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื“ืจื•ืกืช ื”ืืจื™ ื•ื”ื–ืื‘ ื‘ื ืงื•ื‘ืช ื”ืงื•ืฅ:",
218
+ "<b>ื”ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื”ื ืจื‘ืข ื•ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“.</b> ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื›ืดื”) ื›ื™ ืžืฉื—ืชื ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื ื‘ื, ื•ืชื ื™ื, ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืฉื—ืชื ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืขืจื•ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ืขืจื•ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื”ืฉื—ื™ืช ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืืช ื“ืจื›ื•. ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ืค ื“ืณ) ืคืŸ ืชืฉื—ื™ืชื•ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื™ืชื ืœื›ื ืคืกืœ. ื•ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื ืจื‘ืข ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืจื•ื‘ืข ืื• ื ืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืคื™ ืขื“ ืื—ื“ ืื• ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื“ืื™ื ื” ื ืกืงืœืช ื‘ื›ืš ืื‘ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืŸ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
219
+ "<b>ืžื•ืงืฆื”.</b> ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื”ืงืฆื•ื” ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ื‘ื” ืžืขืฉื” ืœืฉื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื•ืžืจื™ื ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืจ ืื• ื’ื–ื–ื•ื”ื• ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื”:",
220
+ "<b>ื•ื ืขื‘ื“.</b> ืื™ื ื• ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืืขืดืค ืฉืขื‘ื“ื•ื”ื•, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ื ืืกืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืื” ื›ืฉืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ื ืคืกืœื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
221
+ "<b>ื•ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ.</b> ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื”ื• ืงืจื (ืฉื ื›ืดื’) ืœื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื” ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘:",
222
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœืื™ื.</b> ืชื™ืฉ ื”ื‘ื ืขืœ ื”ืจื—ืœ:",
223
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืขืฉืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ืœืดื‘) ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜, ืคืจื˜ ืœื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
224
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืงืจืขื” ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืš ื”ื“ื•ืคืŸ. ื•ืžืขื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื™ื•ืœื“, ืคืจื˜ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ:",
225
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ.</b> ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
226
+ "<b>ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจ.</b> ื“ื”ื ืœื ื ืขื‘ื“:",
227
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืืกื•ืจ.</b> ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš. ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื•, ืชื›ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ื•, ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขื‘ื“ื• ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชืคื™ืกืช ื™ื“ื™ ืื“ื:",
228
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื•ื–ื”.</b> ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“:"
229
+ ],
230
+ [
231
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื”.</b> ืื—ืช ื ื›ืจื™ืช ื•ืื—ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ืช, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืชื”ื™ื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช ื•ืžื™ืชื•ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืืชื ืŸ ืฉืœ ืคื ื•ื™ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ืช ืื™ื ื• ืคืกื•ืœ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืืกืจื” ืœื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืื” ื–ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืืชื ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื” ืืฉื” ืœืื™ืฉ, ืื™ื ื• ืคืกื•ืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื›ืจ, ืคืกื•ืœ:",
232
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื.</b> ื”ืชื ื” ืขืžื” ืœืชืช ืœื” ื˜ืœื” ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืชื ื ื” ื•ืฉืœื— ืœื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื”, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื—ื“ ื“ืืชื ื™ ืขืžื” ื”ื•ื™ ืืชื ืŸ ื•ื”ื ืš ืื—ืจื™ื ื™ ื›ื•ืœื ืžืชื ื”, ืืœื ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ:",
233
+ "<b>ื•ืชืœื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ืชืš ืืฆืœ ืขื‘ื“ื™.</b> ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฉื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ืจื‘ื• ืœืžืกื•ืจ ืœื• ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ืืฉื” ืžืชื—ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืืชื ื ื” ืืกื•ืจ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ืืชื ืŸ, ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ืกื‘ืจื, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ืกืจ ืœื• ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ืกื‘ืจื, ืกื‘ืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ื”ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ืœืœื• ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช, ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™:"
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืชืฉืขื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื›ืœื‘.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื—ื‘ืจื•. ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืชืฉืขื” ื•ื›ืœื‘, ื›ื•ืœื ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘. ื•ื”ืชืฉืขื” ืฉืขื ื”ื›ืœื‘ ืžื•ืชืจื™ื. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ืืžืื™ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ื›ืœื‘ ื›ื•ืœื ืืกื•ืจื™ื, ื ื™ืคื•ืง ื—ื“ ืœื”ื“ื™ ื›ืœื‘ื ื•ื”ื ืš ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืœื™ืฉืชืจื•. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ื˜ืคื™ ื“ืžื™ ื›ืœื‘ ืžื—ื“ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ื• ื˜ืœื” ืฉื•ื” ื“ืžื™ ื”ื›ืœื‘, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืฉื™ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื™ ื”ื›ืœื‘ ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื•. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืฉืจื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ืื•ืชืŸ ืชืฉืขื” ืฉืขืžื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื—ืกืจ ืžืขื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชืฉืขื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืชืฉืข ืžืขื•ืช, ื•ื”ื›ืœื‘ ืฉื•ื” ื“ื™ื ืจ ื•ืชืฉืข ืžืขื•ืช, ื ืžืฆื ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืขืฉืจื” ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืชืฉืขื” ื•ื›ืœื‘ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชืฉืขื”, ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžืขื” ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื›ื•ืœื• ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘:",
237
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื”.</b> ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื“ื›ืชื‘ ืงืจื ืคืœื’ื™ื ื ืœื™ื” ื›ืื™ืœื• ื›ืชื‘ ืฉื ื™ื ื”ืŸ. ืฉื ื™ื, ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ื•ืงื ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื” ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘ ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืืชื ืŸ ื›ืœื‘ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื–ื•ื ื”. ื•ื”ืŸ, ืžืฉืžืข ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:"
238
+ ],
239
+ [
240
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ื›ืกืคื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื.</b> ืœืงื ื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•ืกื•ืœืช ืœืžื ื—ื•ืช:",
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+ "<b>ื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ื ื•ืกืœืชื•ืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ืกื•ืœืช ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ื™ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื, ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื”ื ื•ืœื ืฉื ื•ื™ื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:",
242
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื˜ืœื” ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื• ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ ืืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื” ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ ืœื™ ื•ื”ื™ืžื ื™ ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื™ ื‘ืืชื ื ืš. ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœืžื ื•ืช ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื•, ืžืžื•ื ื™ื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ืœื™ื—ื•ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืืชื ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืœื. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ, ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื ื“ื•ืจ ื›ื‘ืจ:",
243
+ "<b>ืขื•ืคื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
244
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื•.</b> ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืฉืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ:",
245
+ "<b>ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื™ืดื˜) ืชืžื™ื ื–ื›ืจ [ื‘ื‘ืงืจ] ื‘ื›ืฉื‘ื™ื, ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื–ื›ืจื•ืช ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื–ื›ืจื•ืช ื‘ืขื•ืฃ:",
246
+ "<b>ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ.</b> ื›ืœ, ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ, ืฉืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ื‘ื ื“ืจ, ืฉืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœื™ื•:"
247
+ ],
248
+ [
249
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ื•ื™ืœื“ื”, ื”ื•ืœื“ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืฉื”ื–ื›ืจ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืืกื•ืจื”, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื’ืจืžื• ืœื•ืœื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื, ื•ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืžื•ืชืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื”ื•ืœื“ ืคืกื•ืœ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื ื•ื•ืœื“ื” ื ืจื‘ืขื•:",
250
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื˜ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘. ืื‘ืœ ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืจื™, ื“ืœืื• ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืงื ืจื‘ื™. ื•ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื”ื™ื ื‘ืืœื• ื˜ืจื™ืคื•ืช [ื“ืฃ ื ืดื—], ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช. ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื˜ืจืคื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื™ื‘ืจื”, ื•ื‘ื”ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืืกื•ืจ, ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืžื•ืชืจ. ื•ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื™ื‘ืจื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ื˜ืจืคื”, ื•ื‘ื”ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื™ืจืš ืืžื• ื”ื•ื, ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืœืื• ื™ืจืš ืืžื• ื”ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:",
251
+ "<b>ื›ืฉืจื” ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืคืกื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ื™ื•ื ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืขืช ืœืขืช ื”ื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืขืžื•ื“ ืขืœ ืื•ืชื• ื—ืœื‘ ื‘ืœื ืื›ื™ืœื” ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืชืื›ืœ ืžืžืขื™ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉืœื ืžืขืช ืœืขืช. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชืื›ืœ ืžืžืขื™ื” ืžื•ื“ื” ืจืดื— ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืจื”, ื“ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ืชืคื˜ืžื” ื‘ื›ืจืฉื™ื ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืจื” ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื™ื ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก:",
252
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื ืคื“ื• ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืชื–ื‘ื— ื•ืื›ืœืช ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืชื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ื’ื™ื–ื”, ื•ืื›ืœืช ื•ืœื ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ืš, ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ืœื ื—ืœื‘:"
253
+ ]
254
+ ],
255
+ [
256
+ [
257
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืง ืงืžื ืžืžืขื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืงืจื ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
258
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื‘ืฉืœืžื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™, ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื™ื•, ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆืื•, ืœื”ืงื™ืฉ ืืœื™ื”ืŸ, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ืžื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
259
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื•ื—ืœื‘ืŸ ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ.</b> ื—ืœื‘ืŸ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืœื ื—ืœื‘. ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืขื‘ืจ ืœืคื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ ื•ืื•ืœื™ื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ, ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื”ื• ืชืงื ืชื ืœืืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ื”ื•, ื“ืžื›ื•ื— ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื“ื—ื•ื™ื” ืงื ืืชื™ื, ืœืคืจืงื™ื ื”ื•, ืœื ืืœื™ืžื ืžืœืชื ืœืžืชืคืก ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื• ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ, ื›ื•ืœื“ ืฆื‘ื™ ื•ืื™ืœ ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืžื•ืชืจื™ื. ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ ืžื•ืชืจื™ื, ื“ืœื ืืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื• ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™ ื•ืœื ื—ืžื™ืจื ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื™ื™ื”ื• ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™:",
260
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžื”ื.</b> ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
261
+ "<b>ืœืื•ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื‘ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ:",
262
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื›ืจืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืฉื›ืจ ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื“ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื”:ื—ืณ) ื•ืขืฉื• ืœื™ ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืœื™ ืžืฉืœื™, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:"
263
+ ],
264
+ [
265
+ "<b>ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืœ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ื•ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื:",
266
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื•ืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ื”. ื•ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช, ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆืชื”. ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืฉื—ืœื‘ ืฉืœ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื•ื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชื•ืจื™ื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื:",
267
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ืฉื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื ืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื‘ืขื•ืจ:"
268
+ ],
269
+ [
270
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื“.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืœื ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ื›ืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื”:",
271
+ "<b>ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงืื™:",
272
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื” ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื•, ืื ื ื“ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื˜ื•ื‘ืชืŸ. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื”ื™ืชื” ื ื“ืจ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื–ื• ืœื ื“ืจื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ื ืžืฆืืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืฉืœื•, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื—ืจื ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื ืžื™ ืื ื”ืชืคื™ืก ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื™ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ืื ืžืชื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื”, ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื—ืœืง ื‘ื” ืืœื ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ื“ืจืฉืื™ ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื•ืชื” ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
273
+ "<b>ื•ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื™ืœื•ื™ ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื™ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื”ืชืคื™ืกืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืจืžื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืœื ืขืฉื” ื•ืœื ื›ืœื•ื, ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฉืœื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•. ื›ืš ื›ืชื‘ ืจืžื‘ืดื:",
274
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืžืชื•.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืžืžื•, ืื‘ืœ ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ืคื“ื•:",
275
+ "<b>ื™ืงื‘ืจื•.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืคื“ื•ืชืŸ ื•ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื ื˜ืจืคื” ื“ืืคืฉืจ ืœื” ื‘ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืžืฉืžืชื• ื“ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืงื™ื™ื ื‘ื”ื• ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš, ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ:",
276
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื ืžืชื• ื™ืคื“ื•.</b> ืงืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืืœื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
277
+ ],
278
+ [
279
+ "<b>ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื™ ื”ื ืื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
280
+ "<b>ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืฉืœื™ื ืชืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื•ืœื“:",
281
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ.</b> ื˜ืžื. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ ื˜ื”ื•ืจ ื›ืฉืžื’ืœื— ื‘ื™ื•ื ืžืœืืช ื™ืžื™ ื ื–ืจื•, ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืงื‘ื•ืจื”:",
282
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืžื—ืœืคื™ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืื™ืจืข ื‘ื”ื ืคืกื•ืœ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืื• ืคืกื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื˜ืขื• ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื• ื ืžื™ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ื•ืื ืŸ ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืืฉ ืชืฉืจืฃ, ืœื™ืžื“ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
283
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื—ื™ื” ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื’ื–ืจ ื‘ื” ื“ืœืžื ื˜ืขื• ืœืงื‘ื•ืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื“ื”ื ื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื ื™ื“ืขื™ ื“ื—ื™ื” ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื™ื›ื ื•ืœื ืืชื™ ืœืื—ืœื•ืคื™, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืชืฉืจืฃ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
284
+ ],
285
+ [
286
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื—.</b> ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืืžืจ [ืคืกื—ื™ื ื›ืดื— ืขืดื‘] ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ื‘ืœ ืชื•ืชื™ืจื• ื•ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ื‘ืœ ืชื•ืชื™ืจื•, ืžื” ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื” ืืฃ ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:",
287
+ "<b>ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ื™ ื”ื ื” ื ืชืชื™ ืœืš ืืช ืžืฉืžืจืช ืชืจื•ืžืชื™, ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ, ืื—ืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื” ื•ืื—ืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืš, ืฉืœืš ืชื”ื ืœื”ืกื™ืงื” ืชื—ืช ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœืš:",
288
+ "<b>ืขืจืœื”.</b> ืžื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื’ืžืจ, ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื‘:ื˜ืณ) ืคืŸ ืชืงื“ืฉ, ืชื•ืงื“ ืืฉ:",
289
+ "<b>ืืช ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ.</b> ืืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืงืื™, ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืฉืœ ืขืจืœื” ื•ืฉืœ ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืฉื“ืจื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ ื™ืฉืจืคื•, ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•:",
290
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื”.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืœืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืขื ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื— ื•ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื™ ื”ื ืื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืœื ืชื˜ืขื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื’ื ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื”ื“ืจ ืชื ื ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ืœื™ื”ื ื•ืช ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”:"
291
+ ],
292
+ [
293
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืื• ื—ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
294
+ "<b>ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืืฉ ืชืฉืจืฃ, ืœื™ืžื“ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
295
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื•ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
296
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืืฉื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื” ืกืคืง ื•ืœื“ ืกืคืง ืจื•ื—, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื—ื˜ืืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื•ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื•ืณ) ื•ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ืžื‘ื™ืืชื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืงื˜ืจืช ืœื ืื™ื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ืื™ ื–ืจืง ื“ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื• ื•ืœื“ ื”ื•ื” ื•ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื–ื• ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื ืื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืœื™ืงื”, ื•ืชืฉืจืฃ ื“ื”ื•ื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื:",
297
+ "<b>ื™ื˜ื™ืœื ื” ืœืืžื”.</b> ืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆืืช ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืขื•ืฃ ืจืš ื”ื•ื ืžืชืžืงืžืง ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ืงื™ืœื•ื— ื”ืžื™ื:",
298
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื‘ืจื•.</b> ื“ืœืžื ื—ืคืจ ืื™ื ืฉ ื•ืžืฉื›ื— ืœื”ื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ืœื”ื•:",
299
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ื ืืคืจืŸ ืืกื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ื, ืืคืจืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื›ื™ื‘ื•ืก ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื ืžื™ ืืคืจืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื“ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ื™ื” ืจื—ืžื ื (ืฉื ื•ืณ) ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืชื ื™ื, ื•ืฉืžื•, ื‘ื ื—ืช. ื•ืฉืžื•, ื›ื•ืœื•. ื•ืฉืžื•, ืฉืœื ื™ืคื–ืจ:",
300
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ืชืœืชื ื‘ื‘ื™ ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ."
301
+ ]
302
+ ]
303
+ ],
304
+ "sectionNames": [
305
+ "Chapter",
306
+ "Mishnah",
307
+ "Comment"
308
+ ]
309
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Temurah/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,305 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Temurah",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Temurah",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืžืชืคื™ืกื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืฉืชื•ืคืกืช ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ืื ืืžืจ ื–ื• ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืื ืฉื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื ืฉื™ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ื”ืžื™ืจื” ืืฉื” ืชื•ืคืกืช ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ืคื™ื”. ื•ื”ื›ืœ ื“ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ื”ื›ื, ืœืืชื•ื™ื™ ื™ื•ืจืฉ ืฉืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืžื•ืจื™ืฉื• ื‘ื—ื™ื™ื•, ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ืชืžื•ืจื”: ",
10
+ "<b>ืœื ืฉืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืžื™ืจ</b> ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ:",
11
+ "<b>ืžื•ืžืจ.</b> ื ืชืคืกืช ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื•ืช:",
12
+ "<b>ื•ืกื•ืคื’ ืืช ื”ืืจื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ืœื•ืงื” ืขืœ ืœืื• ื“ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ, ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื•ื. ื“ืงื™ื™ืดืœ ื›ืœ ืœืื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืžืขืฉื” ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืžื™ืžืจ ื•ืžืงืœืœ ืืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื‘ืฉื: ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ, ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื” ื”ื•ื, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืงื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”. ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ืฉืื ื™ ื”ื›ื ืฉื”ืœืื• ื›ื•ืœืœ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืŸ ื”ืขืฉื” ืฉื‘ื•, ืฉื›ืœ ืžื™ืžืจ ืœื•ืงื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžื™ืžืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ื•ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื” ืœืœืื• ืœื ืžืงืจื™ ืœืื• ื”ื ื™ืชืง ืœืขืฉื”:",
13
+ "<b>ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืืช ืฉืœื”ืŸ.</b> ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœืขืฆืžื•, ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืชืคื™ืก ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
14
+ "<b>ืœื ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืœื ื‘ืืฉื.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื™ืงืจื™ื‘ ืœื•, ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื•, ื“ื”ื ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื—ืœืง ื‘ื•, ืืœื ืžืฉืขืช ื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš ื–ื•ื›ื” ื‘ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืชืคื™ืก ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•:",
15
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
16
+ "<b>ื•ื›ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืœื ื›ื•ืœื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื—ื™ื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ื•:",
17
+ "<b>ืžื” ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ื”ื ื•ื“ืื™ ืคืฉื™ื˜ื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื–ื•ื›ื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืœื ืžื”ืงื˜ืจืช ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš:",
18
+ "<b>ืžื” ืœื™ ืื™ื ื• ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื•ืืฉื ื›ื•ืณ:",
19
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื•.</b> ืžืงื™ืฉ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขืฆืžื•:",
20
+ "<b>ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื”.</b> ืขืœ ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
21
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ืœื ืชื—ื•ืœ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื•, ื ืชืคืก ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ืจืฉื•ืชื• ื—ืœื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืขืงื™ื‘ื:"
22
+ ],
23
+ [
24
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืขืœ ื”ืฆืืŸ ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”, ื•ืฆืืŸ ื•ื‘ืงืจ ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืงืจื•:",
25
+ "<b>ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข.</b> ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืจืข ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืื ื”ืžืจ ื™ืžื™ืจ ื•ื’ื•ืณ, ืืœืžื ื‘ืขืœื™ ืžื•ืžื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืื• ืจืข ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืชื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
26
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ื–ื”ื• ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืจืข ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื“ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื›ืœ ืฉืงื“ื ื”ืงื“ืฉื• ืืช ืžื•ืžื•. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ื ืžื•ืžื• ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื• ื“ืœื ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืžื“ื”ื•ื” ืžืฆื™ ืœืžื›ืชื‘ ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข ืื• ืจืข [ื‘ื•], ื•ื”ื•ื” ืžืฉืžืข [ืื• ืจืข] ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืœื ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ืœื ื‘ืจืข, ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื ื“ื›ืชื‘ ืจื—ืžื ื ืœืžื” ืœื™, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื˜ื•ื‘ ืžืขื™ืงืจื•, ืฉื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ ื”ื™ื” ืชื ื•ืฉื•ื‘ ื ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื, ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืจืข ืžืขื™ืงืจื•, ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืžื•ื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื•ืงื“ืฉ, ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
27
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ื“.</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชื—ืช ืืœื•:",
28
+ "<b>ื•ืฉื ื™ื.</b> ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ื“ ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืชื—ืช ื–ื•:",
29
+ "<b>ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
30
+ ],
31
+ [
32
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืจื™ื ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ. ืฉืื ืืžืจ ืชื”ื ืจื’ืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ืžืขื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื•, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ืจ:",
33
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืื ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืจื’ืœ ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื–ื•, ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ: ",
34
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื“ืงื•ื“ืฉ: ",
35
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื</b> ื“ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื‘ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœ ืงื•ื“ืฉ:",
36
+ "<b>ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื.</b> ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืจื’ืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื–ื•, ื—ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ืจ ื•ืคืฉื˜ื” ืœื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ื”ื•ื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื” ื›ื•ืœื” ื•ืงืจื™ื‘ื”:",
37
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ื›ื— ื‘ืื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
38
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ.</b> ื‘ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื›ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืจื’ืœื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
39
+ "<b>ื›ื•ืœื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื“ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ื˜ืณ) ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืชืŸ ืžืžื ื• ืœื”ืณ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื›ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื›ื•ืœื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื:"
40
+ ],
41
+ [
42
