a. (sb.) [f. prec. + -IC.] Of or pertaining to the Talmud.
1611. H. Broughton, Require Agreement, 73. My next demaund, Rabbi, shall trie your Thalmudique skill.
1618. J. Paget, Arrow agst. Brownists, Title-p. An Admonition tovching Talmudique and Rabbinical allegations.
1677. Gale, Crt. Gentiles, II. III. 167. Corrupt imitamens of Pythagorean and Talmudic Traditions and Canons.
1831. Carlyle, Sart. Res., I. v. Its depth of Talmudic and Rabbinical lore.
1854. Milman, Lat. Chr., IV. i., note. Sale has traced the fables in the Koran to their Talmudic or Rabbinical sources.
† B. sb. = TALMUDIST. Obs. rare.
1624. R. Skynner, in Usshers 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.
a. 1656. Bp. Hall, Revelation Unrevealed, viii. Wks. 1837, VIII. 540. Those carnal pleasures dreamed of by those sensual Turks and Talmudiques [printed -iges].
Hence † Talmudician, sb. = TALMUDIST c.; a. = TALMUDIC. rare.
1575. T. Rogers, Sec. Coming Christ, 6/1. Many things in those Thalmudician books.