Question

Students are compared to four types of this food in a quote attributed to Gamaliel the Elder. An emblematic debate between the Beit (“bait”) Hillel and Beit Shammai (“shah-MYE”) concerned the precise point at which this food could become ritually impure. (-5[1])A recipe for this food is sweeter west of a namesake line (10[1])that divides Litvak (-5[1])and Galician dialects of Yiddish. That preparation of this food is a common Sabbath (10[1])dish because (-5[1])it (-5[1])avoids bans on borer (“boh-RAIR”), or “picking and separating.” In the Book of Tobit, (-5[1])this food cures the title patriarch’s blindness. (10[4])This is the main [emphasize] animal to be considered (10[1])pareve (10[1])(“PAR-iv”), though Sephardim often still do (10[1])not consume it with milk. (10[3])After an encounter with one of these animals, a prophet declares that (10[1])“in 40 days (10[1])Nineveh will be (10[1])overthrown.” (10[4])For 10 points, a “large” example of what animals appears in the Book of Jonah? ■END■ (10[5])

ANSWER: fish [or dag; accept carp, whitefish, pike, or other specific fish; accept gefilte fish or “Gefilte Fish Line”; accept whales or cetaceans; prompt on bladder by asking “of what animal?”; reject “meat” or “flesh”] (In the original Hebrew, Jonah is described as being eaten by a “large fish,” although it is often translated as “whale.”)
<Religion>
= Average correct buzz position