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืžื“ืžืข ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืกืื” ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืฉื ืคืœื” ืœืคื—ื•ืช ืžืžืื” ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื ื“ืžืขื•, ื•ื ืคืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืข ืœืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ, ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžืื” ืžืŸ ื”ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืกืื” ื–ื• ืฉืœ ื“ืžื•ืข, ื•ืœื ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžืื” ืกืื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืกืื” ืฉืœ ื“ืžื•ืข, ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื—ืฉื‘ืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืชืจื•ืžื” ืœืืกื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื™ื:",
43
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื—ื•ืžืฅ ืžื—ืžืฅ ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืขื™ืกื” ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืชื—ืžืฆื” ื‘ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื”ืจื™ ื›ื•ืœื” ืืกื•ืจื” ืœื–ืจื™ื. ื•ืื ื ืคืœ ืžืื•ืชื” ืขื™ืกื” ืœืชื•ืš ืขื™ืกื” ืื—ืจืช ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื—ืžืฆืชื”, ืื™ื ื” ืื•ืกืจืชื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”, ื•ืœื ืžืชืกืจื ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื ืคืœ ื‘ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืฉืื•ืจ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื”ืžืขื•ืจื‘ ื‘ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื—ืžืฅ ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื‘ืœื ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ื”ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ืžื“ื•ืžืขื™ื:",
44
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ.</b> ืžืงื•ื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืื™ื ืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื, ืžืžืœื ื‘ื›ืชืฃ ืชืฉืขื” ืขืฉืจ ืกืื™ืŸ ื•ืคื•ืชืงืŸ ืœืžืงื•ื” ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ื•ื”ืŸ ื˜ื”ื•ืจื™ื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื”, ื”ืฉืื™ื‘ื” ื›ืฉืจื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื‘ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืจื•ื‘ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ืกืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ื”ืžืงื•ื” ื›ืฉื”ืŸ ื“ืจืš ื”ืžืฉื›ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื”ืŸ ืขืฉืจื™ื ืกืื™ื ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื ืจื•ื‘ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื” ืžืžื™ ื’ืฉืžื™ื. ื›ืš ื ืจืื” ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉืชื™ื” ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ืคืจืง ืกืื” ืชืจื•ืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื, ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื›ืœื™ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื ืคืœื• ืœืžืงื•ื” ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ืคืœื• ืžืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืœื™ื, ืื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื™ื ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ื, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืงืืžืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืฉืื•ื‘ื™ื ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื” ืืœื ืœืคื™ ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ื”ื›ืœื™ื ืฉืžื”ืŸ ื ืคืœื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืžื™ื ืœืžืงื•ื”, ื•ืžื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ, ืื ื”ื ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื• ืคื—ื•ืช ืคื•ืกืœื™ื ืืช ื”ืžืงื•ื”. ื•ืื ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ื•ืœืžืขืœื”, ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื‘ืŸ ื—ื•ื ื™ ื”ื™ื ื“ื”ื•ื ืกื‘ืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ืœื•ื’ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืคืœื• ืžื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ืกืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืืœื ืขื ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ.</b> ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ืืคืจ ื ืขืฉื™ื ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ื”ืœื›ืš ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืžื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื•ืื—ืดื› ืืคืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืชืŸ ืืคืจ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ืžื™ื, ืคืกื•ืœ, ื“ื”ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉืขืช ืžืชืŸ ืืคืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืชื• ืœื ืžื™ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื˜:ื™ืดื–) ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื, ืœื ืฉื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืืคืจ, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื ืืœ ื›ืœื™, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื”ืžื™ื ื ืชื•ื ื™ื ืืœ ื”ื›ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืืœ [ื”ืืคืจ], ืืœื, ื•ื ืชืŸ ืขืœื™ื•, ืœื”ื–ื”ื™ืจ ืฉืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืชืŸ [ื”ืืคืจ] ืขืœ ื”ืžื™ื ื™ืขืจื‘ื ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขื• ื™ืคื” ื•ื™ื—ื–ื™ืจ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉืชื—ืชื™ื• ืขืœื™ื•:",
48
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก.</b> ืฉื“ื” ืฉื ื—ืจืฉ ื‘ื” ืงื‘ืจ, ืื ื—ื–ืจ ื•ื—ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ื•ืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืชื™ื•, ืœื ืžื—ื–ืงื™ื ืŸ ืœืฉืืจ ืฉื“ื•ืช ื›ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ืžื—ืจื™ืฉื” ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื” ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืœืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืกื‘ื™ื‘ื•ืชื™ื”, ื“ืงื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืคืจืก. ืืœื ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื“ื” ืฉืื‘ื“ ื‘ื” ื”ืงื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื, ื•ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืœื›ืืŸ ื•ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืœื›ืืŸ ืœืื•ืชื• ื“ืจืš ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ื‘ื ื™ ื”ื‘ืงืขื” ืœื—ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ, ืื ืœืžื–ืจื— ื•ืžืขืจื‘ ืื• ืฆืคื•ืŸ ื•ื“ืจื•ื, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื—ื“ ืžืฉื ื™ ืจืืฉื™ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื‘ืจ ื•ืžืฉื ื ืชื’ืœื’ืœ ื”ืขืฆื ืœืชื•ืš ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื“ื•ืช ืฉืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืžื›ืืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื™ืขืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื“ืžืœื•ื ื”ืžืขื ื” ืจืื•ื™ื•ืช ื”ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืœื™ื’ืœื’ืœ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืžื—ืจื™ืฉื”, ื˜ืคื™ ืœื. ื•ื›ืžื” ืžืœื•ื ืžืขื ื” ืžืื” ืืžื”:",
49
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื” ืื—ืจ ืชืจื•ืžื”.</b> ื”ืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ืฉืชืจืžื• ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ืชืจื•ืžื”, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ ื•ืชืจื, ื’ืœื™ ื“ืขืชื™ื” ื“ืœื ื ื™ื—ื ืœื™ื” ื‘ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ืœื™ื” ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืชื•ืจื ืฉืœื ืžื“ืขืช ื—ื‘ื™ืจื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื™. ื•ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื”ื™ื, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”. ืืœื ืื ืชืจื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžื—ืžืฉื™ื, ืื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชืจื•ืžื”. ื•ืื ืœื ืชืจื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืขื™ืŸ ืจืขื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืจื ืื—ื“ ืžืฉืฉื™ื, ืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชืจื•ืžื”:",
50
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ื•ืœื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืชืžื•ืจืชื•:",
51
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืœื ื”ื•ืœื“:",
52
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ื™ื”ื™ื”, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื”ื•ืœื“. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ื™ื”ื™ื”, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“, ืฉืื ืกื‘ืจ [ืœื”ืžื™ืจ] ืฉื—ื•ืจ [ื•ื”ืžื™ืจ] ืืช ื”ืœื‘ืŸ, ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ื˜ืขื•ืช, ื•ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืืขืดื’ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืžืžื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืื—ืช, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืžื” ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืขืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื–ื” ืื—ืจ ื–ื”, ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”:"
53
+ ],
54
+ [
55
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”.</b> ื•ืื ื”ืžืจ ื™ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
56
+ "<b>ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืื™ืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
57
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื”ืœื ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื”.</b> ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ื“ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื”ืœื›ืš ืœื ื ืคืงื ืœืŸ ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืืœื ืžื”ื›ื:",
58
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื™ื”.</b> ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื“ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
59
+ "<b>ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื™ื“ื™ื” ื“ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื ื™ื‘ืงืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืจืข ื•ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจื ื•:",
60
+ "<b>ืžื” ืžืขืฉืจ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“.</b> ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืืฃ ื›ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
61
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืฉื•ืชืคื™ืŸ. ื“ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื™ืชื™ื” ื‘ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช, ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ื‘ืชืจื ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช [ื“ืฃ ื›ืดื•], ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœืš ื•ืœื ืฉืœ ืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช:",
62
+ "<b>ื™ืฆืื• ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช.</b> ื“ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื›ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื) ื•ื ืงืจื‘ ืืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืณ ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ืžืฆื ื›ืœื™ ื–ื”ื‘, ืื™ื ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื›ืžืขืฉืจ. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืœืขื™ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื ืืงืจื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืกื‘ืจื™, ื ื”ื™ ื“ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืณ ืืงืจื•, ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื”ืณ ืœื ืืงืจื• ื›ืฉืืจ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืžื–ื‘ื—:"
63
+ ]
64
+ ],
65
+ [
66
+ [
67
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“.</b> ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืืœื ื‘ื–ื›ืจื™ื. ื“ืจื•ื‘ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช, ื•ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืืœื ื›ื‘ืฉื™ ืขืฆืจืช ื“ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื”ืŸ, ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉืœื”ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืฉืขื™ืจ ื—ื˜ืืช ืื—ื“:",
68
+ "<b>ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชืŸ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ื™ืฉ ืžืื•ืชืŸ ืฉืงื‘ื•ืข ืœื”ืŸ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ื•ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืข, ืื ืขื‘ืจ ืฉืžื™ื ื™ ืฉืœื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื–ืžืŸ, ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื–ืžื ืŸ ื‘ื˜ืœ ืงืจื‘ื ืŸ:",
69
+ "<b>ืžืฉืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉืื ืงืจื‘ ื”ื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืœื ืงืจื‘ื• ื ืกื›ื™ื• ืขืžื•, ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื ืืคื™ืœื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืขื“ ืขืฉืจื” ื™ืžื™ื. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืคื ื—ืก ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื•ืžื ื—ืชื ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื”ื ืœืคืจื™ื, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ืžื ื—ืชื ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืงืจื‘ื™ื ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืžื—ืจ, ืื ืงืจื‘ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื‘ื–ืžื ื• ื•ืœื ื ื–ื“ืžื ื• ืœื”ื ืžื ื—ื•ืช ื•ื ืกื›ื™ื, ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืฉื™ื–ื“ืžื ื• ืœื”ืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ื›ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื:",
70
+ "<b>ื—ื‘ื™ืชื™ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ.</b> ื“ื•ื—ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื• ืžื ื—ืช ืชืžื™ื“, ื”ืจื™ ืœืš ื›ืžื ื—ื” ืฉืœ ืชืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื“ื‘ืชืžื™ื“ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื•, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ื• ืืฃ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช, ืืฃ ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”, ืฉืื ื”ื™ื• ืจื•ื‘ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื˜ื•ืžืื”:",
71
+ "<b>ืคืจ ื™ื•ื”ืดื›.</b> ืคืจื• ืฉืœ ื›ื”ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœ:",
72
+ "<b>ืืœื ืฉื–ืžื ืŸ ืงื‘ื•ืข</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ืขื ืชืœื•ื™ ืืœื ื‘ืงื‘ื™ืขื•ืช ื”ื–ืžืŸ, ื“ื›ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฉื–ืžื ื• ืงื‘ื•ืข ื•ืื ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืชืฉืœื•ืžื™ื, ื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื•ื˜ื•ืžืื”. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืžืื™ืจ:"
73
+ ],
74
+ [
75
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื•.</b> ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”:",
76
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
77
+ "<b>ืื™ื ืŸ ืžืชื•ืช.</b> ื“ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ื”ืžืชื•ืช ื”ืœื›ื” ืœืžืฉื” ืžืกื™ื ื™ ื”ื™ื, ื•ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ืœืชื ื ืงืžื ื“ืœื™ื—ื™ื“ ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื•ืœื ืœืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ:",
78
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื™ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ื‘ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื ืžื™ ื’ืžื™ืจื™:",
79
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ืžืฆื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื—ืžืฉ ื—ื˜ืื•ืช ืžืชื•ืช, ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื”, ื•ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”, ื•ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืชืœืช ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ืœืื• ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื’ืžื™ืจื™, ื“ื”ื ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื”ื• ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื ืžื™ ืื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”, ื•ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ืŸ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืžืชื™ื:",
80
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื•ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”.</b> ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืคืฉืจ ื“ืžืฉืชื›ื—ื™ ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ, ืœื ื’ืžื™ืจื™ ื“ืžืชื•ืช:",
81
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืžื•ืจื™ื, ื“ืžืชื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืฆื‘ื•ืจ.</b> ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื“ืชืžื•ืจืชื• ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื ื•ืœื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืชืžื•ืจืชื•:",
85
+ "<b>ืื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ื ืœื ืžืžื™ืจื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื›ืชื™ื‘:",
86
+ "<b>ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข.</b> ืฉืื ื”ืžื™ืจ ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ืชืžื™ืžื” ืฉืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืžื•ืจื” ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืฉืื ื™ืคื“ื•ื” ืœื ืชืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื™ื’ื–ื– ื•ืœื™ืขื‘ื“ ืืœื ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืงื“ื ื”ืงื“ืฉืŸ ืืช ืžื•ืžืŸ ืฉื›ืฉืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื™ืชืจ ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืืœื ื”ื™ืชืจ ืื›ื™ืœื”, ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืื ืงื“ื ืžื•ืžืŸ ืœื”ืงื“ื™ืฉืŸ ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืขืดื™ ืคื“ื™ื•ืŸ ืœื™ื’ื–ื– ื•ืœื™ืขื‘ื“, ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื” ื’ืœื™ ืงืจื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืจืข ืื• ืจืข ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘, ืœื ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืชื ืœื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื:",
87
+ "<b>ืขืฉื” ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“ ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ืฉืื ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื•ืจ ืฉื—ื•ืจ ืฉื™ืฆื ืžื‘ื™ืชื™ ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื™ื”ื ืชืžื•ืจื” ืชื—ืช ื–ื•, ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืคื™ื• ืฉื•ืจ ืœื‘ืŸ, ื’ื‘ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ื’ืœื™ ื‘ื™ื” ืงืจื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืงื•ื“ืฉ, ืœืจื‘ื•ืช ืฉื•ื’ื’ ื›ืžื–ื™ื“. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื›ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ื ื ืœืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืื ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื”ื•ื, ืœืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืœื•ืงื”, ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื˜ืขื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ:",
88
+ "<b>ื”ื›ืœืื™ื.</b> ื”ื‘ื ืžืชื™ืฉ ื•ืจื—ืœ:",
89
+ "<b>ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ืชืžื•ืจื” ื—ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื” ืขืœ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ืงื‘ื•ืข, ืื™ื ื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœ ืืœื•:",
90
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ื.</b> ืื—ืจื™ื ื‘ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืื ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื. ื•ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ื˜ืจืคื”, ื•ื‘ื–ื• ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืืขืดืค ืฉืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื”ื™ื, ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืœืื™ื ื•ื˜ื•ืžื˜ื•ื ื•ืื ื“ืจื•ื’ื™ื ื•ืก, ืžืชื—ืœืช ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชืŸ ื ืชืงืœืงืœื• ื•ืื™ ืืชื” ืžื•ืฆื ื‘ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืืœื ื‘ื•ืœื“ื™ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ืฉืงื“ืฉื” ืืžื ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืžืืœื™ื”ืŸ ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื“ื™ืจืš ืืžืŸ ื”ืŸ, ื•ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืืœื™ื‘ื ื“ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื•ืœื“ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืœื ื“ืžื• ืœื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื, ื“ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฉ ื‘ืžื™ื ื• ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ืš ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืžื™ื ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื›ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ, ื“ืœื™ื›ื ืžืืŸ ื“ืคืœื™ื’ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ื”ื:"
91
+ ]
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ [
95
+ "<b>ืืœื• ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื•ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื. ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืชื ื™ ื•ื•ืœื“ืŸ, ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœืžื” ืœื™. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืฉืžืขื™ื” ืชื ื ื“ื™ื“ืŸ ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื“ืืžืจ ืœืงืžืŸ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื, ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ื™ ืชื ื ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืœื ืžื™ื‘ืขื™ื ื‘ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื“ืœื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ืœืš, ืืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœื ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื ืœืš:",
96
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืืœื ื›ื•ื ืกื• ืœื›ื™ืคื” ื•ืžืช. ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ. ืžืฉื•ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื”, ื“ืื™ ืืžืจืช ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืชืงื ื”, ืืชื™ ืœืฉื”ื•ื™ื™ ืœืื ืขื“ ืฉืชืœื“ ื•ื™ื’ื“ืœ ืขื“ืจื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ื•ืืชื• ื‘ื”ื• ืœื™ื“ื™ ื’ื™ื–ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื”:",
97
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืœืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื‘ื•ืœื“ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘, ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ืชื• ื ื™ื›ืจืช ืžืชื•ืš ืžืขืฉื™ื• ื“ืœื’ื“ืœ ืขื“ืจื™ื ื‘ืขื™. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืชื ื ืงืžื ืฉื•ืœื“ (ื•ืœื“) ื•ืœื“ืŸ ืขื“ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
98
+ "<b>ื”ืขื™ื“ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื“ืœื ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ. ื•ืขื“ื•ืช ื–ื” ืืžืช ื•ื”ืœื›ื”:",
99
+ "<b>ื•ืื›ืœื ื• ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื—ื’.</b> ื‘ื—ื’ ื”ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืื ื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ื•ืžืฆืคื” ืœื—ื’ ื”ืกื•ื›ื•ืช, ื ืžืฆื ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขืฉื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ-ื•ืณ) ื•ื‘ืืช ืฉืžื” ื•ื”ื‘ืืชื ืฉืžื”, ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืจื’ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืชื‘ื•ื ืฉืžื”, ืชื‘ื™ื ื›ืœ ื ื“ืจื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ืš. ืžื™ื”ื• ื‘ืœืื• ื“ืœื ืชืื—ืจ ืื™ื ื• ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขื‘ืจื• ืขืœื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ืจื’ืœื™ื:"
100
+ ],
101
+ [
102
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืชื•ื“ื”.</b> ืื™ืžื•ืจื™ื”ืŸ ืงืจื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื ืื›ืœ ืœื™ื•ื ื•ืœื™ืœื”:",
103
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืœื—ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืขืœ ืœื—ื ื”ืชื•ื“ื”, ื”ืชื•ื“ื” ืขืฆืžื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื” ืœื—ื, ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื” ื•ืชืžื•ืจืชื” ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ืœื—ื:",
104
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื™ืจ ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืขื•ืœื”:",
105
+ "<b>ื•ื•ืœื“ ืชืžื•ืจืชื”.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื™ืจ ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื ืงื‘ื” ืžืชืงื“ืฉืช ื‘ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ื™ืœื“ื” ื”ืชืžื•ืจื” ื–ื›ืจ:"
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื•ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืงืชื ื™ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืขื•ืœื” ื’ื‘ื™ ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืื• ืืœื• ื›ื•ืœื ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื”ื•ื ืงืจื‘, ื“ื–ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืขื•ืœื”, ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื‘ืื™ื ืžื›ื•ื—ื• ื ืงื‘ื” ื”ื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ื ื• ื›ืขื•ืœื” ืืœื ื™ืžื›ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื• ืขื•ืœื”:",
109
+ "<b>ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืืฉื.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ืืฉื ื‘ื ืžืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ื”:",
110
+ "<b>ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘.</b> ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื•ืœ ื‘ื” ืžื•ื. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ื‘ืœื ืžื•ื, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœืžืœืชื™ื” ืžื•ื ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื–ื” ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™, ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืืฉื. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ื—ืช ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื“ืžื™ื, ื ื—ืชื” ืœื” ื ืžื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ืœื”ื ืžืœืชื ื“ื‘ืขื™ื ืŸ ืžื•ื:",
111
+ "<b>ืื ืงืจื‘ ืืฉืžื•.</b> ื•ืชื• ืœื ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืืฉื:",
112
+ "<b>ื™ืคืœื• ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ืœืฉื•ืคืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ ืฉืžื”ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ: ",
113
+ "<b>ืชืžื›ืจ ืฉืœื ื‘ืžื•ื</b> ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœืืฉื ืื™ืŸ ืœืš ืžื•ื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžื–ื”, ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ืฃ ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืืฉื. ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื’ื‘ื™ ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ืœืขื•ืœื” ืœื ืคืœื™ื’ ืจืดืฉ ื“ื‘ืขื™ื ืžื•ื, ื”ืชื ื”ื•ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ืฉื ืขื•ืœื” ื‘ื ืงื‘ื”, ื“ืืฉื›ื—ืŸ ืขื•ืœืช ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืฃ, ืื‘ืœ ืืฉื ื ืงื‘ื” ืœื ืžืฆื™ื ื•, ื”ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื•ืžื ื•ืœื ืงื“ืฉื” ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืฉ:",
114
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืืฉื ื•ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื›ื•ืœืŸ ื™ืจืขื•, ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื”ื™ื ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ื‘ืืฉื ืจื•ืขื”, ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื”:",
115
+ "<b>ื™ืžื•ืชื•.</b> ื“ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืœืจืดื ื›ื—ื˜ืืช ื›ืืฉื, ืžื” ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ืืฃ ื‘ืืฉื ืžืชื”:",
116
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ืขื•ืœื•ืช.</b> ื“ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืื–ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ:",
117
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ืื• ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืื—ืจ.</b> ื“ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื•ืช, ื•ื‘ืืฉื ื™ืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘:"
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื ืืฃ ื”ื ื“ื‘ื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื™ ืงืžืคืจืฉ ืžืื™ ื‘ื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•:",
121
+ "<b>ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืื” ื—ื•ื‘ื”.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื•ื˜ืœืช ืขืœ ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื”. ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื” ื›ื•ืณ:",
122
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ื”ืŸ.</b> ืื•ืชื• ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืืฉื ื•ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจ ื•ื ืชืงื• ืœืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืจืขื™ื™ื”:",
123
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื”.</b> ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืงื ื•ื™ื” ืžื“ืžื™ ืื•ืชื• ืืฉื, ืฉืœื• ื”ื™ื, ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืงืจื™ื‘ื” ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ืขื•ืจ, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฉืžืจ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœ ืื•ืชื” ืฉื‘ืช:",
124
+ "<b>ืื™ื ื• ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื”.</b> ื“ื ื“ื‘ืช ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกืžื™ื›ื”:",
125
+ "<b>ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื” ื•ืขื•ืจื” ืœืื ืฉื™ ืžืฉืžืจ.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืฉืœ ืฆื‘ื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ื”ืŸ ืฉืœ ืžืฉืžืจ ืื—ืจ ืจืฉืื™ ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื—) ืœื‘ื“ ืžืžื›ืจื™ื• ืขืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ืžื” ืฉืžื›ืจื• ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื˜ื•ืœ ืืชื” ืืช ืฉื‘ืชืš ื•ืื ื™ ืื˜ื•ืœ ืืช ืฉื‘ืชื™. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
126
+ ],
127
+ [
128
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ื›ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื”, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื ืฉื—ื˜ื™ื ื‘ืื™ื˜ืœื™ืก, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืฉื•ืง ืฉืžื•ื›ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื•ื ื•ื ืคื“ื•:",
129
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืจื”, ื“ื“ืžื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ื“ืžื™ ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื ืื” ื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืœื ืžื–ืœื–ืœื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
130
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืœืืจืฅ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืžืขืฉืจ.</b> ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ื ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ, ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื ืœืงืžืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื‘ืื• ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ื™ืงืจื‘ื•:",
131
+ "<b>ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ:",
132
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžื” ื˜ืขื.</b> ืฉื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื”ืžืขืฉืจ ืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืŸ ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ื›ืฉืืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื:",
133
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืคืจื ืกื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ.</b> ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ืชืงื ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืจืขื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกืชืื‘ื• ื•ื™ืื›ืœื• ื‘ืžื•ืžืŸ ืœื‘ืขืœื™ื:",
134
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืคืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืžื•ื ื”ืจื™ ื”ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืŸ, ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืืชื” ืœืคื“ื•ืชืŸ ื•ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ืŸ, ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืกื•ืคืŸ ืœื”ืขืœื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ, ื™ืขืœื• ื”ืŸ ืขืฆืžืŸ ื•ื™ืงืจื‘ื•. ื•ืคืกืง ื”ื”ืœื›ื”, ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ืฉืขืœื• ืžื—ื•ืฆื” ืœืืจืฅ ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘ื•, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื“:ื›ืดื’) ื•ืื›ืœืช ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืณ ืืœื”ื™ืš ื•ื’ื•ืณ ืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ื ืš ืชื™ืจื•ืฉืš ื•ื™ืฆื”ืจืš ื•ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืงืจืš ื•ืฆืื ืš, ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ืžืขืฉืจ ื•ื“ื’ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ืจ, ื•ืžืžืงื•ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ืŸ, ืื™ืŸ ืืชื” ืžืขืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื•ืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื ืžื™ ืืชืงืฉ ืœืžืขืฉืจ ื“ื’ืŸ:"
135
+ ]
136
+ ],
137
+ [
138
+ [
139
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช.</b> ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื”. ืœื ื—ื–ื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื” ื—ื˜ืืช, ื“ื‘ืช ืฉื ืชื” ื›ืชื™ื‘. ืžื™ื”ื• ืžืฉื•ื ื”ืื™ ืคืกื•ืœื ืœื—ื•ื“ื™ื” ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื”, ืืœื ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ ืขื“ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ืœืจื™ืขื•ืชื, ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืžืชืจืฅ ืœืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ืžืจื, ื“ื”ืื™ ื•ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื“ืงืชื ื™, ืขื•ืœื” ืœื›ืืŸ ื•ืœื›ืืŸ, ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืงืืžืจ, ืฉืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ื•ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ื” ืžื•ื:",
