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Grammar:Tutorial/Alphabet: Difference between revisions
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Hebrew texts are read from right to left (reverse to English texts). | Hebrew texts are read from right to left (reverse to English texts). |
Revision as of 15:36, 22 October 2011
Hebrew texts are read from right to left (reverse to English texts).
Hebrew alphabet consists of 22 letters, five of which use different forms at the end of a word.
Here is the list of the Hebrew letters. For the letters which have a different form at the end of a word, that form (so called “sophit”) is shown to the left of the main form of the letter.
Name of the letter | Letter |
---|---|
Aleph | א |
Bet | ב |
Gimel | ג |
Dalet | ד |
He | ה |
Vav | ו |
Zayn | ז |
Het | ח |
Tet | ט |
Yod | י |
Kaf | כ ך |
Lamed | ל |
Mem | מ ם |
Nun | נ ן |
Samekh | ס |
Ayin | ע |
Pe | פ ף |
Tsadi | צ ץ |
Qof | ק |
Resh | ר |
Shin | ש |
Tav | ת |
There are no distinction of lower case and upper case letters.
Letters ה and י are often added to words or omitted in words, dependently on the manner of a scribe.
Most words have a three-letter root. But some words have roots of a different number of letters.
We will denote words having a letter X at the place N (N=1, 2, or 3) in the root as N-X.