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  2. Hebrew alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_alphabet

    When vowel diacritics are used, the hard sounds are indicated by a central dot called dagesh (דגש ‎), while the soft sounds lack a dagesh. In modern Hebrew, however, the dagesh only changes the pronunciation of ב ‎ bet, כ ‎ kaf, and פ ‎ pe, and does not affect the name of the letter. The differences are as follows:

  3. Begadkefat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begadkefat

    In Ashkenazi Hebrew and in Yiddish borrowings from it, ת ‎ without dagesh still denotes a fricative variant, which is pronounced , which diverged from Biblical/Mishnaic . The only pronunciation tradition to preserve and distinguish all begadkefat letters is Yemenite Hebrew.

  4. Romanization of Hebrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanization_of_Hebrew

    The Hebrew language uses the Hebrew alphabet with optional vowel diacritics. The romanization of Hebrew is the use of the Latin alphabet to transliterate Hebrew words. For example, the Hebrew name spelled יִשְׂרָאֵל ('Israel') in the Hebrew alphabet can be romanized as Yisrael or Yiśrāʼēl in the Latin alphabet.

  5. Niqqud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niqqud

    "dagesh kal", which designates the plosive (as opposed to fricative) variant of any of the letters בגדכפת (in earlier forms of Hebrew this distinction was allophonic; in Israeli Hebrew ג ‎, ד ‎ and ת ‎ with or without dagesh kal are acoustically and phonologically indistinguishable, whereas plosive and fricative variants of ב ...

  6. ISO 259 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_259

    ISO 259-3 is Uzzi Ornan's romanization, which reached the stage of an ISO Final Draft [3] but not of a published International Standard (IS). [4] It is designed to deliver the common structure of the Hebrew word throughout the different dialects or pronunciation styles of Hebrew, in a way that it can be reconstructed into the original Hebrew characters by both man and machine.

  7. Mappiq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mappiq

    dagesh, shuruk: Example גֹּבַהּ ‎ The word for height in Hebrew, govah. The centre dot in the leftmost letter (which is the letter He) is a mappiq. Other Niqqud: Shva · Hiriq · Tzere · Segol · Patach · Kamatz · Holam · Dagesh · Mappiq · Shuruk · Kubutz · Rafe · Sin/Shin Dot

  8. Kubutz and shuruk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kubutz_and_shuruk

    The kubutz sign is represented by three diagonal dots " ֻ" underneath a letter.. The shuruk is the letter vav with a dot in the middle and to the left of it. The dot is identical to the grammatically different signs dagesh and mappiq, but in a fully vocalized text it is practically impossible to confuse them: shuruk itself is a vowel sign, so if the letter before the vav doesn't have its own ...

  9. Bet (letter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bet_(letter)

    Its sound value is the voiced bilabial stop b or the voiced labiodental fricative v . The letter's name means "house" in various Semitic languages (Arabic bayt, Akkadian bītu, bētu, Hebrew: bayīṯ, Phoenician bēt etc.; ultimately all from Proto-Semitic *bayt-), and appears to derive from an Egyptian hieroglyph of a house by acrophony.