140
+ "<b>ืื ืžืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ืื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ื–ืืช ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
141
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืขืœื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืคืจืงื™ืŸ ื•ืืžืจื™ ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื˜ืืช ืžืชื” ืืœื ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื“ื•, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ืœืจื™ืขื•ืชื, ื“ืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ื•ืื‘ื“ื”, ืื• ืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื. ืื‘ืœ ืื‘ื“ื” ืœื—ื•ื“ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”, ืืขืดื’ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื” ืืœื ืชืจืขื”:",
142
+ "<b>ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ:",
143
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืื ื ื”ื ื• ืžื”ืŸ, ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ื ืžืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžืขื™ืœื”. ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื”ื™ื ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ื” ืงืจื‘ื™ื, ืื–ืœื ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื”:",
144
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืขื“ ืฉืœื ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื.</b> ืฉืœื ืจืฆื• ืœื”ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
145
+ "<b>ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘.</b> ื•ืืขื‘ืจื” ืฉื ืชื” ืงืื™. ื“ืื•ืชื” ืฉืื‘ื“ื” ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื, ืชืžื›ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช:",
146
+ "<b>ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”.</b> ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื“ืžื™ื” ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืœื™ืงืจื‘. ื“ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืจืขื” ื•ื™ืกืชืื‘ ืขื•ืฉื” ืชืžื•ืจื”:"
147
+ ],
148
+ [
149
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืžืฆืืช ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืชืžื•ืช.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
150
+ "<b>ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—.</b> ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ ื”ื•ื™ื ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื•ื™ื ืžืชื”, ืžืขื•ืช ื ืžื™ ืื–ืœื™ ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—:"
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ "<b>ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžืืœื• ื•ืžืืœื•.</b> ื™ืขืจื‘ื ื™ื—ื“. ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืžื™ื™ืชื™, ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช ืื‘ืœ ืื™ ื”ื•ื” ืžื™ื™ืชื™ ืžื—ื“ ืžื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžื“ื—ื• ืื—ืจื™ื ื™, ื“ื”ื•ื• ืœื”ื• ื“ืžื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ืฉื›ื™ืคืจื• ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื‘ืื—ืจืช:",
154
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉืืจ ื™ืคืœ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืœื ื“ื‘ื”.</b> ื“ื”ื•ื• ื›ืฉืืจ ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืฉืœ ื—ื˜ืืช ื“ืื–ืœื™ ืœื ื“ื‘ื”:",
155
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืจื™ ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืขืœืช ืžื•ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ืชืžื™ืžื”, ืชื™ืงืจื‘ ื”ื™ื ื•ื”ืžืขื•ืช ื™ืœื›ื• ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื›ื™ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ืืœื™ื‘ื ื“ืจื‘ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ื ืš ืžืขื•ืช ื“ื ืžืฆืื• ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”, ืื–ืœื™ ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—:",
156
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ื” ืชืžื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื™ ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•ืณ</b> ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ืฉืื‘ื•ื“ื” ืžืชื”. ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ื‘ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ื“ืจื‘ื™ ืกื‘ืจ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืœืื‘ื•ื“ ื›ืื‘ื•ื“ ื“ืžื™, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืชื—ืช ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืื‘ื•ื“, ื“ื™ื ื• ื›ืื‘ื•ื“. ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืื ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื• ืื‘ื•ื“, ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ ื”ื ืฉืืจ ื›ืฉื™ืžืฆื ื“ื™ื ื• ืฉื™ืžื•ืช. ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ื›ื™ ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื™ื, ื™ืœื›ื• ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืื‘ื•ื“ื™ื ืœื™ื ื”ืžืœื—. ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืžืคืจื™ืฉ ืœืื‘ื•ื“ ื›ืื‘ื•ื“ ื“ืžื™. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื”ืžืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื ืฉืืจื”, ื”ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ืžืชื” ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื ืžืฆืืช ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืคืจื”. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื ืฉืืจื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืื‘ื•ื“ื”, ืื™ื ื” ืžืชื”, ืืœื ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ื—ื›ืžื™ื:"
157
+ ],
158
+ [
159
+ "<b>ืžื•ื›ืจื” ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ื” ืื—ืจืช.</b> ื“ืžื›ื™ ืžื›ืจื” ืœืื—ืจ, ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื™ื ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื. ืื‘ืœ ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื‘ืขืœื” ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจ ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืกื‘ืจ, ื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืขื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชื›ืคืจื• ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืื—ืจืช, ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื‘ืขืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ ืื—ืจื™ื, ืชืžื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืจื‘ื™ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
160
+ ]
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ [
164
+ "<b>ื›ื™ืฆื“ ืžืขืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจ.</b> ืœื”ืคืงื™ืขื• ืžื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ื• ืœื—ื•ื‘ืชื•:",
165
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“ื” ื–ื›ืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื“ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืœื ืžืจื—ื, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžืขื™ืงืจื ืืชืคืกื™ื” ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื, ืชื• ืœื ื—ื™ื™ืœื ืขืœื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื”:",
166
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื ืงื‘ื” ื–ื‘ื—ื™ ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ืœืื• ื‘ืžื‘ื›ืจืช ืžื™ื™ืจื™, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจื” ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืขืจื•ืžื™ ืขืœื”. ืืœื ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื“ืื ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ื™ื ื•ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ื•ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืขืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืœืš ืœืžื™ืชื”, ื“ื•ืœื“ ื—ื˜ืืช ืœืžื™ืชื” ืื–ื™ืœ, ื™ืฉื ื”ื• ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจืช. [ื•ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ] ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ืงื“ืฉื• ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžืŸ, ืžืฆื™ ืœืืจื›ื•ื‘ื™ ืขืœื™ื™ื”ื• ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืื—ืจื™ืชื™, ื“ืœื›ื™ ืžืชื™ืœื™ื“ ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื˜ืืช:"
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>ื™ืœื“ื” ืฉื ื™ ื–ื›ืจื™ื.</b> ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžื™ื™ืจื™. ื“ืื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื, ื”ื™ืืš ื“ืืงื“ื™ืฉื” ืขื•ืœื” ืœื”ื•ื™ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืื™ื“ืš ืงืื™ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื” ื“ืืžื™ื”. ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ืžื™ื• ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื—ืœื” ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ื”ื ืืžืจ ืื ื–ื›ืจ ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ื ื“ืจ ืืœื ื—ื“ื, ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ืงืจื‘ ื”ืื—ื“ ืœื ื“ืจื• ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื™ืžื›ืจ ืœืฆืจื›ื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื“ืžื™ื• ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
170
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื—ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื”ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืœื ืžืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื ืš ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืจื—ื ืื™ื ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืœื ืงื“ืฉื™. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืขืœ ืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื•ืกื‘ืจื™ ื“ื•ืœื“ื•ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžืŸ ืงื™ื™ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ืŸ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ:"
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืขืœ ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช:",
174
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ื” ืฉืœ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืจื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ื•ืœื“ ืงื“ืžื”. ืื‘ืœ ืืžืจ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื, ืœื” ื•ืœื›ืœ ื“ืื™ืช ื‘ื” ืืงื“ืฉื”, ื•ื”ื•ื™ ื›ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืฉืชื™ ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืœืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”, ื”ื•ื™ ื”ื•ืœื“ ืฉืœืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื›ื ืœื ืฉื™ื™ืš ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื•ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื“ื›ื™ ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขื™ ืืžืŸ, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื‘ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื”, ื“ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ืืชืคืกื™ื” ืœืขื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื•ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื”, ืืœื ืžืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืืžื™ื” ืงื ืงื“ื™ืฉ. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืœืงื‘ื•ืœื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื”. ื•ืจืณ ืžืื™ืจ ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืชืคื•ืก ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ: ",
175
+ "<b>ืื ืœื›ืš ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืžืชื—ืœื”</b> ื›ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืœื•ืœื“ื”:",
176
+ "<b>ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืฉื ื™ ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืื—ืช.</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืคื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืื—ืช:",
177
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืฃ ื‘ื’ืžืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืื“ื ื ืชืคืก:",
178
+ "<b>ื ืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืœื“ื” ืขื•ืœื”, ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืืžื• ืœืฉืœืžื™ื ืœื ื ืชื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ืœื“ ืขื•ืœื”. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื›ืœ ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื›ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื“ืžื™, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื•ืžื™ืžืจ ื•ืžื’ื“ืฃ ื•ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื•ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ืžื’ืจืฉ, ื“ื”ื ืš ืฉืฉื” ืื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื–ืจื” ืžื•ืขืœืช ื‘ื”ืŸ ืืขืดืค ืฉื—ื–ืจ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืš ื›ื“ื™ ื“ื‘ื•ืจ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
179
+ ],
180
+ [
181
+ "<b>ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื.</b> ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื•ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื:",
182
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ื“ืชืคื•ืก ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ:",
183
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืงื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ.</b> ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืชืžื•ืจืช ืฉืœืžื™ื. ื•ื”ืื™ ื“ืœื ืงืืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื•ืืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ ืืžื™ื ื ืชืžื•ืจืช ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ืชื”ื™ื” ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืœื ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืื™ื ื” ืงืจื™ื‘ื”, ื•ื˜ืขื” ื‘ื”ื›ื™ ื•ืกื‘ืจ ืื™ืžืจ ืชืžื•ืจื” ืื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืชื”ื•ื™ ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื’ืžื•ืจื” ืœื™ืงืจื‘, ื”ืœื›ืš ืืขืดื’ ื“ืืžืจ ื›ื™ ื”ืื™ ืœื™ืฉื ื, ืœืชืจื•ื•ื™ื™ื”ื• ืื›ื•ื™ืŸ, ื•ืชืจืขื” ืขื“ ืฉืชืกืชืื‘ ื•ืชืžื›ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื‘ื“ืžื™ ื—ืฆื™ื” ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื‘ื”ื›ื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ื• ืขื•ืœื” ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื›ืฉื”ืžื™ืจ ืืช ื–ื• ื‘ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ื™ื•ืกื™:"
184
+ ],
185
+ [
186
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื–ื• ื—ืœื™ืคืช ื–ื• ืชืžื•ืจืช ื–ื•.</b> ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื” ื”ืŸ:",
187
+ "<b>ืžื—ื•ืœืœืช.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื™ืœื•ืœ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžืช ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืชืžื™ืžื” ื™ื•ืฆืื” ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
188
+ "<b>ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื ื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ.</b> ืืขืดืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉื•ื” ื›ืžื• ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื‘ืขืœ ืžื•ื. ื“ื“ื‘ืจ ืชื•ืจื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืฉื•ื” ืžืื” ืžื ื” ืฉื—ืœืœื• ืขืœ ืฉื•ื” ืคืจื•ื˜ื”, ืžื—ื•ืœืœ. ื•ืืขืดืค ืฉื™ืฆื ืœื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื”, ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื“ืžื™ื ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื“ืžื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ืชืื ื” ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ืื‘ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื ืื” ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื”:ื™ืดื“) ืืœ ืชื•ื ื• ืื™ืฉ ืืช ืื—ื™ื•, ืื—ื™ื• ื•ืœื ื”ืงื“ืฉ:"
189
+ ],
190
+ [
191
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ืื• ืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืกืชื ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื• ืื• ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื•:",
192
+ "<b>ืœื ืืžืจ ื›ืœื•ื.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื–) ืœื ื™ื—ืœื™ืคื ื• ื•ืœื ื™ืžื™ืจ ืื•ืชื•, ืขื“ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื™ื“ื•ืข ื•ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ ื›ืฉืžืžื™ืจ ื‘ื•:",
193
+ "<b>ืชื—ืช ื—ื˜ืืช ื–ื•.</b> ื•ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื˜ืืช ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœืคื ื™ื•:",
194
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืœืขื•ืœื”.</b> ืžืฉืžืข ืœื“ืžื™ ืขื•ืœื”. ื“ืื™ ืื™ื ื”ื• ื’ื•ืคื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืงืจื•ื‘ื™, ื”ื•ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืขื•ืœื”:"
195
+ ]
196
+ ],
197
+ [
198
+ [
199
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉื”ืŸ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”. ื•ืงื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืœื”ื• ื•ืื–ื™ืœ:",
200
+ "<b>ืื•ืกืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื”ืŸ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื ืชืขืจื‘ื• ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืœืฃ ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ืื ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ื›ืจ. ื•ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื“ืื™ืŸ ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื“ืœื ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ื ื™ื›ืจืช ืืœื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืชืขืจื‘ื” ื“ืจื•ืกืช ื”ืืจื™ ื•ื”ื–ืื‘ ื‘ื ืงื•ื‘ืช ื”ืงื•ืฅ:",
201
+ "<b>ื”ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื”ื ืจื‘ืข ื•ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“.</b> ืคืกื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื›ืดื”) ื›ื™ ืžืฉื—ืชื ื‘ื”ื ืžื•ื ื‘ื, ื•ืชื ื™ื, ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืฉื—ืชื ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืขืจื•ื” ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ืขืจื•ื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื•ืณ:ื™ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื”ืฉื—ื™ืช ื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ืืช ื“ืจื›ื•. ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ืค ื“ืณ) ืคืŸ ืชืฉื—ื™ืชื•ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื™ืชื ืœื›ื ืคืกืœ. ื•ืจื•ื‘ืข ื•ื ืจื‘ืข ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืจื•ื‘ืข ืื• ื ืจื‘ืข ืขืœ ืคื™ ืขื“ ืื—ื“ ืื• ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื“ืื™ื ื” ื ืกืงืœืช ื‘ื›ืš ืื‘ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืŸ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ:",
202
+ "<b>ืžื•ืงืฆื”.</b> ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื”ืงืฆื•ื” ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ืคืกื•ืœื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ื‘ื” ืžืขืฉื” ืœืฉื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื• ื”ื›ื•ืžืจื™ื ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืจ ืื• ื’ื–ื–ื•ื”ื• ืื ื”ื•ื ืฉื”:",
203
+ "<b>ื•ื ืขื‘ื“.</b> ืื™ื ื• ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืืขืดืค ืฉืขื‘ื“ื•ื”ื•, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ ื—ื™ื™ื ื ืืกืจื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืื” ื›ืฉืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ืื•ืชืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ื ืคืกืœื™ื ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
204
+ "<b>ื•ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ.</b> ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื ืคืกืœื™ื ื”ื• ืงืจื (ืฉื ื›ืดื’) ืœื ืชื‘ื™ื ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื” ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘:",
205
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœืื™ื.</b> ืชื™ืฉ ื”ื‘ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœ ื”ืจื—ืœ:",
206
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืขืฉืจ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื–:ืœืดื‘) ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืชื—ืช ื”ืฉื‘ื˜, ืคืจื˜ ืœื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื•ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืžืžืขืฉืจ ื‘ื”ืžื”:",
207
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืงืจืขื” ืืžื• ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืš ื”ื“ื•ืคืŸ. ื•ืžืขื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืฉื ื›ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื™ื•ืœื“, ืคืจื˜ ืœื™ื•ืฆื ื“ื•ืคืŸ:",
208
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ.</b> ืœืžื–ื‘ื—:",
209
+ "<b>ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืžื•ืชืจ.</b> ื“ื”ื ืœื ื ืขื‘ื“:",
210
+ "<b>ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื• ืืกื•ืจ.</b> ื”ื•ื ืืกื•ืจ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ืžื•ืชืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื”, ื›ื“ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ืกืžื•ืš. ื•ืžื” ืฉืขืœื™ื•, ืชื›ืฉื™ื˜ื™ื ืฉืขืœื™ื•, ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืื” ืฉื”ืจื™ ื ืขื‘ื“ื• ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชืคื™ืกืช ื™ื“ื™ ืื“ื:",
211
+ "<b>ื–ื” ื•ื–ื”.</b> ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” ื•ื”ื ืขื‘ื“:"
212
+ ],
213
+ [
214
+ "<b>ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื”.</b> ืื—ืช ื ื›ืจื™ืช ื•ืื—ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ืช, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืชื”ื™ื” ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ ื›ืจื™ืชื•ืช ื•ืžื™ืชื•ืช ื‘ื™ืช ื“ื™ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ืืชื ืŸ ืฉืœ ืคื ื•ื™ื” ื•ื”ื™ื ื™ืฉืจืืœื™ืช ืื™ื ื• ืคืกื•ืœ ืœืžื–ื‘ื—, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื”, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืืกืจื” ืœื›ื”ื•ื ื” ื‘ื‘ื™ืื” ื–ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ืืชื ืŸ ืฉื ืชื ื” ืืฉื” ืœืื™ืฉ, ืื™ื ื• ืคืกื•ืœ. ืื‘ืœ ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื›ืจ, ืคืกื•ืœ:",
215
+ "<b>ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื” ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืืกื•ืจื™ื.</b> ื”ืชื ื” ืขืžื” ืœืชืช ืœื” ื˜ืœื” ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืชื ื ื” ื•ืฉืœื— ืœื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืื”, ืœื ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื—ื“ ื“ืืชื ื™ ืขืžื” ื”ื•ื™ ืืชื ืŸ ื•ื”ื ืš ืื—ืจื™ื ื™ ื›ื•ืœื ืžืชื ื”, ืืœื ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื—ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ืืชื ืŸ ื•ืืกื•ืจื™ืŸ:",
216
+ "<b>ื•ืชืœื™ืŸ ืฉืคื—ืชืš ืืฆืœ ืขื‘ื“ื™.</b> ื‘ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ืžื™ื™ืจื™, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฉื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ืจื‘ื• ืœืžืกื•ืจ ืœื• ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ืžืžื ื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ืœื• ืืฉื” ืžืชื—ืœื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ืืชื ื ื” ืืกื•ืจ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื“ืืžืจ ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ืืชื ืŸ, ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ืกื‘ืจื, ื“ื•ื“ืื™ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืืฉื” ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ืกืจ ืœื• ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช. ืื™ ื ืžื™, ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืช ืœื™ื” ื”ืื™ ืกื‘ืจื, ืกื‘ืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ ื”ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ืœืœื• ื‘ืฉืคื—ื” ื›ื ืขื ื™ืช, ืœื ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™:"
217
+ ],
218
+ [
219
+ "<b>ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ืื—ื“ ื ื˜ืœ ืชืฉืขื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ื•ื›ืœื‘.</b> ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื—ื‘ืจื•. ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื˜ืœืื™ื ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืชืฉืขื” ื•ื›ืœื‘, ื›ื•ืœื ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘. ื•ื”ืชืฉืขื” ืฉืขื ื”ื›ืœื‘ ืžื•ืชืจื™ื. ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืคืจื™ืš, ืืžืื™ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ื›ืœื‘ ื›ื•ืœื ืืกื•ืจื™ื, ื ื™ืคื•ืง ื—ื“ ืœื”ื“ื™ ื›ืœื‘ื ื•ื”ื ืš ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ืœื™ืฉืชืจื•. ื•ืžืฉื ื™, ื”ื›ื ื‘ืžืื™ ืขืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ื˜ืคื™ ื“ืžื™ ื›ืœื‘ ืžื—ื“ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื•, ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ื• ื˜ืœื” ืฉื•ื” ื“ืžื™ ื”ื›ืœื‘, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ืฉื™ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืžื™ ื”ื›ืœื‘ ื‘ื›ื•ืœื”ื•. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืื•ืชืŸ ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื“ื”ื•ื™ ืขืฉืจื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ืื•ืชืŸ ืชืฉืขื” ืฉืขืžื• ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื“ื™ื ืจ ื—ืกืจ ืžืขื” ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืชืฉืขื” ื“ื™ื ืจื™ื ืคื—ื•ืช ืชืฉืข ืžืขื•ืช, ื•ื”ื›ืœื‘ ืฉื•ื” ื“ื™ื ืจ ื•ืชืฉืข ืžืขื•ืช, ื ืžืฆื ื‘ืื•ืชืŸ ืขืฉืจื” ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืชืฉืขื” ื•ื›ืœื‘ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ืชืฉืขื”, ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืžืขื” ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘, ื•ื”ืขืฉื™ืจื™ ื›ื•ืœื• ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘:",
220
+ "<b>ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื”.</b> ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื“ื›ืชื‘ ืงืจื ืคืœื’ื™ื ื ืœื™ื” ื›ืื™ืœื• ื›ืชื‘ ืฉื ื™ื ื”ืŸ. ืฉื ื™ื, ืืฉืžื•ืขื™ื ืŸ ื“ื•ืงื ืืชื ืŸ ื–ื•ื ื” ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื›ืœื‘ ื•ืœื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืืชื ืŸ ื›ืœื‘ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื–ื•ื ื”. ื•ื”ืŸ, ืžืฉืžืข ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:"
221
+ ],
222
+ [
223
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ื›ืกืคื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื.</b> ืœืงื ื•ืช ืžื”ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ื•ืกื•ืœืช ืœืžื ื—ื•ืช:",
224
+ "<b>ื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื™ื ื•ืกืœืชื•ืช ืืกื•ืจื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ืกื•ืœืช ื–ื™ืชื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ืฉืžืŸ ืขื ื‘ื™ื ื•ืขืฉืืŸ ื™ื™ืŸ, ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ื, ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื”ื, ื”ื ื•ืœื ืฉื ื•ื™ื™ื”ืŸ ื•ืœื ื•ืœื“ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ:",
225
+ "<b>ื ืชืŸ ืœื” ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื˜ืœื” ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื• ื•ืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ ืืžืจ ืœื–ื•ื ื” ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ ืœื™ ื•ื”ื™ืžื ื™ ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื™ ื‘ืืชื ื ืš. ืกืœืงื ื“ืขืชืš ืืžื™ื ื ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื“ื ืจืฉืื™ ืœืžื ื•ืช ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœ ืคืกื—ื•, ืžืžื•ื ื™ื” ื”ื•ื, ื•ืื™ืžื ืœื™ื—ื•ืœ ืขืœื™ื” ืืชื ืŸ, ืงืžืฉืžืข ืœืŸ ื“ืœื. ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ, ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ื”ื ื“ื•ืจ ื›ื‘ืจ:",
226
+ "<b>ืขื•ืคื•ืช.</b> ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ:",
227
+ "<b>ื”ืจื™ ืืœื•.</b> ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ืฉืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื—ืœ ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ:",
228
+ "<b>ืขื•ืคื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืžื•ื ืคื•ืกืœ ื‘ื”ืŸ.</b> ื“ืืžืจ ืงืจื (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ืดื‘:ื™ืดื˜) ืชืžื™ื ื–ื›ืจ [ื‘ื‘ืงืจ] ื‘ื›ืฉื‘ื™ื, ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื–ื›ืจื•ืช ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืช ื•ื–ื›ืจื•ืช ื‘ืขื•ืฃ:",
229
+ "<b>ืœื›ืœ ื ื“ืจ.</b> ื›ืœ, ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ, ืฉืืฃ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ื‘ื ื“ืจ, ืฉืืชื ืŸ ื•ืžื—ื™ืจ ื—ืœื™ื ืขืœื™ื•:"
230
+ ],
231
+ [
232
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ืืกื•ืจื™ื ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ืื—ืดื› ื ืชืขื‘ืจื” ื•ื™ืœื“ื”, ื”ื•ืœื“ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ืฉื”ื–ื›ืจ ืฉืœ ื”ื™ืชืจ ืฉื‘ื ืขืœ ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ืืกื•ืจื”, ืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื’ืจืžื• ืœื•ืœื“ ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื, ื•ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืžื•ืชืจ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืจื‘ืขื” ื›ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืขื•ื‘ืจืช, ื”ื•ืœื“ ืคืกื•ืœ ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ, ื“ื”ื™ื ื•ื•ืœื“ื” ื ืจื‘ืขื•:",
233
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ ื˜ืจื™ืคื”.</b> ืœื ื™ืงืจื‘. ืื‘ืœ ืœื”ื“ื™ื•ื˜ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืจื™, ื“ืœืื• ืžื’ื•ืคื” ืงื ืจื‘ื™. ื•ืคืœื•ื’ืชื ื”ื™ื ื‘ืืœื• ื˜ืจื™ืคื•ืช [ื“ืฃ ื ืดื—], ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช, ื•ืื™ื›ื ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช. ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉื ื˜ืจืคื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืขื™ื‘ืจื”, ื•ื‘ื”ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืืกื•ืจ, ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื’ื•ืจื ืžื•ืชืจ. ื•ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืื™ื ื” ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืฉื›ื—ืช ืœื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื™ื‘ืจื” ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ื˜ืจืคื”, ื•ื‘ื”ื ืคืœื™ื’ื™, ื“ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืกื‘ืจ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ื™ืจืš ืืžื• ื”ื•ื, ื•ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืกื‘ืจื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืœืื• ื™ืจืš ืืžื• ื”ื•ื. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ:",
234
+ "<b>ื›ืฉืจื” ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืจื™ืคื” ืคืกื•ืœื”.</b> ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ื™ื•ื ืฉื™ื ืงื” ืžืขืช ืœืขืช ื”ื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื” ืœื”ืงืจื‘ื”, ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœื” ืœืขืžื•ื“ ืขืœ ืื•ืชื• ื—ืœื‘ ื‘ืœื ืื›ื™ืœื” ืื—ืจืช, ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืชืื›ืœ ืžืžืขื™ื” ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉืœื ืžืขืช ืœืขืช. ืื‘ืœ ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืชืื›ืœ ืžืžืขื™ื” ืžื•ื“ื” ืจืดื— ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืจื”, ื“ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉื ืชืคื˜ืžื” ื‘ื›ืจืฉื™ื ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ื›ืฉืจื” ืœืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื—ื ื™ื ื ื‘ืŸ ืื ื˜ื™ื’ื ื•ืก:",
235
+ "<b>ืฉืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ื ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื.</b> ื“ื‘ืคืกื•ืœื™ ื”ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื ืคื“ื• ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืชื–ื‘ื— ื•ืื›ืœืช ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืชื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ื’ื™ื–ื”, ื•ืื›ืœืช ื•ืœื ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ืš, ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ืœื ื—ืœื‘:"
236
+ ]
237
+ ],
238
+ [
239
+ [
240
+ "<b>ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—.</b> ืฉืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ืื‘ืœ ืขื•ืคื•ืช ื•ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”. ื•ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืชืžื•ืจื”, ืœืขื™ืœ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืคืจืง ืงืžื ืžืžืขื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืงืจื ื“ืœื ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืชืžื•ืจื”:",
241
+ "<b>ืžืฉื•ื ืคื’ื•ืœ ื•ื ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืžื.</b> ื›ื•ืœื”ื• ื‘ืฉืœืžื™ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ื™, ื•ืฉืœืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื™ื•, ื•ืœืžื” ื™ืฆืื•, ืœื”ืงื™ืฉ ืืœื™ื”ืŸ, ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืš ืžื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืฃ ื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
242
+ "<b>ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื•ื—ืœื‘ืŸ ืืกื•ืจ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ.</b> ื—ืœื‘ืŸ, ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืฉืจ, ื•ืœื ื—ืœื‘. ื•ืœื“ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืื™ืขื‘ืจ ืœืคื ื™ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ ื•ืื•ืœื™ื“ ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ, ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื”ื• ืชืงื ืชื ืœืืงืจื•ื‘ื™ื ื”ื•, ื“ืžื›ื•ื— ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื“ื—ื•ื™ื” ืงื ืืชื™ื, ืœืคืจืงื™ื ื”ื•, ืœื ืืœื™ืžื ืžืœืชื ืœืžืชืคืก ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ. ืื‘ืœ ื ืชืขื‘ืจื• ืœืื—ืจ ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ, ื›ื•ืœื“ ืฆื‘ื™ ื•ืื™ืœ ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืžื•ืชืจื™ื. ื•ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ืื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืคื“ื™ื•ื ืŸ ืžื•ืชืจื™ื, ื“ืœื ืืงื“ืฉื™ื ื”ื• ืืœื ืœื“ืžื™ ื•ืœื ื—ืžื™ืจื ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื™ื™ื”ื• ื›ื•ืœื™ ื”ืื™:",
