a. (sb.) [f. prec. + -IC.] Of or pertaining to the Talmud.

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1611.  H. Broughton, Require Agreement, 73. My next demaund, Rabbi, shall trie your Thalmudique skill.

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1618.  J. Paget, Arrow agst. Brownists, Title-p. An Admonition tovching Talmudique and Rabbinical allegations.

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1677.  Gale, Crt. Gentiles, II. III. 167. Corrupt imitamens of Pythagorean and Talmudic Traditions and Canons.

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1831.  Carlyle, Sart. Res., I. v. Its … depth of Talmudic and Rabbinical lore.

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1854.  Milman, Lat. Chr., IV. i., note. Sale has traced … the fables in the Koran to their Talmudic or Rabbinical sources.

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  † B.  sb. = TALMUDIST. Obs. rare.

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1624.  R. Skynner, in Ussher’s Lett. (1686), 351. It is observable how Christ disputing against the Jews about the Resurrection, doth prove the Resurrection out of the sayings of their own Talmudicks.

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a. 1656.  Bp. Hall, Revelation Unrevealed, viii. Wks. 1837, VIII. 540. Those carnal pleasures … dreamed of by those sensual Turks and Talmudiques [printed -iges].

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  Hence † Talmudician, sb. = TALMUDIST c.; a. = TALMUDIC. rare.

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1575.  T. Rogers, Sec. Coming Christ, 6/1. Many things in those Thalmudician books.

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