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11 But[a] a priest, if with his money he buys a person as his possession,[b] that one may eat it, and the descendants of his house themselves may eat his food. 12 And a priest’s daughter, when she marries a layman,[c] she herself may not eat the votive offering.[d] 13 But[e] a priest’s daughter, when she becomes a widow or[f] divorced or there is no offspring for her, and she returns to her father’s house as in her childhood, she may eat from her father’s food, but[g] no layman may eat it.[h]

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Footnotes

  1. Leviticus 22:11 Or “And”
  2. Leviticus 22:11 Literally “property of”
  3. Leviticus 22:12 Literally “she becomes for a strange man”
  4. Leviticus 22:12 Literally “the offering/lifting of the votive offering”
  5. Leviticus 22:13 Or “And”
  6. Leviticus 22:13 Or “and”
  7. Leviticus 22:13 Or “and”
  8. Leviticus 22:13 Literally “any stranger shall not eat it”