243
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืžื”ื.</b> ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—:",
244
+ "<b>ืœืื•ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื‘ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืžืงื“ืฉ:",
245
+ "<b>ื‘ืฉื›ืจืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ื ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ื ืฉื›ืจ ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ื“ืืžืจ ืจื—ืžื ื (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื”:ื—ืณ) ื•ืขืฉื• ืœื™ ืžืงื“ืฉ, ืœื™ ืžืฉืœื™, ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:"
246
+ ],
247
+ [
248
+ "<b>ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืœ.</b> ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื‘ื”ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ื•ื‘ืื‘ื ื™ื:",
249
+ "<b>ื•ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื•ืœื™ื”ืŸ.</b> ืฉื”ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืžื” ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื—ืœื‘ื”. ื•ืื ื”ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืชืจื ื’ื•ืœืช, ืžื•ืขืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืฆืชื”. ืžืฉืืดื› ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืฉื—ืœื‘ ืฉืœ ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื•ื‘ื™ืฆืช ืชื•ืจื™ื ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžื•ืขืœื™ื:",
250
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืื” ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ืฉื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื ืื›ืœ ืœื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื”ืŸ ืฉื ื”ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื•ืจ:"
251
+ ],
252
+ [
253
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ืžืงื“ื•ืฉื” ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื“.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ืฉืœืžื™ื ืขื•ืœื”, ื•ืœื ืขื•ืœื” ืฉืœืžื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื•ื›ืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื”:",
254
+ "<b>ื•ืžืงื“ื™ืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ืงืื™:",
255
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื™ืœื•ื™.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืขื•ืœื” ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช, ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ื‘ื“ืžื™ื ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื” ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื’ื–ื‘ืจ ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ, ืžื—ืจื™ื ืื“ื ืืช ืงื“ืฉื™ื•, ืื ื ื“ืจ ื ื•ืชืŸ ื“ืžื™ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืืช ื˜ื•ื‘ืชืŸ. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ, ืื ื‘ื”ืžื” ื–ื• ื”ื™ืชื” ื ื“ืจ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืขืœื™ ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ื–ื• ืœื ื“ืจื•, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืื ืžืชื” ืื• ื ื’ื ื‘ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื” ื ืžืฆืืช ื›ื•ืœื” ืฉืœื•, ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ื›ืœ ื“ืžื™ื” ืœื—ืจื ืœื›ื”ืŸ. ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื ืžื™ ืื ื”ืชืคื™ืก ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืื ื ื“ื‘ื”, ื™ืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื• ืขื•ืœื”, ื“ืื ืžืชื” ืื™ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ืื—ืจื™ื•ืชื”, ื ืžืฆื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื—ืœืง ื‘ื” ืืœื ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ื“ืจืฉืื™ ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืŸ ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืชื• ื›ื”ืŸ, ื•ืื•ืชื” ื˜ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื ืื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช:",
256
+ "<b>ื•ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ.</b> ืื ื”ื—ืจื™ื ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ื”ืŸ ืืช ื”ืขื™ืœื•ื™ ื›ื“ืคืจื™ืฉื™ืช. ืื‘ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื”ืชืคื™ืกืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืจืžื™ ื›ื”ื ื™ื, ืœื ืขืฉื” ื•ืœื ื›ืœื•ื, ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืฉืœื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืžืงื“ื™ืฉ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืฉืœื•. ื›ืš ื›ืชื‘ ืจืžื‘ืดื:",
257
+ "<b>ื•ืื ืžืชื•.</b> ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื—, ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื•ืžืžื•, ืื‘ืœ ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ืคื“ื•:",
258
+ "<b>ื™ืงื‘ืจื•.</b> ื•ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืคื“ื•ืชืŸ ื•ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืžืืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื”ืื›ื™ืœืŸ ืœื›ืœื‘ื™ื, ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ื›ืฉื ื˜ืจืคื” ื“ืืคืฉืจ ืœื” ื‘ื”ืขืžื“ื” ื•ื”ืขืจื›ื”, ืื‘ืœ ืžืฉืžืชื• ื“ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืงื™ื™ื ื‘ื”ื• ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš, ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ:",
259
+ "<b>ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืื ืžืชื• ื™ืคื“ื•.</b> ืงืกื‘ืจ ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ ื•ื”ืขืจื™ืš ืืœื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ืžื–ื‘ื— ื•ืœื ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ ื‘ื“ืง ื”ื‘ื™ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
260
+ ],
261
+ [
262
+ "<b>ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ื.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื™ ื”ื ืื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•:",
263
+ "<b>ื”ืคื™ืœื” ืฉืœื™ื ืชืงื‘ืจ.</b> ื“ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื•ืœื“:",
264
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ.</b> ื˜ืžื. ื“ืื™ืœื• ืฉืขืจ ื ื–ื™ืจ ื˜ื”ื•ืจ ื›ืฉืžื’ืœื— ื‘ื™ื•ื ืžืœืืช ื™ืžื™ ื ื–ืจื•, ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืงื‘ื•ืจื”:",
265
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืžื—ืœืคื™ ื‘ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืฉืื™ืจืข ื‘ื”ื ืคืกื•ืœ ื˜ื•ืžืื” ืื• ืคืกื•ืœ ื ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื˜ืขื• ืœืžื™ืžืจ ื‘ื”ื• ื ืžื™ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•, ื•ืื ืŸ ื™ืœืคื™ื ืŸ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืืฉ ืชืฉืจืฃ, ืœื™ืžื“ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”, ื”ืœื›ืš ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื ืžื™ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
266
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ืฉื ืฉื—ื˜ื” ื‘ืขื–ืจื”.</b> ื•ืืขืดื’ ื“ื—ื™ื” ืœื™ื›ื ืœืžื’ื–ืจ ื‘ื” ื“ืœืžื ื˜ืขื• ืœืงื‘ื•ืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ื“ื”ื ื›ื•ืœื™ ืขืœืžื ื™ื“ืขื™ ื“ื—ื™ื” ื‘ืžื•ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืœื™ื›ื ื•ืœื ืืชื™ ืœืื—ืœื•ืคื™, ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื›ื™ ืชืฉืจืฃ. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจืณ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ:"
267
+ ],
268
+ [
269
+ "<b>ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื—.</b> ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ ืจืณ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื, ื“ืืžืจ [ืคืกื—ื™ื ื›ืดื— ืขืดื‘] ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ื‘ืœ ืชื•ืชื™ืจื• ื•ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ื‘ืœ ืชื•ืชื™ืจื•, ืžื” ื ื•ืชืจ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื” ืืฃ ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”. ื•ืื™ื ื” ื”ืœื›ื”:",
270
+ "<b>ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”.</b> ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื™ืดื—:ื—ืณ) ื•ืื ื™ ื”ื ื” ื ืชืชื™ ืœืš ืืช ืžืฉืžืจืช ืชืจื•ืžืชื™, ื‘ืฉืชื™ ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ, ืื—ืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ื”ื•ืจื” ื•ืื—ืช ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”, ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœืš, ืฉืœืš ืชื”ื ืœื”ืกื™ืงื” ืชื—ืช ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœืš:",
271
+ "<b>ืขืจืœื”.</b> ืžื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื’ืžืจ, ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ืดื‘:ื˜ืณ) ืคืŸ ืชืงื“ืฉ, ืชื•ืงื“ ืืฉ:",
272
+ "<b>ืืช ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ.</b> ืืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืงืื™, ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืฉืœ ืขืจืœื” ื•ืฉืœ ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ืฉื“ืจื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ ื™ืฉืจืคื•, ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฉืจืฃ ื™ืงื‘ืจื•:",
273
+ "<b>ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื”.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืœืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืขื ื—ืžืฅ ื‘ืคืกื— ื•ืขืจืœื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ ื”ื›ืจื ื“ืื™ืกื•ืจื™ ื”ื ืื” ื ื™ื ื”ื•, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืœื ืชื˜ืขื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื’ื ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื” ืืกื•ืจื” ื‘ื”ื ืื”, ื”ื“ืจ ืชื ื ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืงื™ืŸ ืœื™ื”ื ื•ืช ื‘ืคืช ื•ื‘ืฉืžืŸ ืฉืœ ืชืจื•ืžื” ื˜ืžืื”:"
274
+ ],
275
+ [
276
+ "<b>ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ.</b> ืขืœ ืžื ืช ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืœื–ืžื ืŸ ืื• ื—ื•ืฅ ืœืžืงื•ืžืŸ:",
277
+ "<b>ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื—ื˜ืืช ื‘ืืฉ ืชืฉืจืฃ, ืœื™ืžื“ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืคืกื•ืœื™ื ืฉื‘ืงื•ื“ืฉ ืฉื”ืŸ ื‘ืฉืจื™ืคื”:",
278
+ "<b>ืืฉื ืชืœื•ื™.</b> ืื ืฉื—ื˜ื• ื•ืงื•ื“ื ื–ืจื™ืงืช ื“ืžื• ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื• ืฉืœื ื—ื˜ื, ื“ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขื–ืจื”:",
279
+ "<b>ื—ื˜ืืช ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื‘ืื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืืฉื” ืฉื”ืคื™ืœื” ืกืคืง ื•ืœื“ ืกืคืง ืจื•ื—, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื—๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืืช ื™ื•ืœื“ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืขื•ืฃ ื”ื•ื ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื™ืดื‘:ื•ืณ) ื•ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื” ืื• ืชื•ืจ ืœื—ื˜ืืช, ืžื‘ื™ืืชื” ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง, ื“ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืงื˜ืจืช ืœื ืื™ื›ืคืช ืœืŸ ืื™ ื–ืจืง ื“ื ืขืœ ื”ืกืคืง, ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ืื›ืœืช, ื“ืฉืžื ืœืื• ื•ืœื“ ื”ื•ื” ื•ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื ื–ื• ื•ื ื‘ื™ืœื”, ื“ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื ืื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืžืœื™ืงื”, ื•ืชืฉืจืฃ ื“ื”ื•ื™ื ื›ืฉืืจ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืคืกื•ืœื™ื:",
280
+ "<b>ื™ื˜ื™ืœื ื” ืœืืžื”.</b> ืืžืช ื”ืžื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื‘ืขื–ืจื” ื•ื™ื•ืฆืืช ืœื ื—ืœ ืงื“ืจื•ืŸ. ื•ืื™ื™ื“ื™ ื“ืขื•ืฃ ืจืš ื”ื•ื ืžืชืžืงืžืง ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ืงื™ืœื•ื— ื”ืžื™ื:",
281
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื‘ืจื•.</b> ื“ืœืžื ื—ืคืจ ืื™ื ืฉ ื•ืžืฉื›ื— ืœื”ื• ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ืœื”ื•:",
282
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื™ืฉืจืคื•.</b> ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื ืงื‘ืจื™ื ืืคืจืŸ ืืกื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ื›ืœืื™ื, ืืคืจืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ ืœื›ื™ื‘ื•ืก ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื ืฉืจืคื™ืŸ ื“ื”ืงื“ืฉ, ื ืžื™ ืืคืจืŸ ืžื•ืชืจ, ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืชืจื•ืžืช ื”ื“ืฉืŸ ื“ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ื™ื” ืจื—ืžื ื (ืฉื ื•ืณ) ื•ืฉืžื• ืืฆืœ ื”ืžื–ื‘ื—. ื•ืชื ื™ื, ื•ืฉืžื•, ื‘ื ื—ืช. ื•ืฉืžื•, ื›ื•ืœื•. ื•ืฉืžื•, ืฉืœื ื™ืคื–ืจ:",
283
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•ืณ.</b> ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื ืš ืชืœืชื ื‘ื‘ื™ ื“ืžืชื ื™ืชื™ืŸ."
284
+ ]
285
+ ]
286
+ ],
287
+ "versions": [
288
+ [
289
+ "On Your Way",
290
+ "http://mobile.tora.ws/"
291
+ ]
292
+ ],
293
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืชืžื•ืจื”",
294
+ "categories": [
295
+ "Mishnah",
296
+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
297
+ "Bartenura",
298
+ "Seder Kodashim"
299
+ ],
300
+ "sectionNames": [
301
+ "Chapter",
302
+ "Mishnah",
303
+ "Comment"
304
+ ]
305
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Kodashim/Bartenura on Mishnah Zevachim/English/Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020.json ADDED
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Beitzah",
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+ "versionSource": "http://sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "license": "CC-BY",
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+ "versionNotes": "http://sefaria.org",
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+ "shortVersionTitle": "Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
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+ "actualLanguage": "en",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "isBaseText": false,
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+ "direction": "ltr",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื”",
15
+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Moed"
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+ ],
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+ "text": [
22
+ [
23
+ [
24
+ "ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืฉื ื•ืœื“ื” ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ [on Yom Tov] which is after Shabbat is what we are dealing with. And the reason of the School of Hillel which states โ€œit may not be eaten,โ€ because an egg laid today was fully developed yesterday (Talmud Betzah 2b), and it results that Shabbat would prepare for Yom Tov, and the Torah states (Exodus 16:5): โ€œBut on the sixth day, when they apportion [what they have brought in, it shall prove to be double the amount they gather each day],โ€ for a regular Friday is a weekday, on a weekday one prepares for Shabbat, and on a weekday one prepares for a Yom Tov/Festival, for a Festival is also called Shabbat, one does not prepare on a Yom Tov for Shabbat nor does one prepare on Shabbat for a Yom Tov. And preparation like this of the egg, even though it is in the hands of heaven, it is called preparation. However, Shabbat and Yom Tov are important, as they require that their meals have preparation/designation on a weekday, and on one of them, one can prepare for its fellow, even with preparation at the hands of heaven, but the meal of a weekday is not considered important nor does it require preparation. Therefore, on a mere Sunday which is not a Holy Day, we donโ€™t forbid an egg that was laid on that day because it was completed on Shabbat, but the meal of a weekday, the all-Merciful does not require preparation while it is still daylight. But they (i.e., the Rabbis) an egg that was laid on any Holy Day/Yom Tov, and even though it is not after the Shabbat, as a decree because of a Holy Day that comes after the Sabbath. And similarly, they forbade an egg that was laid on every Sabbath to quaff/swallow a living animal, as a decree because of a Shabbat that comes after a Yom Tov. For a Sabbath and a Holy Day that are juxtaposed one to the other, an egg that is laid on this one is forbidden [to be eaten] on that one. And similarly, the two days Holy Days of Rosh Hashanah, but the second Holy Days of the Diaspora that whatever be your opinion one of them is a weekday, and an egg that is laid on this one is permitted on that one.",
25
+ "ืฉืื•ืจ ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช โ€“ as regarding eating, everyone does not dispute that both this (leaven) and that (leavened bread) are [forbidden] with an oliveโ€™s bulk, for since the Biblical verse begins with ืฉืื•ืจ/leaven and concludes with ื—ืžืฅ/leavened bread. โ€œNo leaven shall be found in your houses [for seven days]. For whoever eats what is leavened, [that person shall be cut off from the community of Israel],โ€ to tell you that this is โ€œleavenโ€ and that is which is leavened, as is the case with the one is also the case with the other. But they (i.e., the Schools of Hillel and Shammai) argue regarding removal, as the School of Shammai holds that since the All-Merciful has written for both leaven and that which is leavened, and to write [the word] Hametz/leavened product, for its that which is a strong leavening agent (see Talmud Betzah 7b), and despite this, one is obligated to remove it, and it is an a fortiori for leaven which is a strong leavening agent, but we learn from this that the measurement for the one is not like the measurement of the other, and we donโ€™t derive removal [of Hametz] from eating. But the School of Hillel holds that both (i.e. ืฉืื•ืจ ื•ื—ืžืฅ) [are forbidden] by an oliveโ€™s bulk, as we derive removal from eating. But because that these three things are of the liberal opinions of the School of Shammai and the of the stringencies of the School of Hillel regarding the Yom Tov, they are taught together.",
26
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช โ€“ date palm."
27
+ ],
28
+ [
29
+ "ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ he who comes to slaughters a wild beast or fowl and consults with the Jewish court how he should do it.",
30
+ "ื‘\"ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ the Jewish court teaches him that ab initio, he should slaughter it with a mattock (i.e., a pronged tool) stuck in the ground that he prepared while it is still day (i.e., before the start of the Festival โ€“ see Talmud Betzah 7b) that is he should uproot it from the place where it is stuck into the ground and bring up dirt and cover it. For we are speaking that it is inserted in crushed/loose earth (see Talmud Betzah 8a) that is appropriate for covering, that is not lacking pounding/crushing.",
31
+ "ื“ืงืจ โ€“ a peg that we stick in the ground, and the language of the peg is (Numbers 25:8): โ€œstabbed both of them.โ€",
32
+ "ืฉืืคืจ ื›ื™ืจื” ืžื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื โ€“ they do not refer to the words/matter of the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel, but it is an entirely separate matter, and this is how it should be understood โ€“ that the ashes of the oven should be made ready and that they do not need preparation/designation for a particular purpose that is mind is upon it, and they did not teach other than that which had been heated from the eve of the Festival, but that which was heated on the Festival is prohibited, for one cannot say that his thoughts were upon it from yesterday. For if it was appropriate to roast on it an egg, for it was yet hot ashes/embers, even though it was kindled on the Festival, it is permissible to cover it, for it is worthy of roast on it an egg, they take it also and cover [the blood] with it."
33
+ ],
34
+ [
35
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ืกื•ืœื ืžืฉื•ื‘ืš ืœืฉื•ื‘ืš โ€“ regarding the ladder of an upper story no one disagrees that it is forbidden and regarding a ladder of a dovecote also, when he brings it in the public domain, the School of Hillel admits that it is forbidden, for a person who sees it would say that he is fixing his roof, he is bringing it and doing work on the Festival, but they (i.e., the Schools of Shammai and Hillel) disagree when he brings it in the private domain and there arenโ€™t people who see him. The School of Shammai holds that they should not bring it, for any thing that the Sages prohibit in order to avoid the semblance of wrong-doing for appearance sake (Talmud Betzah 9a), even in the remotest recesses (i.e., the strictest secrecy) is prohibited, but the School of Hillel permits it, and even though that generally, this is the law, here it is permitted because of the joy of the Festivals.",
36
+ "ืžื—ืœื•ืŸ ืœื—ืœื•ืŸ โ€“ in the same dovecote itself, for it is the manner of each dovecote to have [many compartments] a nest for each and every pair, and a window for each and every nest.",
37
+ "ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ืื ื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ โ€“ This is a dispute between the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel specificially in the first brood of the year (see Talmud Betzah 10a), for it is the practice of those who raise doves to always leave the first brood which are the first two pigeons, for their mothers console them so that they do not fly off. But the School of Shammai holds that that mere words are not enough, lest they take them on the morrow, and they determine to protect them and would engage in carrying that is not necessary , but when he shakes and uses them while it is still daytime for slaughter, and does not protect them, furthermore, we donโ€™t suspect that he is protecting them. But the School of Hillel does not decree lest he has compassion on them, and even if they are the first brood."
38
+ ],
39
+ [
40
+ "ื–ื™ืžืŸ ืฉื—ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืžืฆื ืœื‘ื ื™ื โ€“ this matter is simple and it was not necessary to teach it. But this is how it should be understood โ€“ that if he designated black and white ones and found black ones in the place of white ones and white ones in the place of black ones. And this is the explanation of our Mishnah โ€“ that he designated black ones in this nest and found white ones there, [or] he designated in the second [nest] white ones and found it black ones, you might think they had been reversed, but it comes to teach us that this is not the case.",
41
+ "ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืžืฆื ื’' โ€“ and he doesnโ€™t recognize the ones that are ready, all of them are forbidden.",
42
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ื•ืžืฆื ืฉื ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจื™ื โ€“ and one went off, and he two remained. And we donโ€™t say that just as the one went off, so all the others went off and these are the others.",
43
+ "ื–ื™ืžืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืงืŸ ื•ืžืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืงืŸ โ€“ but within the nest he did not find all of them, they are forbidden.",
44
+ "ื•ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืืœื ื”ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ โ€“ and even though there is another dovecote near it within fifty cubits, if that dovecote is not in the row of this dovecote equivalently other than in the corner-piece, we donโ€™t say that from that dovecote that is closest to it. For the pigeons all the while that they are not flying but are stretching their legs, they are not equally stretching other opposite their own nest, for if they see their nests when they turn around to their backs they stretch, and if not they do not stretch."
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "ื”ืขืœื™ โ€“ the handle of a very large piece of wood where they pound/crush grits and similar things. But because of its heaviness and size, for it is not considered a utensil.",
48
+ "ืœืงืฆื‘ โ€“ to cut/sever.",
49
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ because of the joy of the Festival, and even though it is not considered as utensil.",
50
+ "ืœืคื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืจื™ืกื” โ€“ that people will tread upon it, in order that he will not lose it.",
51
+ "ื•ืœื ื™ื’ื‘ื™ื”ื ื• โ€“ to carry it after flaying it.",
52
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ for if he did not permit it, he would not slaughter it in order not to lose the hide, and be prevented from the rejoicing of the Festival.",
53
+ "ืชืจื™ืกื™ืŸ โ€“ those who sell spices have stores that are made like chests which stand in the market and are not attached to the ground. And these shutters are doors that close the openings of these chests, and sometimes these shutters are removed from the opening of the chest and they spread upon them, the dyes/ingredients of frankincense that are in the store.",
54
+ "ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืขืฃ ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจ โ€“ with these shutters that lack a hinge from the side, no one disagrees that it is forbidden to lock with them even the doors of the stores, for this is comparable to building. But they do dispute regarding shutters that have a hinge in the middle like something protruding and they insert it in the hole that is in the middle wall, at the opening of the store. The School of Shammai holds that we make a decree that a hinge in the middle is on account of the hinge from the side. But the School of Hillel holds that we do not make a decree concerning the shutters of the stores, and it is permitted ot return them, because it is necessary to remove spices and if we donโ€™t permit him to return them, he would not open it and would be prevented from the joy of the Festival.",
55
+ "ืœื ืืช ื”ืงื˜ืŸ โ€“ nor whatever it may be that is not for the needs of eating.",
56
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ who say that since it was permitted to remove something for the needs of eating, it is also permitted for something that is not for the needs of eating, and there would be a need for a Mitzvah such as these that are considered in our Mishnah, or for the need of something enjoyable such as from the opening of his house and similar things, to exclude the removal of stones and similar things, for on those, the School of Hillel admits that it is prohibited."
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "ืื™ื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื—ืœื” โ€“ on the Festival Day. Even though it is permitted to separate it, they did not permit him to bring it, but the repair of the dough they permitted to him, and nothing more.",
60
+ "ืžืชื ื•ืช โ€“ the shoulder, the cheeks and the stomach (see Deuteronomy 18:3).",
61
+ "ื’ื–ืจื” ืฉื•ื” โ€“ not specifically, for all of it is, was decreed by the Rabbis because of a decree that we donโ€™t raise up the priestโ€™s due and the tithes on the Festival. But it is similar to an analogy.",
62
+ "ืžืชื ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ โ€“ from the twenty-four priestly gifts.",
63
+ "ื›ืฉื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ this Mishnah is superseded in the Gemara (Tractate Betzah 12b) for the Schools of Shammai and Hillel did not dispute that they bring up the hallah offering and priestly gifts. For they did not dispute other than in bringing up the Priestโ€™s due/the Sacred gift for the Priest/Terumah, as the School of Shammai state that we donโ€™t bring it up but the School of Hillel states that we do bring it up. The School of Hillel said to the School of Shammai that the Hallah/dough offering and priestly gifts are for the Kohen, and the Priestโ€™s Due is a gift for the Kohen, and just as they bring up the [other gifts] they also bring up the Terumah. Bet Shammai responded to them that this is not the case, for if you said concerning the Hallah and priestly gifts that they are deserving of separating their priestly gifts, the Sages gave the strength and the permission for their being set apart for a sacred purpose, for since their obligation comes on the Festival day, since we knead and slaughter on the Festival day, and since they were permitted on the Festival day, we permit to bring them up even those that were made from the eve of the Festival day, shall we say that the Priestโ€™s due which is not worthy in being brought up that it is impossible that the obligation for Terumah should come to the pile on the Festival Day, since there is no obligation for Terumah other than from the time of smoothing out the pile and we donโ€™t smooth out the pile on the Festive Day, therefore, we donโ€™t bring up the Terumah on the Festival Day."
64
+ ],
65
+ [
66
+ "ื‘ืžื“ื•ืš ืฉืœ ืขืฅ โ€“ but not in one (i.e., a pestle) made of stone. But however, with a wooden pestle, they are crushed in their manner and there is no need for a change, since they lose their taste if they are crushed from the day before.",
67
+ "ื•ื”ืžืœื— ื‘ืคืš โ€“ [a cruse] of earthenware he crushes it.",
68
+ "ืื• ื‘ืขืฅ ืคืจื•ืจ โ€“ it is the spoon that one stirs the pot with, for the salt requires a change, for he had to crush it from the day before so that it doesnโ€™t lose its taste. And the Halakha is that one who comes to crush salt on the Festival Day, turns the mortar on its side and crushes in a changed manner. But the spices are crushed in the regular manner and they do not require a change."
69
+ ],
70
+ [
71
+ "ื‘ื•ืจืจ ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœ โ€“ he collects food one piece at a time from the refuse.",
72
+ "ื‘ื•ืจืจ ื›ื“ืจื›ื• ื‘ื—ื™ืงื• โ€“ and as long as it wonโ€™t be a painstaking preparation separating the large amount of refuse. But if it the painstaking preparation involved in separating the refuse is greater than the trouble involved to separate the food, such as the case where the refuse is exceptionally thin, even though the food is greater in its measure than the refuse, the School of Hillel agrees that one separates the food and sets aside the refuse, to exclude where the trouble involved is preferable.",
73
+ "ืืฃ ืžื“ื™ื— ื•ืฉื•ืœื” โ€“ that he brings a utensil filled with pulse and puts water upon it and the refuse floats on top of the water and he removes it with his hand. The word ืฉื•ืœื” /โ€draw it outโ€ is like (Exodus 3: 5 ) โ€œRemove your sandals [from your feet, for the place on which you stand is holy ground].โ€ But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel."
74
+ ],
75
+ [
76
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืœื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ โ€“ gift of a person to his friend.",
77
+ "ืืœื ืžื ื•ืช โ€“ something prepared that is not made to be left over until the morrow, such as pieces of meat and/or fish.",
78
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•' โ€“ The School of Hillel did not permit other than to send via one or two people. But three or more people who carry the present is forbidden, as it the matter is too large and appears like one is bringing [things] to sell in the marketplace.",
79
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืชื‘ื•ืื” โ€“ which is not appropriate for eating, for it requires grinding and we do not grind on the Festival Day.",
80
+ "ื•ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ื‘ืชื‘ื•ืื” โ€“ for one is able to crush it in a small mortar and cook it through the use of a pot. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
81
+ ],
82
+ [
83
+ "ืžืฉืœื—ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ื ืชืคื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ that are appropriate for clothing, and which are not sewn are appropriate for covering.",
84
+ "ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ when they are hard and they donโ€™t make warm, it is permissible to lie on them.",
85
+ "ืกื ื“ืœ ืžืกื•ืžืจ โ€“ of wood covered with nails. For the Sages decreed concerning it that one should not wear it on the Sabbath and the Festival Day, because of an event that occurred where those killed by the [Roman] Kingdom were killed by it, as it is explained in Tractate Shabbat 60a โ€“ in the chapter โ€œHow a woman goes outโ€ (chapter 6).",
86
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื ืขืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืชืคื•ืจ โ€“ and one that was attached by pegs made of wood and similar kinds of things.",
87
+ "ืืฃ ืœื ืžื ืขืœ ืœื‘ืŸ โ€“ in the place of Rabbi Yehuda, they would not wear white shoes until they blacken it.",
88
+ "ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืื•ืžืŸ โ€“ to blacken it.",
89
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื ืื•ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ this is how it should be understood: All that is permitted to be used on weekdays like it is and does not require other work [done to it], even though they are not permitted to be used on Festival Days, such as Tefillin, which on weekdays one wears as they are and on Festival Days, one does not wear them, we send them on the Festival Day (see Talmud Betzah 15a)."
