If you have a large book in your home titled "The Old Testament", then a
complete Tanakh might resemble it. The broad scope of many of the ideas
and stories in them might also have some similarity.
The Tanakh is a book, not a place. Please rewrite your question.
The Tanakh is a book, not a place. Please rewrite your question.
Talmud Ketuboth 72. Talmud is a sideline commentary of the Holy Book Tanakh. I'm researching this as well, but look at Kimchit's story in the Tanakh which implies that the tichel is required.
Judaism accepts the Tanakh as its only holy book. The Tanakh is what Christians call the Old Testament, though it should be noted that no translation of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) can be completely accurate, due to the rich, multi-layered nature of the Tanakh.
Nevi'im.
The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible).
The Tanakh is in Judaism.
The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible).
There is no part of the Tanakh that is not present in the Christian Old Testament (even in its shortest editions). However, the Christian Old Testament has a different book-order and numbering than the Tanakh and does have more content in some books (like Daniel) as well as additional books, depending on the Christian sect.
It is called the Tanakh. It comes in book form; while the Torah or individual prophets can be found in parchment-scroll form.
The 4th book of the Torah. In Hebrew it is called Bamidbar.
The fifth book of Moses. In Hebrew it is called Devarim.