Shomea k'oneh (Hebrew: שומע כעונה, "One who hears is the equivalent of one who recites") is a principle in Jewish law that, in general, allows one to fulfill his or her obligation of textual recitation by listening to another recite the text while both of them have in mind to effect such a fulfillment.[1] The principle of shomea k'oneh is also indicated as the rationale for one fulfilling one's requirement to hear the shofar blown on Rosh Hashana even though the sounds are not the recitation of text.
References
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Blessings over Enjoyment | |
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Blessings of Praise | |
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Blessings on Seeing | Birkat HaMelachim • Birkat HaYam Hagadol • Chacham HaRazim • Shechalak Mechokhmato • Natan Mechokhmato • Shekachah Lo BeOlamo • Oseh Ma’aseh Bereshit • Shekocho Ugvurato • Zocher HaBrit • Mechayei HaMetim • Yatzar Etchem BaDin • Matziv Gvul Almanah |
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Blessings on Commandments | Birkot HaTorah • Birkat HaShechita • Birkat Erusin • Blessing on commandments in general • Leshev BaSukkah |
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After-Blessings | |
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Miscellaneous Blessings | |
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General Laws | One Hundred Blessings • Unnecessary blessing • Blessing in vain • Interruption (halakha) • Toch k'dei dibur • Name and kingdom (of God) • • Safek brachot lehakel • Tadir veshe’eino tadir • Over la’asiyatan •
Adjacent blessings • Answering amen • Baruch Hu Uvaruch Shemo • Order of precedence in blessings |
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