90
+ ]
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ [
94
+ "ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ืœื ื™ื‘ืฉืœ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” โ€“ that is to say that the beginning of his cooking and its essence should not be for the Sabbath, but rather for the sake of Yom Tov/the Festival Day should be the beginning of his cooking and what remains should be for the Sabbath.",
95
+ "ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœ ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ โ€“ for the sake of the โ€œjoining of cooked foodsโ€/Eruv Tavshilin (preparing meals for the Sabbath on a Holy Day occurring on a Friday: a person prepares a dish on Thursday and lets it lie over until the end of the Sabbath which he does on the Holy Day โ€“ Friday โ€“ is merely a continuation of the preparation begun on Thursday). There are those who say that the reason that this dish from the eve of the Festival day/Yom Tov, is because of the honor of the Sabbath, for since from the eve of the Festival day he remembers the Sabbath, he will choose a nice portion for the Sabath, and not forget the Sabbath because of the preoccupation with the Festival Day. And there are those wohose say that is because of the honor of the Festival day, in order that they should see that they donโ€™t bake from the Festival day for the Sabbath other than if he had begun while it was still daylight, for on the Festival day, he does nothing other than complete it, a fortiori (i.e., all the more so), from the Festival day to a weekday entirely, we do not back nor cook. And we make the blessing on Eruv Tavshilin/โ€joining of cooked foodsโ€ in the manner that we make the blessing on the Eruv in reference to the โ€œjoining of courtyardsโ€/Eruv Hatzerot. But it is necessary to make assignment through another for all who wish afterwards to rely upon his Eruv/โ€joining,โ€ and even without his knowledge, for one acts in a personโ€™s interest in his absence.",
96
+ "ืื›ืœื• ืื• ืฉืื‘ื“ โ€“ that same dish that he cooked, from the eve of the Sabbath.",
97
+ "ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ to cook his dish on the Festival day for the needs of the Sabbath, But, from the outset, his โ€œjoining of dishesโ€/Eruv Tavshilin is not less than an oliveโ€™s bulk, whether for one [person] or for one hundred [people]. But if he began with his dough and his Eruv became lost, he completes it with what he has begun with."
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ "ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืœ โ€“ for a person is obligated to ritually purify himself on the Festival. And everything that requires ritual immersion, whether a person or utensils, we ritually immerse prior to the Sabbath.",
101
+ "ื›ืœื™ื ืžืœืคื ื™ ื”ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ for since they are worthy after ritual immersion for things that they were not worthy for prior to the immersion, if one immerses them on Shabbat or on Yom Tov/the Festival day, it would be like repairing a matter an that is forbidden. And Shabbat was used here to inform you of the power of the School of Hillel, that even on the Sabbath, they permitted the ritual immersion of a person, because it appears like holding him dear and become cols cold and bathes for pleasure and not for the sake of ritual immersion."
102
+ ],
103
+ [
104
+ "ื•ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืื‘ืŸ โ€“ whomever has fine water for drinking that became ritually impure, one fills from them a stone utensil that is not susceptible to receive ritual impurity and place them in a Mikveh of salty or turbid waters until the waters come into close contact with each other, resulting that these which were sown and connected to the waters of the Mikveh/ritual bath were cancelled out on account of this and made ritually pure, but the purification in the Mikveh is not for any foodstuffs and liquids but only for water alone, and not for the law of ritual immersion, but for the law of sowing.",
105
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ we donโ€™t put them (i.e., the waters) in a ritually impure wooden utensil that requires ritual immersion for the vessel, to cause contact [by dipping a vessel, filled with unclean liquid, so as to make its surface level with the surface of the water into which it is dipped, which is a ceremony of levital purification], in order to raise the ritual immersion to the utensil along with the contact with the water.",
106
+ "ื•ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ ืœื’ื‘ โ€“ a person who immersed utensils with the intention that he would tread olives upon them in the building containing the tank [and all the implements] for the pressing of common (i.e., non-holy) olives, and he reconsidered to press in them grapes in the vat for wine pressing of Terumah, he mus immerse them a second time for the purpose of Terumah. And similarly, if he had immersed utensils for the sake of Terumah and reconsidered to make them holy, he requires a second ritual immersion for the sake of making it holy. And that ritual immersion can be done on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for there is no repair of the utensil for this ritual immersion is not for elevating them from ritual defilement, but rather for an additional purity.",
107
+ "ื•ืžื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืœื—ื‘ื•ืจื” โ€“ if he immersed utensils in order to eat his Passover offering with one association/group and he reconsidered to be reckoned with another association and he came to ritually immerse his utensils a second time, this ritual immersion is permitted to be done on Yom Tov/the Festival day."
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ on Yom Tov/the Festival day, holiday peace-offerings, because thereโ€™re is through them the need for consumption by a person.",
111
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืžื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื โ€“ for laying of hands upon them is prohibited because of the rabbinic decree to enhance the character of the day as a day of rest, for he would lay his hands with all of his strength and he would be making use of animals, for he lays his hands on them on the Eve of the Festival day, for the School of Shammai does not hold by the rule that immediately after the lay of hands comes the slaughtering [of the animal] (see Mishnah Menahot, Chapter 9, Mishnah 8 at the conclusion).",
112
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ outside of the daily whole-offerings and Musaf/additional offerings which are a community sacrifice at a fixed time. But one should not bring an individual whole burnt-offering which cannot be consumed by a commoner (i.e., non-Kohen). But even the burnt-offerings for appearing [during the Festival in the Temple]are offered on the other days of the Festival, but not on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for the All-Merciful stated (Numbers 29:35): โ€œ[On the eight day] you shall hold a solemn gathering,โ€ for you, but not for Most-High.",
113
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ one brings festival peace offerings and whole burnt offerings for appearance [in the Temple], as it is written (Deuteronomy 16:8): โ€œ[After eating unleavened bread for six days,] you shall hold a solemn gathering for the LORD] your God on the seventh dayโ€ฆ,โ€ everything is for God. But vows and free-will donations, according to everyone are not offered on the Festival, neither whole burnt-offerings or peace-offerings."
114
+ ],
115
+ [
116
+ "ืœื ื™ื—ื ืื“ื ื—ืžื™ืŸ ืœืจื’ืœื™ื• โ€“ The Torah permitted the preparation of food [on Yom Tov, for that day], but not to start a fire for bathing.",
117
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ for such it [i.e., the Torah] permitted kindling a fire for the needs of eating, it permitted it also for things which are not for the needs of eating, when there is a need for some sort of benefit. And the Halakhic decision is that hot water that was warmed on the Festival day, a person can wash his face, hands and feet in it but not his entire body, for they decreed that the Festival day/Yom Tov is like Shabbat. But hot water that was warmed from the eve of the Festival, one can wash all of oneโ€™s body in it on Yom Tov."
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ืžื™ืŸ ืžื™ื•\"ื˜ ืœืฉื‘ืช โ€“ for the School of Shammai holds that one does not bake other than if one made an Eruv with bread, and we donโ€™t cook other than if he made an Eruv on the cooked dish, and we donโ€™t put warm dishes in the chafing stove other than if he had warm dishes placed there from the eve of the Festival day. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake and cook and keep dishes warm for the Sabbath on the Eruv of the cooked dish alone. However, in the Gemara (Talmud Betzah 22a), it is proven that the School of Hillel also requires bread and meat and that is the Halakha.",
121
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื•ืงืคื™ืŸ ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ [ put together a candlestick] when its pieces can be taken apart, and we donโ€™t restore them for that is similar to [the prohibition of] โ€œbuilding,โ€ for there is building for utensils. But the School of Hillel holds that there is no building with utensils.",
122
+ "ื’ืจื™ืฆื™ืŸ โ€“ thick loaves",
123
+ "ืืœื ืจืงื™ืงื™ืŸ โ€“ thin loaves, for the School of Shammai holds that one does make a great deal of bread on the Festival Day because of the effort involved. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake a great deal of bread on the Festival day, for at the time that the bread is plentiful, it bakes well.",
124
+ "ื•ื—ืจื™ โ€“ a large piece of dough that is baked upon coals, because it requires a large flame where the coals are continuously dimming/quenching, and there is great effort. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel where he is stringent like the words of the School of Shammai."
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "ืžื›ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื•ืช โ€“ when the eat there (they sweep between the couches). For they normally recline to eat on top of beds and because it is such a small place, they are not suspect lest it make indentations, as we would fear regarding a large house and it is impossible that there wouldnโ€™t be an indentation/hole.",
128
+ "ืžื•ื’ืžืจ โ€“ frankincense on top of the coals to smell it, but to perfume the utensils, it is the words of everyone that it is prohibited.",
129
+ "ืžืงื•ืœืก โ€“ its legs, and its innards are hanging outside of it [on its side] when they are roasting it, and they do this in memory of the Passover sacrifice, as it is written concerning it (Exodus 12:9): โ€œ[Do not eat any of it raw, or cooked in any way with water, but roasted-] head, legs and entrails โ€“ over the fire.โ€ [The word] ืžืงื•ืœืก/an animal roasted in its entrails and legs on the head โ€“ is like this hero whose weaponry was with him (a reference to Goliath in I Samuel 17:5 who had a โ€œbronze helmet/ื›ื•ื‘ืข ื ื—ืฉืช ) and the Aramaic translation of โ€œbronze helmetโ€ is a bronze helmet (see also Rashi to Zebahim 88b). But Maimonides explained the word ืžืงื•ืœืก as meaning honorable, in the manner of praise.",
130
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืกืจื™ืŸ โ€“ [The Sages forbid] all three. Sweeping because it makes indentations, and the spices put upon the coals/perfume because it is not necessary for every person, for it is not other than for those spoiled and those who indulge themselves in pleasures and to one who has a bad odor. The spices placed upon the coals โ€“ because it appears like one who is eating Holy objects outside [the Temple]. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
131
+ ],
132
+ [
133
+ "ืคืจืชื• ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ืจืฆื•ืขื” ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืงืจื ื™ื” โ€“ for beauty/adornment. And the Sages stated that it is a burden and is not a decoration for it. And it was not the cow of Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah but that of his neighbor, and since they did not protest, it was called as associated with him.",
134
+ "ื•ืžืงืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ like a small bronze saw whose teeth are thin and which rubs and scratches the animal, and even though it makes a wound.",
135
+ "ื‘ืจื—ื™ื ืฉืœื”ืŸ โ€“ small which are made for this.",
136
+ "ืžืงืจืฆืคื™ืŸ โ€“ with a wooden saw whose teeth are thick. But they donโ€™t make a wound.",
137
+ "ืืฃ ืœื ืžืงืจืฆืคื™ืŸ โ€“ for we decree that currying with a strigil leads to scratching (which causes a wound). But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah in these three matters, but rather, we scrape/curry the animal only, because in this we confirm the approach of Rabbi Shimon who said that a thing in which we donโ€™t have an intention is permitted, and we hold according to him. But the Sages dispute this as they hold like Rabbi Yehuda who stated that a thing which was not intended is prohibited, but this is not the Halakha."
138
+ ],
139
+ [
140
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ for if he separated one of them they are not shards of utensils but rather all of them are considered a utensil of its own and is impure, even while they are still attached in the millstone and appear as one utensil.",
141
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœื™ ืงื‘ื•ืœ โ€“ the bottom one that receives dust from the pounding of the peppers through the holes of the basket used as a sieve is ritually impure because it is a receptacle, for it is a wooden utensil that has a receptacle.",
142
+ "ื•ืžืฉื ื›ืœื™ ืžืชื›ื•ืช โ€“ the upper one where we pound and grind in it the peppers, is ritually impure because it is a metal utensil, and because a wooden utensil cannot be made impure, for its flat surfaces are ritually pure, but because its lower covering is made of metal.",
143
+ "ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœื™ ื›ื‘ืจื” โ€“ its middle which surround the basket used as a sieve. Because of the wood utensil it is not defiled and its receptacle is not a receptacle, but the Sages decreed defilement upon the basket used as a sieve because it is a woven utensil, and even if the metal basket used as a sieve does not defile because it is the utensil of the basket used as a sieve."
144
+ ],
145
+ [
146
+ "ืขื’ืœื” โ€“ made for a child to play with, and it is special for him to sit upon it.",
147
+ "ื˜ืžืื” ืžื“ืจืก โ€“ if the small child had a flux, the wagon becomes a primary source of ritual impurity.",
148
+ "ื•ื ื˜ืœืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ because it has the status of a utensil upon it.",
149
+ "ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ื’ืจืจืช โ€“ [but may not be dragged] on the Sabbath.",
150
+ "ืืœื ืข\"ื’ ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ on top of clothing, because it makes a ditch in the ground and someone who furrows is liable because of [the prohibition of] plowing.",
151
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ there are two Tannaim and according to Rabbi Yehuda, for the first Tanna is also Rabbi Yehuda who said that something that is not intended is prohibited, and this other Tanna comes and states that Rabbi Yehuda did not prohibit a childโ€™s wagon because it does not make a ditch while walking through the digging, but presses upon the earth and threshes underneath it and makes its dirt lower but does not move the dirt from its place. But already, the law has been decided according to Rabbi Shimon who stated that a person may drag a bed, chair and a bench, so long as he doesnโ€™t intend to make a ditch."
152
+ ]
153
+ ],
154
+ [
155
+ [
156
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืฆื“ื™ืŸ ื“ื’ื™ื โ€“ even though slaughtering and baking and cooking are from the primary forms of [prohibited] work, they are permitted for the needs of the Festival day/Yom Tov, hunting is similar to reaping and reaping is not permitted on the Festival day. Vivarium of fish are pools of water where fish are raised there. Vivarium of wild beasts, enclosures (especially, an enclosed space outside for a settlement) surrounded by a fence all about and they bring there wild animals who give birth and who are raised there.",
157
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ โ€“ [they do not place] before the fish food, for it is possible for them [to survive] without food, and their feeding is not upon you.",
158
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืฆื“ื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ who are ready from yesterday.",
159
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ื‘ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ the small vivarium, which do not lack some phase of the process of hunting. And Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel does not to argue against the first Tanna [of our Mishnah], but rather to explain [his reasoning].",
160
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ืฆื™ื“ื” โ€“ that one needs to request a company of intriguers to catch him, and all the runners after it and reach it at once when the wild beast is not lacking some phase of the hunting process, and if not, it is lacking some phase of the hunting process."
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ "ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ื ื›ืจื™ โ€“ The Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows: If it was doubtfully ready, it is prohibited, but Rabban Gamaliel permits it, and there was a story about one heathen, etc. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel, but rather, fruit and fish that were brought on Yom Tov/The Festival day, which was a doubt if they had been collected today or yesterday, [or] there was a doubt if they had been hunted today or yesterday, they are forbidden. And whatever is forbidden to eat is forbidden to carry. But if their form proves about them such as withered fruit that it is impossible that they were gathered today, and similarly, fish that were brought from a distant place that it is impossible that they had been hunted today, are permitted. And something that is prepared/ready that comes from outside the [Sabbath] limits (i.e., the marked off area around a town or place within which it is permitted to move on the Sabbath two-thousand cubits in every direction) for an Israelite, it is forbidden for that Israelite to be brought for him and for his household, but it is permitted for another Israelite. But fruit that had been plucked and fish that had been hunted on the first day of the Festival, are permitted for the evening of the Second Day of the Festival in order that they are made, except for the two days of the holiday of Rosh Hashanah in which they are prohibited until the conclusion of the Second Day of the Holiday in order that they are made. And the explanation of [the term] in order that they are made, in order that the fruit can be plucked/detached from the place where they are detached and are brought from the place that they are brought from. But a cities whose doors are locked at night must wait until they are made.",
164
+ "ืืœื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฆื•ื ื• ืœืงื‘ืœ ืžืžื ื• โ€“ that I hate him."
165
+ ],
166
+ [
167
+ "ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืกื•ื›ื ืช โ€“ which he is afraid lest it might die. And he has not need for it for he has already eaten his meal.",
168
+ "ืœื ื™ืฉื—ื•ื˜ โ€“ unless he knows that there is a delay during to day to eat an oliveโ€™s bulk roasted from it.",
169
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืช ื˜ื‘ื™ื—ืชื” โ€“ which is ready at hand and stripped from its hide and standing. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Akiba.",
170
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื• ื‘ืžื•ื˜ ื•ื‘ืžื˜ื” โ€“ by two people, because the matter is noisy and disregards the honor of the Festival day."
171
+ ],
172
+ [
173
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืฉื ืคืœ ืœื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ a firstling with a blemish, which had not been shown to a Sage from the eve of the Festival day while it is still daylight to [potentially] permit it, and it fell into a pit on the Festival day, and he is afraid that it might die there.",
174
+ "ื™ืจื“ ืžื•ืžื—ื” โ€“ who is a specialist to distinguish between a fixed blemish and a passing blemish.",
175
+ "ื•ื™ืจืื” โ€“ a blemish that it had [acquired] yesterday, if it is a fixed blemish.",
176
+ "ื™ืขืœื” ื•ื™ืฉื—ื˜ โ€“ because there is no prohibition for use or handling [on Yom Tov] (or set aside in a shed for a sacrifice), and from yesterday, his mind was upon it.",
177
+ "ื•ืื ืœืื• ืœื ื™ืฉื—ื•ื˜ โ€“ this is how it should be understood, and if not, that this blemish that was upon it from the eve of the Festival was not a fixed [blemish] but rather on that day, it became a fixed blemish, even if it had passed and he brought it up, he should not slaughter it. And we donโ€™t say that from yesterday, his mind was upon it and since it now has a fixed blemish, letโ€™s slaughter it, for since yesterdayโ€™s blemish was not fixed, it is set aside in consequence of its being ritually forbidden.",
178
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื›ืŸ โ€“ not because it was forbidden for use or handling did he prohibit it, for Rabbi Shimon does not have [the concept of] Muktzeh/something set aside, but because he permits its use on the Festival day, it is like he repairs it, and it appears that he made a legal decision that was decreed upon it because of it is forbidden by the Rabbis as being out of harmony with the celebration of the day. And this is how it should be state: His making it permissible is not a permit, and it is not prepared to be acceptable."
179
+ ],
180
+ [
181
+ "ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉืžืชื” โ€“ we are speaking of the Holy Animals [for use in the Temple], as it is taught regarding it and on the Hallah that was defiled. For the Holy Animals that died it is forbidden to derive benefit from it and it requires burial, therefore, one should not move it from its place. But a secular/non-holy animal, we cut it up before the dogs. And these words [apply] when it was in danger from yesterday, when his mind was upon it, but if it was not endangered from yesterday, even a non-holy/secular animal, he should not move it from its place.",
182
+ "ื”ื—ืœื” ืฉื ื˜ืžืืช โ€“ which is not appropriate for the Kohen on the Festival day, even to burn it or to give it to his dog, we donโ€™t remove out of existence holy things form the world on Yom Tov, and even through animals eating it, as it is the decree of a Biblical verse that we do not remove ritually impure Holy Things from the world on Yom Tov."
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ืžื ื™ืŸ โ€“ fix a price so that two or three people would say that this animal is for three Zuzim, one per person.",
186
+ "ื•ืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ืžื—ืœืงื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ at one half, one third or one-fourth, and for one does not mention the fixing of the price.",
187
+ "ืฉื•ืงืœ ืื“ื ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ even though it is prohibited to weigh a pound, for it is the activity of a weekday, it is permissible to weigh meat in the place with a utensil in the balance with a chopper, and on the next day, they will see the chopper and the utensil as to their [combined] weight.",
188
+ "ื•ื—ื›\"ื ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื’ื™ื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ do not investigate.",
189
+ "ื‘ื›ืฃ ืžืื–ื ื™ื ื›ืœ ืขื™ืงืจ โ€“ even to preserve the meat from the mice, it is prohibited to place them on the weighing scale. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
190
+ ],
191
+ [
192
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื—ื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืกื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ with a millstone or with a whetting implement (of stone or wood)",
193
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžืฉื™ืื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” โ€“ as he makes a change from the manner of the weekday."
194
+ ],
195
+ [
196
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืžื“ื” โ€“ a designated/special utensil for measuring that he measures and sells [produce] with it. But if it is not designated for this, even though it stands for the measurement, when this one that he measures with breaks, the other stands in its place, and he is permitted to fill with it.",
197
+ "ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ืœื™ ืฉืœ ืžื“ื” โ€“ even though it has yet been designated for this purpose, he should not fill it up. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda.",
198
+ "ืžืžืœื ืžื“ื•ืชื™ื• ืžืขื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ for we donโ€™t measure on the Festival day.",
199
+ "ืืฃ ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ื›ืŸ โ€“ because of being idle from being in the House of Study, for many people would come to ask of him during the Intermediate Days when they are not busy with work and he would fill his measures at night which is not the time of study in the House of Study in order that he can be free during the daytime.",
200
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืžืฆื•ื™ ื”ืžื“ื•ืช โ€“ when he would sell oil, he had many measurements, and the purchasers would bring their utensils and he would measure for each and every person with his own measuring utensil, and they would empty out everything into their utensils all night long, in order that there would be no remaining oil attached to the sides of the measuring device or on its walls and as a result he would be stealing from the purchasers."
201
+ ]
202
+ ],
203
+ [
204
+ [
205
+ "ืžื‘ื™ื. ืžืžืงื•ื ืœืžืงื•ื โ€“ within the [Sabbath] boundary limits.",
206
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ to place three or four jugs within a basket or a hamper and carry them, because it appears like a weekday activity to carry burdens. But if it is impossible to make a change, it is permissible.",
207
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื‘ื™ื ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื›ืชืคื• โ€“ one or two for it proves that it is for the needs of the Festival day.",
208
+ "ืื• ืœืคื ื™ื• โ€“ in his hand.",
209
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืœื™ืš ืืช ื”ืชื‘ืŸ โ€“ for burning or for the cattle.",
210
+ "ืœื ื™ืคืฉื™ืœ ืงื•ืคื” ืœืื—ื•ืจื™ื• โ€“ for it appears like a weekday activity.",
211
+ "ื•ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจืžืช ื”ืชื‘ืŸ โ€“ even though he had not ordered it while it is was still daytime (before the start of the holiday) and he was not accustomed to burn with it, for this Tanna does not have the concept of Muktzeh/storage hut.",
212
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืขืฆื™ื [ืฉื‘ืžื•ืงืฆื”] โ€“ something wide at the back of the homes is called Muktzeh (a space back of the dwelling containing stored up wood, cattle in sheds, etc.), on account that it is set aside in back and one does not go in and come out of there frequently. And this wood that we are speaking of here, are large beams of cedar set aside for construction, and regarded as an item set aside due to monetary loss, as they are expensive. For in this case, even Rabbi Shimon, who is not of the opinion that there is a prohibition of muktze, concedes."
213
+ ],
214
+ [
215
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ื”ืกื•ื›ื” โ€“ even from a booth that is not of the Mitzvah (i.e., an ordinary booth on the property โ€“ not necessarily for Sukkot) such as on Passover or Atzeret/Shavuot, we donโ€™t take from it wood on the Festival day (see Talmud Betzah 31a) because of the tearing down/destruction of the tent.",
216
+ "ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื” โ€“ such as reeds that are standing near the walls that are not woven with the wall and are not abolished by the wall, therefore, we may take from them on the Festival day.",
217
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ detached [wood] pieces",
218
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื“ื” โ€“ that are within the [Sabbath] limit from what is stored up/brought in.",
219
+ "ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจืคืฃ ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ื–ืจ โ€“ Our Mishnah represents the opinion of a singular authority and is not Halakha. But rather, the Halakha is that one does not bring in wood other than from the that which is gathered/collected in the enclosure (especially, an enclosed space outside of a settlement). But he should not bring it in from field at all, and even from that which is collected, for his mind is not upon it, since they are not guarded there. But from the enclosure which is guarded and surrounded about, when they are brought in his mind is upon them.",
220
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉืกืžื•ืš ืœืขื™ืจ โ€“ in actuality, and that it has an opening, a key and is guarded, for Rabbi Yehuda requires two things โ€“ near the city and has a key/lock. But because he holds that mere enclosures have keys, because of this, he is not anxious to mention it.",
221
+ "ืจ\"ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืคื•ืชื—ืช, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืชื—ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ since he has key, he doesnโ€™t require it to be close by, but even if it is far until it is close to the end of the Sabbath limit boundary. And if it is nearby, we donโ€™t require a key/lock. For something nearby without a key or a key without it being nearby is permissible. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yosi."
