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  2. Aleph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleph

    Maraqten identifies three different aleph traditions in East Arabian coins: a lapidary Aramaic form that realizes it as a combination of a V-shape and a straight stroke attached to the apex, much like a Latin K; a cursive Aramaic form he calls the "elaborated X-form", essentially the same tradition as the Hebrew reflex; and an extremely cursive ...

  3. Ayin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayin

    Ayin (also ayn or ain; transliterated ʿ ) is the sixteenth letter of the Semitic scripts, including Arabic ʿayn ع ‎, Aramaic ʿē 𐡏, Hebrew ʿayin ע ‎, Phoenician ʿayin 𐤏, and Syriac ʿē ܥ (where it is sixteenth in abjadi order only).

  4. Hebraization of English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebraization_of_English

    For the most accurate transliteration, below is a table describing the different vowel sounds and their corresponding letters. Hebrew has only 5 vowel sounds, with lack of discrimination in Hebrew between long and short vowels. In comparison, English which has around 12 vowel sounds (5 long, 7 short) depending on dialect.

  5. Prefixes in Hebrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prefixes_in_Hebrew

    Prefix Meaning Comments Examples ל ‎ () : to, for, onto The Inseparable Prepositions are pointed: Normally with Sheva.; Before a Sheva they take Chirik.; Before יְ ‎ they take Chirik, but the Sheva under the י ‎ falls away.

  6. Hebrew diacritics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_diacritics

    Gen. 1:9 And God said, "Let the waters be collected". Letters in black, pointing in red, cantillation in blue [1] Hebrew orthography includes three types of diacritics: . Niqqud in Hebrew is the way to indicate vowels, which are omitted in modern orthography, using a set of ancillary glyphs.

  7. Modern Hebrew phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Hebrew_phonology

    The final H sound is hardly ever pronounced in Modern Hebrew. However, the final H with Mappiq still retains the guttural characteristic that it should take a patach and render the pronunciation /a(h)/ at the end of the word, for example, גָּבוֹהַּ gavoa(h) ("tall").

  8. Where did the ‘How I love being a woman’ sound come from?

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  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.