32 Everything on which one of them falls when dead becomes unclean, including any article of wood, cloth, leather or goat hair—any article of which use can be made. It must be immersed in water and remain unclean until evening, when it again becomes clean.
33 Should any of these creatures fall into a clay vessel, everything in it becomes unclean, and the vessel itself you must break.
34 Any food that can be eaten which makes contact with water, and any liquid that may be drunk, in any such vessel become unclean.
35 Any object on which any part of their carcasses falls becomes unclean; if it is an oven or stove, this must be broken to pieces; they are unclean and shall always be unclean to you.
36 However, a spring or a cistern for collecting water remains clean; but whoever touches such an animal’s carcass becomes unclean.
37 If any part of their carcasses falls on any sort of grain that is to be sown, it remains clean;
38 but if the grain has become moistened, it becomes unclean to you when any part of their carcasses falls on it.