222
+ ],
223
+ [
224
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืขื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ that are set up in the Land, in order that they do not curve, and stand for building.",
225
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืฉื ืฉื‘ืจื” ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ and even though that now they exist for burning, at eventide, they donโ€™t exist for this.",
226
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืขื™ืŸ ืœื ื‘ืงืจื“ื•ื โ€“ Our Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows, but they chop firewood from the beam that was broken on the eve of the Festival day, and when they chop it, they should not do so with an ax.",
227
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ืžื’ืจื” โ€“ a sort of long knife filled with notches and cuts with it thick wood, for it is the utensil of an artisan.",
228
+ "ืžื’ืœ โ€“ this also is the tool of an artisan, and appears like [one] wanting to do work.",
229
+ "ืืœื ื‘ืงื•ืคื™ืฅ โ€“ a mere hatchet (i.e., curved cutting tool) is a knife of butchers and is not the utensil of an artisan. And there are among them those which have two heads, one head is wide and is called the broadside of a double tool (see Talmud Betzah 31b), and the other head is narrow and is called the thin and pointed side of a double tool, and we donโ€™t chop with it other than where its head is narrow and is the thin and pointed side of the double tool.",
230
+ "ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ืžืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื—ืช โ€“ and we donโ€™t say that they are in consequence of a ritual prohibition, for he is not able to make a breach/hollow it out on Yom Tov and his mind is upon them, for the hut/house that is taught In our Mishnah speaks of that which is not built with plaster and lime, but is an arrangement of stones one on top of another without plaster, and not that its breach is not forbidden according to the Torah, therefore they are not forbidden for use or handling [on Shabbat and Festivals], and since we have said regarding eatables forbidden pending the separation of sacred gifts are not forbidden for use and handing and if he transgressed and repaired it, it is made legally fit by giving priestly dues.",
231
+ "ืืฃ ืคื•ื—ืช ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” โ€“ for since there is no plaster there but only bricks stacked on top of the other, he does not tear them down and iit is permitted to make a breach ab initio. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Meir."
232
+ ],
233
+ [
234
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื ืจ โ€“ to take one of the lumps of the artisan of earthenware and to insert his fist into it to engrave a lamp, because he is making a utensil.",
235
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืคื—ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ for these are also a utensil for the refinement/smelting of gold, and the wick also is a utensil for kindling, which requires making and repair.",
236
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื ื™ื โ€“ because [in the process] he is repairing a utensil, but to crush it/rub it with his hand is permitted.",
237
+ "ื—ื•ืชื›ื” ื‘ืื•ืจ โ€“ he places the two ends of the wick in the mouth of two candles that he needs to kindle at once and kindles in the middle, but now that he does not prove that he was repairing something with intention, but merely just to kindle. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yehuda."
238
+ ],
239
+ [
240
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื ื™ื™ืจ โ€“ that they place on it oil, and it stands in the midst of the fire, all o fthis when the oil is within it and it doesnโ€™t burn.",
241
+ "",
242
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืจืคื™ืŸ ืชื ื•ืจ ื•ื›ื™ืจื™ื โ€“ if there fell into them (i.e., the oven and/or the stove) from the paste of the oven and from the plaster , they donโ€™t remove the ashes and coal from the oven for it is like repairing a thing, and it comes like the Rabbis who say that acts that are preliminary to the preparation (as grinding the slaughtering knife) are forbidden.",
243
+ "ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ lie on the dust and dirt in order that it would be smooth, for if it is impossible for him to bake other than if he removes the ashes and coal form the oven, it is permitted.",
244
+ "ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ โ€“ bring them close to each other, like we donโ€™t bring close a creation.",
245
+ "ืœืฉืคื•ืช โ€“ to arrange and to place upon them a pot and the flame is between the two pots but he forbid it because it is similar to โ€œbuilding.โ€",
246
+ "[ื•ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืžื›ื™ืŸ] ืืช ื”ืงื“ืจื” ื‘ื‘ืงืขื” โ€“ and they do not place wood other than for burning, and chips, wood that been split.",
247
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืช โ€“ they do not support it on chips, for wood is forbidden for use and handling on the Festival regarding all usage outside of burning.",
248
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื ื”ื™ื’ื™ื ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืžืงืœ โ€“ because it appears like he leads it (i.e, the animal) to be sold in the marketplace."
249
+ ],
250
+ [
251
+ "ืžืฉืœืคื ื™ื• โ€“ from what is in front of him in the house.",
252
+ "ืœื—ืฆื•ืช ื‘ื• ืฉื ื™ื• โ€“ to take the meat which protrudes between his teeth, and that it is in front of him, is not specifically, for according to Rabbi Eliezer, it is permissible to take it even from the courtyard, as it states that whatever is in the courtyard is ready. But the fact that he (i.e., Rabbi Eliezer) used the term, โ€œin front of him,โ€ because the Rabbis who disagree with him state that even what is in front of him, he can kindle with it, but not to pick at his teeth, for they hold that wood is not used other than for burning.",
253
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื’ื‘ื‘ ืžืฉืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง โ€“ but not from the courtyard, for since they are thin chips and it is a burden to gather the wood and to sweep/rake them up, for from yesterday, they di dnot exist. But when the Mishnah stated that a person takes a chip of wood to pick at his teeth, we hold that even that which is in front of him he should not take other than to kindle, for wood is not given other than for burning. And in two things they disagree. But the Halakha is according to the Sages. And it is not permissible to take a wood chip to pick at his teeth other the manger of the animal, for anything that is fit for the food of an animal is permitted to cut whether on Yom Tov or on Shabbat, and there is nothing regarding them concerning the repair of a utensil."
254
+ ],
255
+ [
256
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืื•ืจ โ€“ because it is like โ€œgiving birthโ€ and similar to [prohibited] work, for one creates this fire on the Festival day.",
257
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ืขืคืจ โ€“ there is ground that when one digs it up, one produces fire from the place of its digging.",
258
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ one puts water in a white glass utensil and places it in the sun and when the sun is very hot and the glass produces a flame, and brings scraps/chips and they reach the glass and it burns.",
259
+ "ืจืขืคื™ื โ€“ a hollowed out earthenware utensil in its middle when they cover with them the gardens.",
260
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ with a flame.",
261
+ "ืืช ื”ืจืขืคื™ื โ€“ and specifically with new flints because they are similar to a think that is burned, and they are glazed and strengthened by the flame.",
262
+ "ื•ืขื•ื“ ืืžืจ ืจ\"ื โ€“ because the Tanna taught one for a leniency regarding that which is not permitted for use on the Sabbath/Festival day (i.e., Muktzeh) and afterwards he taught another thing, and it says, โ€œand furthermore.โ€",
263
+ "ืขื•ืžื“ ืื“ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” โ€“ that requires designation of an object for use [on the coming Holy Day], and the designation is beneficial for it.",
264
+ "ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช โ€“ when the tithe does not apply on it, and is not missing anything other than a designation. But the same law applies by that which is tithed in and in the rest of the years of the seven-year cycle. But he took something that is usual, for something merely set aside is not tithed, for dried figs and raisins are merely things that are stored away and it is not customary to tithe them prior to the completion of the work.",
265
+ "ืžื›ืืŸ ืื ื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ืœืžื—ืจ โ€“ and is enough with these when there is choice.",
266
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ืจืฉื•ื โ€“ with a sign/symbol, for there is no choice. But the Halakha is according to the Sages."
267
+ ]
268
+ ],
269
+ [
270
+ [
271
+ "ืžืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจื•ื‘ื” โ€“ whomever has fruit or produce spread out on his roof to dry out, and he saw rain coming slowly, they permitted him to go to the trouble and to cast them through an aperture in the roof, and they fall to the ground, for there is no excess trouble, and specifically an aperture, for every aperture is from above to below [in the ceiling of the roof] but a window, such as a roof that is surrounded by partitions and window I in the wall, and one must raise it up to the window to cast it, all of this the Rabbis did not permit and to be painstaking.",
272
+ "ื•ืžื›ืกื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืช โ€“ but we donโ€™t say that it is toil that is not for the needs of the Festival day, but because of the loss of money, the Rabbis permitted it.",
273
+ "ื“ืœืฃ โ€“ rain that drips from the roof.",
274
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืžืŸ โ€“ that cover them because of the drippings [from the roof].",
275
+ "ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ืœืฃ โ€“ to receive the water so that it should not soil the house. But if the utensil became filled, he pours it out and repeats it and is not prevented [from doing so]."
276
+ ],
277
+ [
278
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ that the Sages forbade to do on Shabbat because of Rabbinic decrees to enhance the character of the Shabbat/Festivals as a day of rest.",
279
+ "ืื• ืžืฉื•ื ืจืฉื•ืช โ€“ that there is in a bit of a Mitzvah, but not a large Mitzvah, but it is near to being an optional act, but there is within it a prohibition from the words of the Scribes.",
280
+ "ืื• ืžืฉื•ื ืžืฆื•ื” โ€“ or there is within an actual Mitzvah/commandment, and the Sages prohibited doing it on the Sabbath.",
281
+ "ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ not to do it on the Festival.",
282
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ื•ืช โ€“ that the Sages placed upon him to abstain from doing but there isnโ€™t in their performance any kind of Mitzvah.",
283
+ "ืœื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœืŸ โ€“ a decree lest he tear off [a branch].",
284
+ "ื•ืœื ืจื•ื›ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€“ a decree lest he cut a vine-shoot to drive the animal.",
285
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉื˜ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ a decree lest he make a swimmerโ€™s bottle (see Tractate Kelim, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3 โ€“ used for practicing).",
286
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื˜ืคื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ hand upon hand.",
287
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืกืคืงื™ืŸ โ€“ hand upon the leg.",
288
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืจืงื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ on the Festival, and all of them are a decree lest he repair a musical instrument.",
289
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืจืฉื•ืช โ€“ because oof those of the ending section of the Mishnah which are a complete Mitzvah, regarding them we call these โ€œoptional.โ€",
290
+ "ืœื ื“ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ a judgement, and sometimes it is optional, such as when there is a larger city than this one, and it is not upon him to judge.",
291
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ the betrothal of a woman. For sometimes, it is not a complete commandment but rather optional, such as when he has a wife and children.",
292
+ "ื•ืœื ื—ื•ืœืฆื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื™ื‘ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ also at the time when he has an older brother than him, it is option, but it is a great Mitzvah to perform a levirate marriage and the reason for all of them is lest he write [documents].",
293
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ the value of this thing is upon me, and he gives according to the years, as it is written in the portion of valuations (Leviticus 27:1-8).",
294
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ behold this animal is devoted to God. And a mere devotion of an animal is for the treasury of the Temple. And all of them, the Rabbis forbad because they are similar to business transactions where one removes it from his domain to the domain of the Sanctified.",
295
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื•ืžืขืฉืจื•ืช โ€“ and even in order to give them to the Kohen on the same day that is appropriate, for because of the Rejoicing on the Festival that the Kohen who needs them, he separates them (i.e., the tithes), and nevertheless, it is prohibited, for it is considered like repairing. And these words concerning produce that yesterday were eatables forbidden prior to the separation of sacred gifts, that currently such as dough one has to separate Hallah from, we separate it on the Festival and give them to the Kohen.",
296
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ื•\"ื˜ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืื•ื›ืœ ื ืคืฉ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ (this part of the Mishnah is also found in Tractate Megillah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 5) โ€“ this anonymous teaching is according to the School of Shammai which states that we do not take out the minor nor the Lulav nor a Torah scroll into the public domain, for taking out was only permitted for the purpose of the preparation of food. But we hold like the School of Hillel which states that since removal was permitted for the purposes of the preparation of food, it is also permitted for that which is not needed [for food preparation]. And there are those who state that we let down pieces of fruit through an aperture in the roof looking to the ground floor at the beginning of our Chapter (Mishnah 1), that it is prohibited on the Sabbath, but that is permitted on the Festival."
297
+ ],
298
+ [
299
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ a person cannot bring it on the Festival other than where its owners are able to go.",
300
+ "ืื• ืœืจื•ืขื” ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ Our Mishnah when there is in the city two shepherds, and we do not know which of them it would be [according to] the will of the owners, they are like status of the owner, if it was not with the shepherd while it was still day [prior to the start of the Festival]. But when the city lacks all but one shepherd, all the people of the city place their cattle in his domain and in having a Sabbath center, it would be like the status of the shepherd.",
301
+ "ื•ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ื™ื โ€“ [not designated] to one of them, but rather to all of them.",
302
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ to the place where all of them are able to go, it is permissible to bring the utensils, but if one of them made an Eruv at the end of two-thousand [cubits] to the north and the others did not make an Eruv, he delays them from being able to walk to the south even one step because of his portion, and they prevent him from going to the north, other than to the two-thousand cubits that are permitted to them."
303
+ ],
304
+ [
305
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืฉื•ืืœ โ€“ for he acquired his Sabbath center with him at twilight, for twilight is the entrance of the day where one acquires his Sabbath center, and even though it did not come into the hand of the borrower other than on Yom Tov/the Festival day, for it was not established in his possession at twilight, it is in the status of the person who borrows it (i.e., the utensil). And if he borrowed it on Yom Tov once it became dark, it is in the possession of the one who is lending it out, because he has acquired the Sabbath center with its owners. And even if he was accustomed to lend it out on every Holy Day.",
306
+ "ื”ืืฉื” ืฉืฉืืœื” ืžื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ for her pot.",
307
+ "ื•ืžื™ื ื•ืžืœื— โ€“ for her dough.",
308
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• โ€“ her pot and her dough.",
309
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ they do not bring them other than in a place where both of them are able to go, for since she borrowed it on the Festival day, they acquired the Sabbath center for the spices or the water and the salt with their respective owners.",
310
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืžืฉ โ€“ they are not recognized, neither the pot, nor the dough, such as the case where the cooked dish is thick and the water is not recognized in it. Therefore, it does not delay their going. And regarding the salt, Rabbi Yehuda does not dispute when speaking of dough that was kneaded in salt which is large and thick, which is recognizable and has substance. But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Yehuda."
311
+ ],
312
+ [
313
+ "ื•ืฉืœื”ื‘ืช โ€“ such as the case where he kindled his candle with his friendโ€™s flame, it does not indispensable in the prohibition of [Sabbath/Yom Tov] boundaries.",
314
+ "ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื” โ€“ a person who benefits from it (i.e., the burning coal), brings a guilt-offering of sacrilege.",
315
+ "ื•ืฉืœื”ื‘ืช ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ ab initio according to the Rabbis.. But if they derived benefit, they do not commit an act of sacrilege, and they are not liable for a sacrifice of sacrilege for there isnโ€™t anything of substance. And similarly, a person who takes out a burning coal to the public domain on the Sabbath is liable, but the flame that pushed his hand from the private domain to the public domain is exempt.",
316
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ โ€“ we donโ€™t bring water other than according to the status of the owner of the well.",
317
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ืื•ืชื” ื”ืขื™ืจ โ€“ two-thousand cubits in all directions outside of its extension of the city limits/outskirts of the city.",
318
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื™ ื‘ื‘ืœ โ€“ that is made for those who passers-by in the middle of the path, and they made them members of the Diaspora to cause them to drink while they are coming up [from Babylonia].",
319
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืžืžืœื โ€“ because it is ownerless and something ownerless is acquired through lifting. But if a person comes and asks him for water, he does not lead them other than according to his status, for this Tanna/teacher holds that there is a choice to be stringent, for from yesterday, the matter was clear that it belonged to this person and it stood in his domain. But not according to Rabbi Yohanan ben Nuri who stated that ownerless objects acquire their Sabbath center for themselves in their place (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5)."
320
+ ],
321
+ [
322
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• โ€“ from his produce, for since he had not made an Eruv there, that his produce is like him."
323
+ ],
324
+ [
325
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื–ื™ืžืŸ ืืฆืœื• ืื•ืจื—ื™ื โ€“ from another town and they would come to him via the Eruv.",
326
+ "ืœื ื™ื•ืœื™ื›ื• โ€“ after the meal [they should not bring] portions in their hands to their homes.",
327
+ "ืื\"ื› ื–ื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื โ€“ at the hand of another [he gave them possession of those foodstuffs].",
328
+ "[ืžื ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉ] โ€“ that the owner of the house distributed them to another person through โ€œpullingโ€™ on the eve of the Festival day, and said to him: have so-and-so and so-and-so acquire these portions, for one acts in a personโ€™s interest in his absence (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 7, Mishnah 11)."
329
+ ]
330
+ ]
331
+ ],
332
+ "sectionNames": [
333
+ "Chapter",
334
+ "Mishnah",
335
+ "Comment"
336
+ ]
337
+ }
json/Mishnah/Rishonim on Mishnah/Bartenura/Seder Moed/Bartenura on Mishnah Beitzah/English/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,335 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Bartenura on Mishnah Beitzah",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Bartenura_on_Mishnah_Beitzah",
6
+ "text": [
7
+ [
8
+ [
9
+ "ื‘ื™ืฆื” ืฉื ื•ืœื“ื” ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ [on Yom Tov] which is after Shabbat is what we are dealing with. And the reason of the School of Hillel which states โ€œit may not be eaten,โ€ because an egg laid today was fully developed yesterday (Talmud Betzah 2b), and it results that Shabbat would prepare for Yom Tov, and the Torah states (Exodus 16:5): โ€œBut on the sixth day, when they apportion [what they have brought in, it shall prove to be double the amount they gather each day],โ€ for a regular Friday is a weekday, on a weekday one prepares for Shabbat, and on a weekday one prepares for a Yom Tov/Festival, for a Festival is also called Shabbat, one does not prepare on a Yom Tov for Shabbat nor does one prepare on Shabbat for a Yom Tov. And preparation like this of the egg, even though it is in the hands of heaven, it is called preparation. However, Shabbat and Yom Tov are important, as they require that their meals have preparation/designation on a weekday, and on one of them, one can prepare for its fellow, even with preparation at the hands of heaven, but the meal of a weekday is not considered important nor does it require preparation. Therefore, on a mere Sunday which is not a Holy Day, we donโ€™t forbid an egg that was laid on that day because it was completed on Shabbat, but the meal of a weekday, the all-Merciful does not require preparation while it is still daylight. But they (i.e., the Rabbis) an egg that was laid on any Holy Day/Yom Tov, and even though it is not after the Shabbat, as a decree because of a Holy Day that comes after the Sabbath. And similarly, they forbade an egg that was laid on every Sabbath to quaff/swallow a living animal, as a decree because of a Shabbat that comes after a Yom Tov. For a Sabbath and a Holy Day that are juxtaposed one to the other, an egg that is laid on this one is forbidden [to be eaten] on that one. And similarly, the two days Holy Days of Rosh Hashanah, but the second Holy Days of the Diaspora that whatever be your opinion one of them is a weekday, and an egg that is laid on this one is permitted on that one.",
10
+ "ืฉืื•ืจ ื‘ื›ื–ื™ืช โ€“ as regarding eating, everyone does not dispute that both this (leaven) and that (leavened bread) are [forbidden] with an oliveโ€™s bulk, for since the Biblical verse begins with ืฉืื•ืจ/leaven and concludes with ื—ืžืฅ/leavened bread. โ€œNo leaven shall be found in your houses [for seven days]. For whoever eats what is leavened, [that person shall be cut off from the community of Israel],โ€ to tell you that this is โ€œleavenโ€ and that is which is leavened, as is the case with the one is also the case with the other. But they (i.e., the Schools of Hillel and Shammai) argue regarding removal, as the School of Shammai holds that since the All-Merciful has written for both leaven and that which is leavened, and to write [the word] Hametz/leavened product, for its that which is a strong leavening agent (see Talmud Betzah 7b), and despite this, one is obligated to remove it, and it is an a fortiori for leaven which is a strong leavening agent, but we learn from this that the measurement for the one is not like the measurement of the other, and we donโ€™t derive removal [of Hametz] from eating. But the School of Hillel holds that both (i.e. ืฉืื•ืจ ื•ื—ืžืฅ) [are forbidden] by an oliveโ€™s bulk, as we derive removal from eating. But because that these three things are of the liberal opinions of the School of Shammai and the of the stringencies of the School of Hillel regarding the Yom Tov, they are taught together.",
11
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืชื‘ืช โ€“ date palm."
12
+ ],
13
+ [
14
+ "ื”ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ he who comes to slaughters a wild beast or fowl and consults with the Jewish court how he should do it.",
15
+ "ื‘\"ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ the Jewish court teaches him that ab initio, he should slaughter it with a mattock (i.e., a pronged tool) stuck in the ground that he prepared while it is still day (i.e., before the start of the Festival โ€“ see Talmud Betzah 7b) that is he should uproot it from the place where it is stuck into the ground and bring up dirt and cover it. For we are speaking that it is inserted in crushed/loose earth (see Talmud Betzah 8a) that is appropriate for covering, that is not lacking pounding/crushing.",
16
+ "ื“ืงืจ โ€“ a peg that we stick in the ground, and the language of the peg is (Numbers 25:8): โ€œstabbed both of them.โ€",
17
+ "ืฉืืคืจ ื›ื™ืจื” ืžื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื โ€“ they do not refer to the words/matter of the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel, but it is an entirely separate matter, and this is how it should be understood โ€“ that the ashes of the oven should be made ready and that they do not need preparation/designation for a particular purpose that is mind is upon it, and they did not teach other than that which had been heated from the eve of the Festival, but that which was heated on the Festival is prohibited, for one cannot say that his thoughts were upon it from yesterday. For if it was appropriate to roast on it an egg, for it was yet hot ashes/embers, even though it was kindled on the Festival, it is permissible to cover it, for it is worthy of roast on it an egg, they take it also and cover [the blood] with it."
18
+ ],
19
+ [
20
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ืกื•ืœื ืžืฉื•ื‘ืš ืœืฉื•ื‘ืš โ€“ regarding the ladder of an upper story no one disagrees that it is forbidden and regarding a ladder of a dovecote also, when he brings it in the public domain, the School of Hillel admits that it is forbidden, for a person who sees it would say that he is fixing his roof, he is bringing it and doing work on the Festival, but they (i.e., the Schools of Shammai and Hillel) disagree when he brings it in the private domain and there arenโ€™t people who see him. The School of Shammai holds that they should not bring it, for any thing that the Sages prohibit in order to avoid the semblance of wrong-doing for appearance sake (Talmud Betzah 9a), even in the remotest recesses (i.e., the strictest secrecy) is prohibited, but the School of Hillel permits it, and even though that generally, this is the law, here it is permitted because of the joy of the Festivals.",
21
+ "ืžื—ืœื•ืŸ ืœื—ืœื•ืŸ โ€“ in the same dovecote itself, for it is the manner of each dovecote to have [many compartments] a nest for each and every pair, and a window for each and every nest.",
22
+ "ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ืื ื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ โ€“ This is a dispute between the School of Shammai and the School of Hillel specificially in the first brood of the year (see Talmud Betzah 10a), for it is the practice of those who raise doves to always leave the first brood which are the first two pigeons, for their mothers console them so that they do not fly off. But the School of Shammai holds that that mere words are not enough, lest they take them on the morrow, and they determine to protect them and would engage in carrying that is not necessary , but when he shakes and uses them while it is still daytime for slaughter, and does not protect them, furthermore, we donโ€™t suspect that he is protecting them. But the School of Hillel does not decree lest he has compassion on them, and even if they are the first brood."
23
+ ],
24
+ [
25
+ "ื–ื™ืžืŸ ืฉื—ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืžืฆื ืœื‘ื ื™ื โ€“ this matter is simple and it was not necessary to teach it. But this is how it should be understood โ€“ that if he designated black and white ones and found black ones in the place of white ones and white ones in the place of black ones. And this is the explanation of our Mishnah โ€“ that he designated black ones in this nest and found white ones there, [or] he designated in the second [nest] white ones and found it black ones, you might think they had been reversed, but it comes to teach us that this is not the case.",
26
+ "ืฉื ื™ื ื•ืžืฆื ื’' โ€“ and he doesnโ€™t recognize the ones that are ready, all of them are forbidden.",
27
+ "ืฉืœืฉื” ื•ืžืฆื ืฉื ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจื™ื โ€“ and one went off, and he two remained. And we donโ€™t say that just as the one went off, so all the others went off and these are the others.",
28
+ "ื–ื™ืžืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืงืŸ ื•ืžืฆื ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืงืŸ โ€“ but within the nest he did not find all of them, they are forbidden.",
29
+ "ื•ืื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืชื• ืฉื•ื‘ืš ืืœื ื”ืŸ ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ืžื•ืชืจื™ืŸ โ€“ and even though there is another dovecote near it within fifty cubits, if that dovecote is not in the row of this dovecote equivalently other than in the corner-piece, we donโ€™t say that from that dovecote that is closest to it. For the pigeons all the while that they are not flying but are stretching their legs, they are not equally stretching other opposite their own nest, for if they see their nests when they turn around to their backs they stretch, and if not they do not stretch."
30
+ ],
31
+ [
32
+ "ื”ืขืœื™ โ€“ the handle of a very large piece of wood where they pound/crush grits and similar things. But because of its heaviness and size, for it is not considered a utensil.",
33
+ "ืœืงืฆื‘ โ€“ to cut/sever.",
34
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ because of the joy of the Festival, and even though it is not considered as utensil.",
35
+ "ืœืคื ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื“ืจื™ืกื” โ€“ that people will tread upon it, in order that he will not lose it.",
36
+ "ื•ืœื ื™ื’ื‘ื™ื”ื ื• โ€“ to carry it after flaying it.",
37
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ for if he did not permit it, he would not slaughter it in order not to lose the hide, and be prevented from the rejoicing of the Festival.",
38
+ "ืชืจื™ืกื™ืŸ โ€“ those who sell spices have stores that are made like chests which stand in the market and are not attached to the ground. And these shutters are doors that close the openings of these chests, and sometimes these shutters are removed from the opening of the chest and they spread upon them, the dyes/ingredients of frankincense that are in the store.",
39
+ "ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ ืขืฃ ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจ โ€“ with these shutters that lack a hinge from the side, no one disagrees that it is forbidden to lock with them even the doors of the stores, for this is comparable to building. But they do dispute regarding shutters that have a hinge in the middle like something protruding and they insert it in the hole that is in the middle wall, at the opening of the store. The School of Shammai holds that we make a decree that a hinge in the middle is on account of the hinge from the side. But the School of Hillel holds that we do not make a decree concerning the shutters of the stores, and it is permitted ot return them, because it is necessary to remove spices and if we donโ€™t permit him to return them, he would not open it and would be prevented from the joy of the Festival.",
40
+ "ืœื ืืช ื”ืงื˜ืŸ โ€“ nor whatever it may be that is not for the needs of eating.",
41
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ who say that since it was permitted to remove something for the needs of eating, it is also permitted for something that is not for the needs of eating, and there would be a need for a Mitzvah such as these that are considered in our Mishnah, or for the need of something enjoyable such as from the opening of his house and similar things, to exclude the removal of stones and similar things, for on those, the School of Hillel admits that it is prohibited."
42
+ ],
43
+ [
44
+ "ืื™ื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ื—ืœื” โ€“ on the Festival Day. Even though it is permitted to separate it, they did not permit him to bring it, but the repair of the dough they permitted to him, and nothing more.",
45
+ "ืžืชื ื•ืช โ€“ the shoulder, the cheeks and the stomach (see Deuteronomy 18:3).",
46
+ "ื’ื–ืจื” ืฉื•ื” โ€“ not specifically, for all of it is, was decreed by the Rabbis because of a decree that we donโ€™t raise up the priestโ€™s due and the tithes on the Festival. But it is similar to an analogy.",
47
+ "ืžืชื ื” ืœื›ื”ืŸ โ€“ from the twenty-four priestly gifts.",
48
+ "ื›ืฉื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืœื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ this Mishnah is superseded in the Gemara (Tractate Betzah 12b) for the Schools of Shammai and Hillel did not dispute that they bring up the hallah offering and priestly gifts. For they did not dispute other than in bringing up the Priestโ€™s due/the Sacred gift for the Priest/Terumah, as the School of Shammai state that we donโ€™t bring it up but the School of Hillel states that we do bring it up. The School of Hillel said to the School of Shammai that the Hallah/dough offering and priestly gifts are for the Kohen, and the Priestโ€™s Due is a gift for the Kohen, and just as they bring up the [other gifts] they also bring up the Terumah. Bet Shammai responded to them that this is not the case, for if you said concerning the Hallah and priestly gifts that they are deserving of separating their priestly gifts, the Sages gave the strength and the permission for their being set apart for a sacred purpose, for since their obligation comes on the Festival day, since we knead and slaughter on the Festival day, and since they were permitted on the Festival day, we permit to bring them up even those that were made from the eve of the Festival day, shall we say that the Priestโ€™s due which is not worthy in being brought up that it is impossible that the obligation for Terumah should come to the pile on the Festival Day, since there is no obligation for Terumah other than from the time of smoothing out the pile and we donโ€™t smooth out the pile on the Festive Day, therefore, we donโ€™t bring up the Terumah on the Festival Day."
49
+ ],
50
+ [
51
+ "ื‘ืžื“ื•ืš ืฉืœ ืขืฅ โ€“ but not in one (i.e., a pestle) made of stone. But however, with a wooden pestle, they are crushed in their manner and there is no need for a change, since they lose their taste if they are crushed from the day before.",
52
+ "ื•ื”ืžืœื— ื‘ืคืš โ€“ [a cruse] of earthenware he crushes it.",
53
+ "ืื• ื‘ืขืฅ ืคืจื•ืจ โ€“ it is the spoon that one stirs the pot with, for the salt requires a change, for he had to crush it from the day before so that it doesnโ€™t lose its taste. And the Halakha is that one who comes to crush salt on the Festival Day, turns the mortar on its side and crushes in a changed manner. But the spices are crushed in the regular manner and they do not require a change."
54
+ ],
55
+ [
56
+ "ื‘ื•ืจืจ ืื•ื›ืœ ืื•ื›ืœ โ€“ he collects food one piece at a time from the refuse.",
57
+ "ื‘ื•ืจืจ ื›ื“ืจื›ื• ื‘ื—ื™ืงื• โ€“ and as long as it wonโ€™t be a painstaking preparation separating the large amount of refuse. But if it the painstaking preparation involved in separating the refuse is greater than the trouble involved to separate the food, such as the case where the refuse is exceptionally thin, even though the food is greater in its measure than the refuse, the School of Hillel agrees that one separates the food and sets aside the refuse, to exclude where the trouble involved is preferable.",
58
+ "ืืฃ ืžื“ื™ื— ื•ืฉื•ืœื” โ€“ that he brings a utensil filled with pulse and puts water upon it and the refuse floats on top of the water and he removes it with his hand. The word ืฉื•ืœื” /โ€draw it outโ€ is like (Exodus 3: 5 ) โ€œRemove your sandals [from your feet, for the place on which you stand is holy ground].โ€ But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel."
59
+ ],
60
+ [
61
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉืœื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ โ€“ gift of a person to his friend.",
62
+ "ืืœื ืžื ื•ืช โ€“ something prepared that is not made to be left over until the morrow, such as pieces of meat and/or fish.",
63
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื•' โ€“ The School of Hillel did not permit other than to send via one or two people. But three or more people who carry the present is forbidden, as it the matter is too large and appears like one is bringing [things] to sell in the marketplace.",
64
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืชื‘ื•ืื” โ€“ which is not appropriate for eating, for it requires grinding and we do not grind on the Festival Day.",
65
+ "ื•ืจ' ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืžืชื™ืจ ื‘ืชื‘ื•ืื” โ€“ for one is able to crush it in a small mortar and cook it through the use of a pot. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon."
66
+ ],
67
+ [
68
+ "ืžืฉืœื—ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื™ื ืชืคื•ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ that are appropriate for clothing, and which are not sewn are appropriate for covering.",
69
+ "ื›ืœืื™ื โ€“ when they are hard and they donโ€™t make warm, it is permissible to lie on them.",
70
+ "ืกื ื“ืœ ืžืกื•ืžืจ โ€“ of wood covered with nails. For the Sages decreed concerning it that one should not wear it on the Sabbath and the Festival Day, because of an event that occurred where those killed by the [Roman] Kingdom were killed by it, as it is explained in Tractate Shabbat 60a โ€“ in the chapter โ€œHow a woman goes outโ€ (chapter 6).",
71
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื ืขืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืชืคื•ืจ โ€“ and one that was attached by pegs made of wood and similar kinds of things.",
72
+ "ืืฃ ืœื ืžื ืขืœ ืœื‘ืŸ โ€“ in the place of Rabbi Yehuda, they would not wear white shoes until they blacken it.",
73
+ "ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืื•ืžืŸ โ€“ to blacken it.",
74
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื ืื•ืชื™ืŸ โ€“ this is how it should be understood: All that is permitted to be used on weekdays like it is and does not require other work [done to it], even though they are not permitted to be used on Festival Days, such as Tefillin, which on weekdays one wears as they are and on Festival Days, one does not wear them, we send them on the Festival Day (see Talmud Betzah 15a)."
75
+ ]
76
+ ],
77
+ [
78
+ [
79
+ "ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ืœื ื™ื‘ืฉืœ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” โ€“ that is to say that the beginning of his cooking and its essence should not be for the Sabbath, but rather for the sake of Yom Tov/the Festival Day should be the beginning of his cooking and what remains should be for the Sabbath.",
80
+ "ื•ืขื•ืฉื” ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœ ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ โ€“ for the sake of the โ€œjoining of cooked foodsโ€/Eruv Tavshilin (preparing meals for the Sabbath on a Holy Day occurring on a Friday: a person prepares a dish on Thursday and lets it lie over until the end of the Sabbath which he does on the Holy Day โ€“ Friday โ€“ is merely a continuation of the preparation begun on Thursday). There are those who say that the reason that this dish from the eve of the Festival day/Yom Tov, is because of the honor of the Sabbath, for since from the eve of the Festival day he remembers the Sabbath, he will choose a nice portion for the Sabath, and not forget the Sabbath because of the preoccupation with the Festival Day. And there are those wohose say that is because of the honor of the Festival day, in order that they should see that they donโ€™t bake from the Festival day for the Sabbath other than if he had begun while it was still daylight, for on the Festival day, he does nothing other than complete it, a fortiori (i.e., all the more so), from the Festival day to a weekday entirely, we do not back nor cook. And we make the blessing on Eruv Tavshilin/โ€joining of cooked foodsโ€ in the manner that we make the blessing on the Eruv in reference to the โ€œjoining of courtyardsโ€/Eruv Hatzerot. But it is necessary to make assignment through another for all who wish afterwards to rely upon his Eruv/โ€joining,โ€ and even without his knowledge, for one acts in a personโ€™s interest in his absence.",
81
+ "ืื›ืœื• ืื• ืฉืื‘ื“ โ€“ that same dish that he cooked, from the eve of the Sabbath.",
82
+ "ืกื•ืžืš ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ to cook his dish on the Festival day for the needs of the Sabbath, But, from the outset, his โ€œjoining of dishesโ€/Eruv Tavshilin is not less than an oliveโ€™s bulk, whether for one [person] or for one hundred [people]. But if he began with his dough and his Eruv became lost, he completes it with what he has begun with."
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ืœ โ€“ for a person is obligated to ritually purify himself on the Festival. And everything that requires ritual immersion, whether a person or utensils, we ritually immerse prior to the Sabbath.",
86
+ "ื›ืœื™ื ืžืœืคื ื™ ื”ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ for since they are worthy after ritual immersion for things that they were not worthy for prior to the immersion, if one immerses them on Shabbat or on Yom Tov/the Festival day, it would be like repairing a matter an that is forbidden. And Shabbat was used here to inform you of the power of the School of Hillel, that even on the Sabbath, they permitted the ritual immersion of a person, because it appears like holding him dear and become cols cold and bathes for pleasure and not for the sake of ritual immersion."
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "ื•ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืื‘ืŸ โ€“ whomever has fine water for drinking that became ritually impure, one fills from them a stone utensil that is not susceptible to receive ritual impurity and place them in a Mikveh of salty or turbid waters until the waters come into close contact with each other, resulting that these which were sown and connected to the waters of the Mikveh/ritual bath were cancelled out on account of this and made ritually pure, but the purification in the Mikveh is not for any foodstuffs and liquids but only for water alone, and not for the law of ritual immersion, but for the law of sowing.",
90
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ we donโ€™t put them (i.e., the waters) in a ritually impure wooden utensil that requires ritual immersion for the vessel, to cause contact [by dipping a vessel, filled with unclean liquid, so as to make its surface level with the surface of the water into which it is dipped, which is a ceremony of levital purification], in order to raise the ritual immersion to the utensil along with the contact with the water.",
91
+ "ื•ืžื˜ื‘ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืžื’ื‘ ืœื’ื‘ โ€“ a person who immersed utensils with the intention that he would tread olives upon them in the building containing the tank [and all the implements] for the pressing of common (i.e., non-holy) olives, and he reconsidered to press in them grapes in the vat for wine pressing of Terumah, he mus immerse them a second time for the purpose of Terumah. And similarly, if he had immersed utensils for the sake of Terumah and reconsidered to make them holy, he requires a second ritual immersion for the sake of making it holy. And that ritual immersion can be done on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for there is no repair of the utensil for this ritual immersion is not for elevating them from ritual defilement, but rather for an additional purity.",
92
+ "ื•ืžื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืœื—ื‘ื•ืจื” โ€“ if he immersed utensils in order to eat his Passover offering with one association/group and he reconsidered to be reckoned with another association and he came to ritually immerse his utensils a second time, this ritual immersion is permitted to be done on Yom Tov/the Festival day."
93
+ ],
94
+ [
95
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืฉืœืžื™ื โ€“ on Yom Tov/the Festival day, holiday peace-offerings, because thereโ€™re is through them the need for consumption by a person.",
96
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืžื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื โ€“ for laying of hands upon them is prohibited because of the rabbinic decree to enhance the character of the day as a day of rest, for he would lay his hands with all of his strength and he would be making use of animals, for he lays his hands on them on the Eve of the Festival day, for the School of Shammai does not hold by the rule that immediately after the lay of hands comes the slaughtering [of the animal] (see Mishnah Menahot, Chapter 9, Mishnah 8 at the conclusion).",
97
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ืขื•ืœื•ืช โ€“ outside of the daily whole-offerings and Musaf/additional offerings which are a community sacrifice at a fixed time. But one should not bring an individual whole burnt-offering which cannot be consumed by a commoner (i.e., non-Kohen). But even the burnt-offerings for appearing [during the Festival in the Temple]are offered on the other days of the Festival, but not on the Festival day/Yom Tov, for the All-Merciful stated (Numbers 29:35): โ€œ[On the eight day] you shall hold a solemn gathering,โ€ for you, but not for Most-High.",
98
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืื•ืžืจื™ื โ€“ one brings festival peace offerings and whole burnt offerings for appearance [in the Temple], as it is written (Deuteronomy 16:8): โ€œ[After eating unleavened bread for six days,] you shall hold a solemn gathering for the LORD] your God on the seventh dayโ€ฆ,โ€ everything is for God. But vows and free-will donations, according to everyone are not offered on the Festival, neither whole burnt-offerings or peace-offerings."
99
+ ],
100
+ [
101
+ "ืœื ื™ื—ื ืื“ื ื—ืžื™ืŸ ืœืจื’ืœื™ื• โ€“ The Torah permitted the preparation of food [on Yom Tov, for that day], but not to start a fire for bathing.",
102
+ "ื•ื‘\"ื” ืžืชื™ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ for such it [i.e., the Torah] permitted kindling a fire for the needs of eating, it permitted it also for things which are not for the needs of eating, when there is a need for some sort of benefit. And the Halakhic decision is that hot water that was warmed on the Festival day, a person can wash his face, hands and feet in it but not his entire body, for they decreed that the Festival day/Yom Tov is like Shabbat. But hot water that was warmed from the eve of the Festival, one can wash all of oneโ€™s body in it on Yom Tov."
103
+ ],
104
+ [
105
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ืžื™ืŸ ืžื™ื•\"ื˜ ืœืฉื‘ืช โ€“ for the School of Shammai holds that one does not bake other than if one made an Eruv with bread, and we donโ€™t cook other than if he made an Eruv on the cooked dish, and we donโ€™t put warm dishes in the chafing stove other than if he had warm dishes placed there from the eve of the Festival day. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake and cook and keep dishes warm for the Sabbath on the Eruv of the cooked dish alone. However, in the Gemara (Talmud Betzah 22a), it is proven that the School of Hillel also requires bread and meat and that is the Halakha.",
106
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื–ื•ืงืคื™ืŸ ืžื ื•ืจื” โ€“ [ put together a candlestick] when its pieces can be taken apart, and we donโ€™t restore them for that is similar to [the prohibition of] โ€œbuilding,โ€ for there is building for utensils. But the School of Hillel holds that there is no building with utensils.",
107
+ "ื’ืจื™ืฆื™ืŸ โ€“ thick loaves",
108
+ "ืืœื ืจืงื™ืงื™ืŸ โ€“ thin loaves, for the School of Shammai holds that one does make a great deal of bread on the Festival Day because of the effort involved. But the School of Hillel holds that we bake a great deal of bread on the Festival day, for at the time that the bread is plentiful, it bakes well.",
109
+ "ื•ื—ืจื™ โ€“ a large piece of dough that is baked upon coals, because it requires a large flame where the coals are continuously dimming/quenching, and there is great effort. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel where he is stringent like the words of the School of Shammai."
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "ืžื›ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื•ืช โ€“ when the eat there (they sweep between the couches). For they normally recline to eat on top of beds and because it is such a small place, they are not suspect lest it make indentations, as we would fear regarding a large house and it is impossible that there wouldnโ€™t be an indentation/hole.",
113
+ "ืžื•ื’ืžืจ โ€“ frankincense on top of the coals to smell it, but to perfume the utensils, it is the words of everyone that it is prohibited.",
114
+ "ืžืงื•ืœืก โ€“ its legs, and its innards are hanging outside of it [on its side] when they are roasting it, and they do this in memory of the Passover sacrifice, as it is written concerning it (Exodus 12:9): โ€œ[Do not eat any of it raw, or cooked in any way with water, but roasted-] head, legs and entrails โ€“ over the fire.โ€ [The word] ืžืงื•ืœืก/an animal roasted in its entrails and legs on the head โ€“ is like this hero whose weaponry was with him (a reference to Goliath in I Samuel 17:5 who had a โ€œbronze helmet/ื›ื•ื‘ืข ื ื—ืฉืช ) and the Aramaic translation of โ€œbronze helmetโ€ is a bronze helmet (see also Rashi to Zebahim 88b). But Maimonides explained the word ืžืงื•ืœืก as meaning honorable, in the manner of praise.",
115
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืกืจื™ืŸ โ€“ [The Sages forbid] all three. Sweeping because it makes indentations, and the spices put upon the coals/perfume because it is not necessary for every person, for it is not other than for those spoiled and those who indulge themselves in pleasures and to one who has a bad odor. The spices placed upon the coals โ€“ because it appears like one who is eating Holy objects outside [the Temple]. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
116
+ ],
117
+ [
118
+ "ืคืจืชื• ื™ื•ืฆืื” ื‘ืจืฆื•ืขื” ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืงืจื ื™ื” โ€“ for beauty/adornment. And the Sages stated that it is a burden and is not a decoration for it. And it was not the cow of Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah but that of his neighbor, and since they did not protest, it was called as associated with him.",
119
+ "ื•ืžืงืจื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ like a small bronze saw whose teeth are thin and which rubs and scratches the animal, and even though it makes a wound.",
120
+ "ื‘ืจื—ื™ื ืฉืœื”ืŸ โ€“ small which are made for this.",
121
+ "ืžืงืจืฆืคื™ืŸ โ€“ with a wooden saw whose teeth are thick. But they donโ€™t make a wound.",
122
+ "ืืฃ ืœื ืžืงืจืฆืคื™ืŸ โ€“ for we decree that currying with a strigil leads to scratching (which causes a wound). But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Eleazar ben Azariah in these three matters, but rather, we scrape/curry the animal only, because in this we confirm the approach of Rabbi Shimon who said that a thing in which we donโ€™t have an intention is permitted, and we hold according to him. But the Sages dispute this as they hold like Rabbi Yehuda who stated that a thing which was not intended is prohibited, but this is not the Halakha."
123
+ ],
124
+ [
125
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ืฉืœืฉื” ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ for if he separated one of them they are not shards of utensils but rather all of them are considered a utensil of its own and is impure, even while they are still attached in the millstone and appear as one utensil.",
126
+ "ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœื™ ืงื‘ื•ืœ โ€“ the bottom one that receives dust from the pounding of the peppers through the holes of the basket used as a sieve is ritually impure because it is a receptacle, for it is a wooden utensil that has a receptacle.",
127
+ "ื•ืžืฉื ื›ืœื™ ืžืชื›ื•ืช โ€“ the upper one where we pound and grind in it the peppers, is ritually impure because it is a metal utensil, and because a wooden utensil cannot be made impure, for its flat surfaces are ritually pure, but because its lower covering is made of metal.",
128
+ "ื•ืžืฉื•ื ื›ืœื™ ื›ื‘ืจื” โ€“ its middle which surround the basket used as a sieve. Because of the wood utensil it is not defiled and its receptacle is not a receptacle, but the Sages decreed defilement upon the basket used as a sieve because it is a woven utensil, and even if the metal basket used as a sieve does not defile because it is the utensil of the basket used as a sieve."
129
+ ],
130
+ [
131
+ "ืขื’ืœื” โ€“ made for a child to play with, and it is special for him to sit upon it.",
132
+ "ื˜ืžืื” ืžื“ืจืก โ€“ if the small child had a flux, the wagon becomes a primary source of ritual impurity.",
133
+ "ื•ื ื˜ืœืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ because it has the status of a utensil upon it.",
134
+ "ื•ืื™ื ื” ื ื’ืจืจืช โ€“ [but may not be dragged] on the Sabbath.",
135
+ "ืืœื ืข\"ื’ ื›ืœื™ื โ€“ on top of clothing, because it makes a ditch in the ground and someone who furrows is liable because of [the prohibition of] plowing.",
136
+ "ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื•' โ€“ there are two Tannaim and according to Rabbi Yehuda, for the first Tanna is also Rabbi Yehuda who said that something that is not intended is prohibited, and this other Tanna comes and states that Rabbi Yehuda did not prohibit a childโ€™s wagon because it does not make a ditch while walking through the digging, but presses upon the earth and threshes underneath it and makes its dirt lower but does not move the dirt from its place. But already, the law has been decided according to Rabbi Shimon who stated that a person may drag a bed, chair and a bench, so long as he doesnโ€™t intend to make a ditch."
137
+ ]
138
+ ],
139
+ [
140
+ [
141
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืฆื“ื™ืŸ ื“ื’ื™ื โ€“ even though slaughtering and baking and cooking are from the primary forms of [prohibited] work, they are permitted for the needs of the Festival day/Yom Tov, hunting is similar to reaping and reaping is not permitted on the Festival day. Vivarium of fish are pools of water where fish are raised there. Vivarium of wild beasts, enclosures (especially, an enclosed space outside for a settlement) surrounded by a fence all about and they bring there wild animals who give birth and who are raised there.",
142
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ โ€“ [they do not place] before the fish food, for it is possible for them [to survive] without food, and their feeding is not upon you.",
143
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืฆื“ื™ืŸ ื—ื™ื” ื•ืขื•ืฃ โ€“ who are ready from yesterday.",
144
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ื‘ืจื™ืŸ โ€“ the small vivarium, which do not lack some phase of the process of hunting. And Rabban Shimon ben Gamaliel does not to argue against the first Tanna [of our Mishnah], but rather to explain [his reasoning].",
145
+ "ื›ืœ ื”ืžื—ื•ืกืจ ืฆื™ื“ื” โ€“ that one needs to request a company of intriguers to catch him, and all the runners after it and reach it at once when the wild beast is not lacking some phase of the hunting process, and if not, it is lacking some phase of the hunting process."
146
+ ],
147
+ [
148
+ "ื•ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ื ื›ืจื™ โ€“ The Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows: If it was doubtfully ready, it is prohibited, but Rabban Gamaliel permits it, and there was a story about one heathen, etc. But the Halakha is not according to Rabban Gamaliel, but rather, fruit and fish that were brought on Yom Tov/The Festival day, which was a doubt if they had been collected today or yesterday, [or] there was a doubt if they had been hunted today or yesterday, they are forbidden. And whatever is forbidden to eat is forbidden to carry. But if their form proves about them such as withered fruit that it is impossible that they were gathered today, and similarly, fish that were brought from a distant place that it is impossible that they had been hunted today, are permitted. And something that is prepared/ready that comes from outside the [Sabbath] limits (i.e., the marked off area around a town or place within which it is permitted to move on the Sabbath two-thousand cubits in every direction) for an Israelite, it is forbidden for that Israelite to be brought for him and for his household, but it is permitted for another Israelite. But fruit that had been plucked and fish that had been hunted on the first day of the Festival, are permitted for the evening of the Second Day of the Festival in order that they are made, except for the two days of the holiday of Rosh Hashanah in which they are prohibited until the conclusion of the Second Day of the Holiday in order that they are made. And the explanation of [the term] in order that they are made, in order that the fruit can be plucked/detached from the place where they are detached and are brought from the place that they are brought from. But a cities whose doors are locked at night must wait until they are made.",
149
+ "ืืœื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฆื•ื ื• ืœืงื‘ืœ ืžืžื ื• โ€“ that I hate him."
150
+ ],
151
+ [
152
+ "ื‘ื”ืžื” ืžืกื•ื›ื ืช โ€“ which he is afraid lest it might die. And he has not need for it for he has already eaten his meal.",
153
+ "ืœื ื™ืฉื—ื•ื˜ โ€“ unless he knows that there is a delay during to day to eat an oliveโ€™s bulk roasted from it.",
154
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืช ื˜ื‘ื™ื—ืชื” โ€“ which is ready at hand and stripped from its hide and standing. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Akiba.",
155
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื• ื‘ืžื•ื˜ ื•ื‘ืžื˜ื” โ€“ by two people, because the matter is noisy and disregards the honor of the Festival day."
156
+ ],
157
+ [
158
+ "ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืฉื ืคืœ ืœื‘ื•ืจ โ€“ a firstling with a blemish, which had not been shown to a Sage from the eve of the Festival day while it is still daylight to [potentially] permit it, and it fell into a pit on the Festival day, and he is afraid that it might die there.",
159
+ "ื™ืจื“ ืžื•ืžื—ื” โ€“ who is a specialist to distinguish between a fixed blemish and a passing blemish.",
160
+ "ื•ื™ืจืื” โ€“ a blemish that it had [acquired] yesterday, if it is a fixed blemish.",
161
+ "ื™ืขืœื” ื•ื™ืฉื—ื˜ โ€“ because there is no prohibition for use or handling [on Yom Tov] (or set aside in a shed for a sacrifice), and from yesterday, his mind was upon it.",
162
+ "ื•ืื ืœืื• ืœื ื™ืฉื—ื•ื˜ โ€“ this is how it should be understood, and if not, that this blemish that was upon it from the eve of the Festival was not a fixed [blemish] but rather on that day, it became a fixed blemish, even if it had passed and he brought it up, he should not slaughter it. And we donโ€™t say that from yesterday, his mind was upon it and since it now has a fixed blemish, letโ€™s slaughter it, for since yesterdayโ€™s blemish was not fixed, it is set aside in consequence of its being ritually forbidden.",
163
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื›ืŸ โ€“ not because it was forbidden for use or handling did he prohibit it, for Rabbi Shimon does not have [the concept of] Muktzeh/something set aside, but because he permits its use on the Festival day, it is like he repairs it, and it appears that he made a legal decision that was decreed upon it because of it is forbidden by the Rabbis as being out of harmony with the celebration of the day. And this is how it should be state: His making it permissible is not a permit, and it is not prepared to be acceptable."
164
+ ],
165
+ [
166
+ "ื‘ื”ืžื” ืฉืžืชื” โ€“ we are speaking of the Holy Animals [for use in the Temple], as it is taught regarding it and on the Hallah that was defiled. For the Holy Animals that died it is forbidden to derive benefit from it and it requires burial, therefore, one should not move it from its place. But a secular/non-holy animal, we cut it up before the dogs. And these words [apply] when it was in danger from yesterday, when his mind was upon it, but if it was not endangered from yesterday, even a non-holy/secular animal, he should not move it from its place.",
167
+ "ื”ื—ืœื” ืฉื ื˜ืžืืช โ€“ which is not appropriate for the Kohen on the Festival day, even to burn it or to give it to his dog, we donโ€™t remove out of existence holy things form the world on Yom Tov, and even through animals eating it, as it is the decree of a Biblical verse that we do not remove ritually impure Holy Things from the world on Yom Tov."
168
+ ],
169
+ [
170
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ืžื ื™ืŸ โ€“ fix a price so that two or three people would say that this animal is for three Zuzim, one per person.",
171
+ "ื•ืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ืžื—ืœืงื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ at one half, one third or one-fourth, and for one does not mention the fixing of the price.",
172
+ "ืฉื•ืงืœ ืื“ื ื‘ืฉืจ โ€“ even though it is prohibited to weigh a pound, for it is the activity of a weekday, it is permissible to weigh meat in the place with a utensil in the balance with a chopper, and on the next day, they will see the chopper and the utensil as to their [combined] weight.",
173
+ "ื•ื—ื›\"ื ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื’ื™ื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ do not investigate.",
174
+ "ื‘ื›ืฃ ืžืื–ื ื™ื ื›ืœ ืขื™ืงืจ โ€“ even to preserve the meat from the mice, it is prohibited to place them on the weighing scale. And the Halakha is according to the Sages."
175
+ ],
176
+ [
177
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืฉื—ื™ื–ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืกื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ with a millstone or with a whetting implement (of stone or wood)",
178
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžืฉื™ืื” ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื—ื‘ืจืชื” โ€“ as he makes a change from the manner of the weekday."
179
+ ],
180
+ [
181
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืžื“ื” โ€“ a designated/special utensil for measuring that he measures and sells [produce] with it. But if it is not designated for this, even though it stands for the measurement, when this one that he measures with breaks, the other stands in its place, and he is permitted to fill with it.",
182
+ "ืื ื”ื™ื” ื›ืœื™ ืฉืœ ืžื“ื” โ€“ even though it has yet been designated for this purpose, he should not fill it up. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Yehuda.",
183
+ "ืžืžืœื ืžื“ื•ืชื™ื• ืžืขื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ for we donโ€™t measure on the Festival day.",
184
+ "ืืฃ ื‘ื—ื•ืœ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ ืขื•ืฉื” ื›ืŸ โ€“ because of being idle from being in the House of Study, for many people would come to ask of him during the Intermediate Days when they are not busy with work and he would fill his measures at night which is not the time of study in the House of Study in order that he can be free during the daytime.",
185
+ "ืžืคื ื™ ืžืฆื•ื™ ื”ืžื“ื•ืช โ€“ when he would sell oil, he had many measurements, and the purchasers would bring their utensils and he would measure for each and every person with his own measuring utensil, and they would empty out everything into their utensils all night long, in order that there would be no remaining oil attached to the sides of the measuring device or on its walls and as a result he would be stealing from the purchasers."
186
+ ]
187
+ ],
188
+ [
189
+ [
190
+ "ืžื‘ื™ื. ืžืžืงื•ื ืœืžืงื•ื โ€“ within the [Sabbath] boundary limits.",
191
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื•ื›ื•' โ€“ to place three or four jugs within a basket or a hamper and carry them, because it appears like a weekday activity to carry burdens. But if it is impossible to make a change, it is permissible.",
192
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืžื‘ื™ื ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื›ืชืคื• โ€“ one or two for it proves that it is for the needs of the Festival day.",
193
+ "ืื• ืœืคื ื™ื• โ€“ in his hand.",
194
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืœื™ืš ืืช ื”ืชื‘ืŸ โ€“ for burning or for the cattle.",
195
+ "ืœื ื™ืคืฉื™ืœ ืงื•ืคื” ืœืื—ื•ืจื™ื• โ€“ for it appears like a weekday activity.",
196
+ "ื•ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืจืžืช ื”ืชื‘ืŸ โ€“ even though he had not ordered it while it is was still daytime (before the start of the holiday) and he was not accustomed to burn with it, for this Tanna does not have the concept of Muktzeh/storage hut.",
197
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื‘ืขืฆื™ื [ืฉื‘ืžื•ืงืฆื”] โ€“ something wide at the back of the homes is called Muktzeh (a space back of the dwelling containing stored up wood, cattle in sheds, etc.), on account that it is set aside in back and one does not go in and come out of there frequently. And this wood that we are speaking of here, are large beams of cedar set aside for construction, and regarded as an item set aside due to monetary loss, as they are expensive. For in this case, even Rabbi Shimon, who is not of the opinion that there is a prohibition of muktze, concedes."
198
+ ],
199
+ [
200
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ืžื”ืŸ ื”ืกื•ื›ื” โ€“ even from a booth that is not of the Mitzvah (i.e., an ordinary booth on the property โ€“ not necessarily for Sukkot) such as on Passover or Atzeret/Shavuot, we donโ€™t take from it wood on the Festival day (see Talmud Betzah 31a) because of the tearing down/destruction of the tent.",
201
+ "ืืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืกืžื•ืš ืœื” โ€“ such as reeds that are standing near the walls that are not woven with the wall and are not abolished by the wall, therefore, we may take from them on the Festival day.",
202
+ "ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื โ€“ detached [wood] pieces",
203
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ืฉื“ื” โ€“ that are within the [Sabbath] limit from what is stored up/brought in.",
204
+ "ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืงืจืคืฃ ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ื–ืจ โ€“ Our Mishnah represents the opinion of a singular authority and is not Halakha. But rather, the Halakha is that one does not bring in wood other than from the that which is gathered/collected in the enclosure (especially, an enclosed space outside of a settlement). But he should not bring it in from field at all, and even from that which is collected, for his mind is not upon it, since they are not guarded there. But from the enclosure which is guarded and surrounded about, when they are brought in his mind is upon them.",
205
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉืกืžื•ืš ืœืขื™ืจ โ€“ in actuality, and that it has an opening, a key and is guarded, for Rabbi Yehuda requires two things โ€“ near the city and has a key/lock. But because he holds that mere enclosures have keys, because of this, he is not anxious to mention it.",
206
+ "ืจ\"ื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉื ื›ื ืกื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืคื•ืชื—ืช, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืชื•ืš ืชื—ื•ื ืฉื‘ืช โ€“ since he has key, he doesnโ€™t require it to be close by, but even if it is far until it is close to the end of the Sabbath limit boundary. And if it is nearby, we donโ€™t require a key/lock. For something nearby without a key or a key without it being nearby is permissible. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yosi."
207
+ ],
208
+ [
209
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืขื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื•ืช โ€“ that are set up in the Land, in order that they do not curve, and stand for building.",
210
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืงื•ืจื” ืฉื ืฉื‘ืจื” ื‘ื™ื•\"ื˜ โ€“ and even though that now they exist for burning, at eventide, they donโ€™t exist for this.",
211
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืงืขื™ืŸ ืœื ื‘ืงืจื“ื•ื โ€“ Our Mishnah is deficient and should be read as follows, but they chop firewood from the beam that was broken on the eve of the Festival day, and when they chop it, they should not do so with an ax.",
212
+ "ื•ืœื ื‘ืžื’ืจื” โ€“ a sort of long knife filled with notches and cuts with it thick wood, for it is the utensil of an artisan.",
213
+ "ืžื’ืœ โ€“ this also is the tool of an artisan, and appears like [one] wanting to do work.",
214
+ "ืืœื ื‘ืงื•ืคื™ืฅ โ€“ a mere hatchet (i.e., curved cutting tool) is a knife of butchers and is not the utensil of an artisan. And there are among them those which have two heads, one head is wide and is called the broadside of a double tool (see Talmud Betzah 31b), and the other head is narrow and is called the thin and pointed side of a double tool, and we donโ€™t chop with it other than where its head is narrow and is the thin and pointed side of the double tool.",
215
+ "ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœ ืžืžืงื•ื ื”ืคื—ืช โ€“ and we donโ€™t say that they are in consequence of a ritual prohibition, for he is not able to make a breach/hollow it out on Yom Tov and his mind is upon them, for the hut/house that is taught In our Mishnah speaks of that which is not built with plaster and lime, but is an arrangement of stones one on top of another without plaster, and not that its breach is not forbidden according to the Torah, therefore they are not forbidden for use or handling [on Shabbat and Festivals], and since we have said regarding eatables forbidden pending the separation of sacred gifts are not forbidden for use and handing and if he transgressed and repaired it, it is made legally fit by giving priestly dues.",
216
+ "ืืฃ ืคื•ื—ืช ืœื›ืชื—ืœื” โ€“ for since there is no plaster there but only bricks stacked on top of the other, he does not tear them down and iit is permitted to make a breach ab initio. But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Meir."
217
+ ],
218
+ [
219
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืคื•ื—ืชื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื ืจ โ€“ to take one of the lumps of the artisan of earthenware and to insert his fist into it to engrave a lamp, because he is making a utensil.",
220
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขื•ืฉื™ืŸ ืคื—ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ for these are also a utensil for the refinement/smelting of gold, and the wick also is a utensil for kindling, which requires making and repair.",
221
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื” ืœืฉื ื™ื โ€“ because [in the process] he is repairing a utensil, but to crush it/rub it with his hand is permitted.",
222
+ "ื—ื•ืชื›ื” ื‘ืื•ืจ โ€“ he places the two ends of the wick in the mouth of two candles that he needs to kindle at once and kindles in the middle, but now that he does not prove that he was repairing something with intention, but merely just to kindle. And the Halakha is according to Rabbi Yehuda."
223
+ ],
224
+ [
225
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืชื›ื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ื ื™ื™ืจ โ€“ that they place on it oil, and it stands in the midst of the fire, all o fthis when the oil is within it and it doesnโ€™t burn.",
226
+ "",
227
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื’ื•ืจืคื™ืŸ ืชื ื•ืจ ื•ื›ื™ืจื™ื โ€“ if there fell into them (i.e., the oven and/or the stove) from the paste of the oven and from the plaster , they donโ€™t remove the ashes and coal from the oven for it is like repairing a thing, and it comes like the Rabbis who say that acts that are preliminary to the preparation (as grinding the slaughtering knife) are forbidden.",
228
+ "ืžื›ื‘ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ lie on the dust and dirt in order that it would be smooth, for if it is impossible for him to bake other than if he removes the ashes and coal form the oven, it is permitted.",
229
+ "ืžืงื™ืคื™ืŸ โ€“ bring them close to each other, like we donโ€™t bring close a creation.",
230
+ "ืœืฉืคื•ืช โ€“ to arrange and to place upon them a pot and the flame is between the two pots but he forbid it because it is similar to โ€œbuilding.โ€",
231
+ "[ื•ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืžื›ื™ืŸ] ืืช ื”ืงื“ืจื” ื‘ื‘ืงืขื” โ€“ and they do not place wood other than for burning, and chips, wood that been split.",
232
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื“ืœืช โ€“ they do not support it on chips, for wood is forbidden for use and handling on the Festival regarding all usage outside of burning.",
233
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื ื”ื™ื’ื™ื ืืช ื”ื‘ื”ืžื” ื‘ืžืงืœ โ€“ because it appears like he leads it (i.e, the animal) to be sold in the marketplace."
234
+ ],
235
+ [
236
+ "ืžืฉืœืคื ื™ื• โ€“ from what is in front of him in the house.",
237
+ "ืœื—ืฆื•ืช ื‘ื• ืฉื ื™ื• โ€“ to take the meat which protrudes between his teeth, and that it is in front of him, is not specifically, for according to Rabbi Eliezer, it is permissible to take it even from the courtyard, as it states that whatever is in the courtyard is ready. But the fact that he (i.e., Rabbi Eliezer) used the term, โ€œin front of him,โ€ because the Rabbis who disagree with him state that even what is in front of him, he can kindle with it, but not to pick at his teeth, for they hold that wood is not used other than for burning.",
238
+ "ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื’ื‘ื‘ ืžืฉืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืžื“ืœื™ืง โ€“ but not from the courtyard, for since they are thin chips and it is a burden to gather the wood and to sweep/rake them up, for from yesterday, they di dnot exist. But when the Mishnah stated that a person takes a chip of wood to pick at his teeth, we hold that even that which is in front of him he should not take other than to kindle, for wood is not given other than for burning. And in two things they disagree. But the Halakha is according to the Sages. And it is not permissible to take a wood chip to pick at his teeth other the manger of the animal, for anything that is fit for the food of an animal is permitted to cut whether on Yom Tov or on Shabbat, and there is nothing regarding them concerning the repair of a utensil."
239
+ ],
240
+ [
241
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ืื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืื•ืจ โ€“ because it is like โ€œgiving birthโ€ and similar to [prohibited] work, for one creates this fire on the Festival day.",
242
+ "ืžืŸ ื”ืขืคืจ โ€“ there is ground that when one digs it up, one produces fire from the place of its digging.",
243
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ one puts water in a white glass utensil and places it in the sun and when the sun is very hot and the glass produces a flame, and brings scraps/chips and they reach the glass and it burns.",
244
+ "ืจืขืคื™ื โ€“ a hollowed out earthenware utensil in its middle when they cover with them the gardens.",
245
+ "ืื™ืŸ ืžืœื‘ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ with a flame.",
246
+ "ืืช ื”ืจืขืคื™ื โ€“ and specifically with new flints because they are similar to a think that is burned, and they are glazed and strengthened by the flame.",
247
+ "ื•ืขื•ื“ ืืžืจ ืจ\"ื โ€“ because the Tanna taught one for a leniency regarding that which is not permitted for use on the Sabbath/Festival day (i.e., Muktzeh) and afterwards he taught another thing, and it says, โ€œand furthermore.โ€",
248
+ "ืขื•ืžื“ ืื“ื ืขืœ ื”ืžื•ืงืฆื” โ€“ that requires designation of an object for use [on the coming Holy Day], and the designation is beneficial for it.",
249
+ "ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช โ€“ when the tithe does not apply on it, and is not missing anything other than a designation. But the same law applies by that which is tithed in and in the rest of the years of the seven-year cycle. But he took something that is usual, for something merely set aside is not tithed, for dried figs and raisins are merely things that are stored away and it is not customary to tithe them prior to the completion of the work.",
250
+ "ืžื›ืืŸ ืื ื™ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ืœืžื—ืจ โ€“ and is enough with these when there is choice.",
251
+ "ืขื“ ืฉื™ืจืฉื•ื โ€“ with a sign/symbol, for there is no choice. But the Halakha is according to the Sages."
252
+ ]
253
+ ],
254
+ [
255
+ [
256
+ "ืžืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ืคื™ืจื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจื•ื‘ื” โ€“ whomever has fruit or produce spread out on his roof to dry out, and he saw rain coming slowly, they permitted him to go to the trouble and to cast them through an aperture in the roof, and they fall to the ground, for there is no excess trouble, and specifically an aperture, for every aperture is from above to below [in the ceiling of the roof] but a window, such as a roof that is surrounded by partitions and window I in the wall, and one must raise it up to the window to cast it, all of this the Rabbis did not permit and to be painstaking.",
257
+ "ื•ืžื›ืกื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืช โ€“ but we donโ€™t say that it is toil that is not for the needs of the Festival day, but because of the loss of money, the Rabbis permitted it.",
258
+ "ื“ืœืฃ โ€“ rain that drips from the roof.",
259
+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืžืŸ โ€“ that cover them because of the drippings [from the roof].",
260
+ "ืชื—ืช ื”ื“ืœืฃ โ€“ to receive the water so that it should not soil the house. But if the utensil became filled, he pours it out and repeats it and is not prevented [from doing so]."
261
+ ],
262
+ [
263
+ "ื›ืœ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ that the Sages forbade to do on Shabbat because of Rabbinic decrees to enhance the character of the Shabbat/Festivals as a day of rest.",
264
+ "ืื• ืžืฉื•ื ืจืฉื•ืช โ€“ that there is in a bit of a Mitzvah, but not a large Mitzvah, but it is near to being an optional act, but there is within it a prohibition from the words of the Scribes.",
265
+ "ืื• ืžืฉื•ื ืžืฆื•ื” โ€“ or there is within an actual Mitzvah/commandment, and the Sages prohibited doing it on the Sabbath.",
266
+ "ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• โ€“ not to do it on the Festival.",
267
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ื•ืช โ€“ that the Sages placed upon him to abstain from doing but there isnโ€™t in their performance any kind of Mitzvah.",
268
+ "ืœื ืขื•ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืื™ืœืŸ โ€“ a decree lest he tear off [a branch].",
269
+ "ื•ืœื ืจื•ื›ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ื‘ื”ืžื” โ€“ a decree lest he cut a vine-shoot to drive the animal.",
270
+ "ื•ืœื ืฉื˜ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ ื”ืžื™ื โ€“ a decree lest he make a swimmerโ€™s bottle (see Tractate Kelim, Chapter 2, Mishnah 3 โ€“ used for practicing).",
271
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื˜ืคื—ื™ืŸ โ€“ hand upon hand.",
272
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืกืคืงื™ืŸ โ€“ hand upon the leg.",
273
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืจืงื“ื™ืŸ โ€“ on the Festival, and all of them are a decree lest he repair a musical instrument.",
274
+ "ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืจืฉื•ืช โ€“ because oof those of the ending section of the Mishnah which are a complete Mitzvah, regarding them we call these โ€œoptional.โ€",
275
+ "ืœื ื“ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ a judgement, and sometimes it is optional, such as when there is a larger city than this one, and it is not upon him to judge.",
276
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืงื“ืฉื™ืŸ โ€“ the betrothal of a woman. For sometimes, it is not a complete commandment but rather optional, such as when he has a wife and children.",
277
+ "ื•ืœื ื—ื•ืœืฆื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ืžื™ื‘ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ also at the time when he has an older brother than him, it is option, but it is a great Mitzvah to perform a levirate marriage and the reason for all of them is lest he write [documents].",
278
+ "ื•ืœื ืžืขืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ the value of this thing is upon me, and he gives according to the years, as it is written in the portion of valuations (Leviticus 27:1-8).",
279
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื—ืจื™ืžื™ืŸ โ€“ behold this animal is devoted to God. And a mere devotion of an animal is for the treasury of the Temple. And all of them, the Rabbis forbad because they are similar to business transactions where one removes it from his domain to the domain of the Sanctified.",
280
+ "ื•ืœื ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ืŸ ืชืจื•ืžื•ืช ื•ืžืขืฉืจื•ืช โ€“ and even in order to give them to the Kohen on the same day that is appropriate, for because of the Rejoicing on the Festival that the Kohen who needs them, he separates them (i.e., the tithes), and nevertheless, it is prohibited, for it is considered like repairing. And these words concerning produce that yesterday were eatables forbidden prior to the separation of sacred gifts, that currently such as dough one has to separate Hallah from, we separate it on the Festival and give them to the Kohen.",
281
+ "ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ื•\"ื˜ ืœืฉื‘ืช ืืœื ืื•ื›ืœ ื ืคืฉ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ (this part of the Mishnah is also found in Tractate Megillah, Chapter 1, Mishnah 5) โ€“ this anonymous teaching is according to the School of Shammai which states that we do not take out the minor nor the Lulav nor a Torah scroll into the public domain, for taking out was only permitted for the purpose of the preparation of food. But we hold like the School of Hillel which states that since removal was permitted for the purposes of the preparation of food, it is also permitted for that which is not needed [for food preparation]. And there are those who state that we let down pieces of fruit through an aperture in the roof looking to the ground floor at the beginning of our Chapter (Mishnah 1), that it is prohibited on the Sabbath, but that is permitted on the Festival."
282
+ ],
283
+ [
284
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ a person cannot bring it on the Festival other than where its owners are able to go.",
285
+ "ืื• ืœืจื•ืขื” ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ Our Mishnah when there is in the city two shepherds, and we do not know which of them it would be [according to] the will of the owners, they are like status of the owner, if it was not with the shepherd while it was still day [prior to the start of the Festival]. But when the city lacks all but one shepherd, all the people of the city place their cattle in his domain and in having a Sabbath center, it would be like the status of the shepherd.",
286
+ "ื•ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ื™ื โ€“ [not designated] to one of them, but rather to all of them.",
287
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• ื›ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ โ€“ to the place where all of them are able to go, it is permissible to bring the utensils, but if one of them made an Eruv at the end of two-thousand [cubits] to the north and the others did not make an Eruv, he delays them from being able to walk to the south even one step because of his portion, and they prevent him from going to the north, other than to the two-thousand cubits that are permitted to them."
288
+ ],
289
+ [
290
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืฉื•ืืœ โ€“ for he acquired his Sabbath center with him at twilight, for twilight is the entrance of the day where one acquires his Sabbath center, and even though it did not come into the hand of the borrower other than on Yom Tov/the Festival day, for it was not established in his possession at twilight, it is in the status of the person who borrows it (i.e., the utensil). And if he borrowed it on Yom Tov once it became dark, it is in the possession of the one who is lending it out, because he has acquired the Sabbath center with its owners. And even if he was accustomed to lend it out on every Holy Day.",
291
+ "ื”ืืฉื” ืฉืฉืืœื” ืžื—ื‘ืจืชื” ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ โ€“ for her pot.",
292
+ "ื•ืžื™ื ื•ืžืœื— โ€“ for her dough.",
293
+ "ื”ืจื™ ืืœื• โ€“ her pot and her dough.",
294
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ืฉืชื™ื”ืŸ โ€“ they do not bring them other than in a place where both of them are able to go, for since she borrowed it on the Festival day, they acquired the Sabbath center for the spices or the water and the salt with their respective owners.",
295
+ "ืฉืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืžืžืฉ โ€“ they are not recognized, neither the pot, nor the dough, such as the case where the cooked dish is thick and the water is not recognized in it. Therefore, it does not delay their going. And regarding the salt, Rabbi Yehuda does not dispute when speaking of dough that was kneaded in salt which is large and thick, which is recognizable and has substance. But the Halakah is not according to Rabbi Yehuda."
296
+ ],
297
+ [
298
+ "ื•ืฉืœื”ื‘ืช โ€“ such as the case where he kindled his candle with his friendโ€™s flame, it does not indispensable in the prohibition of [Sabbath/Yom Tov] boundaries.",
299
+ "ืžื•ืขืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื” โ€“ a person who benefits from it (i.e., the burning coal), brings a guilt-offering of sacrilege.",
300
+ "ื•ืฉืœื”ื‘ืช ืœื ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ โ€“ ab initio according to the Rabbis.. But if they derived benefit, they do not commit an act of sacrilege, and they are not liable for a sacrifice of sacrilege for there isnโ€™t anything of substance. And similarly, a person who takes out a burning coal to the public domain on the Sabbath is liable, but the flame that pushed his hand from the private domain to the public domain is exempt.",
301
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ื™ื—ื™ื“ โ€“ we donโ€™t bring water other than according to the status of the owner of the well.",
302
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ืื•ืชื” ื”ืขื™ืจ โ€“ two-thousand cubits in all directions outside of its extension of the city limits/outskirts of the city.",
303
+ "ื•ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื™ ื‘ื‘ืœ โ€“ that is made for those who passers-by in the middle of the path, and they made them members of the Diaspora to cause them to drink while they are coming up [from Babylonia].",
304
+ "ื›ืจื’ืœื™ ื”ืžืžืœื โ€“ because it is ownerless and something ownerless is acquired through lifting. But if a person comes and asks him for water, he does not lead them other than according to his status, for this Tanna/teacher holds that there is a choice to be stringent, for from yesterday, the matter was clear that it belonged to this person and it stood in his domain. But not according to Rabbi Yohanan ben Nuri who stated that ownerless objects acquire their Sabbath center for themselves in their place (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 4, Mishnah 5)."
305
+ ],
306
+ [
307
+ "ืœื ื™ื‘ื™ืื• ืœื• โ€“ from his produce, for since he had not made an Eruv there, that his produce is like him."
308
+ ],
309
+ [
310
+ "ืžื™ ืฉื–ื™ืžืŸ ืืฆืœื• ืื•ืจื—ื™ื โ€“ from another town and they would come to him via the Eruv.",
311
+ "ืœื ื™ื•ืœื™ื›ื• โ€“ after the meal [they should not bring] portions in their hands to their homes.",
312
+ "ืื\"ื› ื–ื™ื›ื” ืœื”ื โ€“ at the hand of another [he gave them possession of those foodstuffs].",
313
+ "[ืžื ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืžืขืจื‘ ื™ื•ื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ ืฉ] โ€“ that the owner of the house distributed them to another person through โ€œpullingโ€™ on the eve of the Festival day, and said to him: have so-and-so and so-and-so acquire these portions, for one acts in a personโ€™s interest in his absence (see Tractate Eruvin, Chapter 7, Mishnah 11)."
314
+ ]
315
+ ]
316
+ ],
317
+ "versions": [
318
+ [
319
+ "Bartenura on Mishnah, trans. by Rabbi Robert Alpert, 2020",
320
+ "http://sefaria.org"
321
+ ]
322
+ ],
323
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื˜ื ื•ืจื ืขืœ ืžืฉื ื” ื‘ื™ืฆื”",
324
+ "categories": [
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Rishonim on Mishnah",
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+ "Bartenura",
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+ "Seder Moed"
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+ ],
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+ "sectionNames": [
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+ "Chapter",
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+ "Mishnah",
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+ "Comment"
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+ ]
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+ }