Hebrew alphabet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hebrew | ||
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Type: | Abjad (sometimes used as an alphabet) | |
Languages: | Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, and Judaeo-Arabic (see Jewish languages) | |
Time period: | 200 BCE to the present | |
Parent writing systems: | Proto-Canaanite alphabet Phoenician alphabet Aramaic alphabet Hebrew |
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Unicode range: | U+0590 to U+05FF, U+FB1D to U+FB40 |
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ISO 15924 code: | Hebr | |
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. See IPA chart for English for an English-based pronunciation key. |
History of the Alphabet |
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Middle Bronze Age 19–15th c. BC
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Meroitic 3rd c. BC |
Hangul 1443 |
Zhuyin 1913 |
Complete genealogy |
Hebrew alphabet | |||||
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א ב ג ד ה ו | |||||
ז ח ט י כך | |||||
ל מם נן ס ע פף | |||||
צץ ק ר ש ת | |||||
History · Transliteration Niqqud · Dagesh · Gematria Cantillation · Numeration |
- Note: This article contains special characters.
The Hebrew alphabet is a set of 22 letters used for writing the Hebrew language. Five of these letters have a different form when appearing as the last letter in a word. The Hebrew letters are used in mildly adapted forms for writing several languages of the Jewish diaspora, most famously Yiddish, Ladino, and Judeo-Arabic (for a full and detailed list, see Jewish languages). Hebrew is written from right to left.
The Hebrew word for "alphabet" is אלף-בית (alef-bet), named after the first two letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The Hebrew alphabet was in origin an abjad, having letters for consonants only, but means were later devised to indicate vowels, first by using consonant letters as matres lectionis and later by separate vowel points or nikud.
The number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet, their order, their names, and their phonetic values are virtually identical to those of the Aramaic alphabet, as both Hebrews and Arameans borrowed the Phoenician alphabet for their uses during the end of the 2nd millennium BC.
The modern script used for writing Hebrew (usually called the Jewish script by scholars, and also traditionally known as the square script, block script, or Assyrian script — not to be confused with the Eastern variant of the Syriac alphabet) evolved during the 3rd century BC from the Aramaic script, which was used by Jews for writing Hebrew since the 6th century BC. Prior to that, Hebrew was written using the old Hebrew script, which evolved during the 10th century BC from the Phoenician script; the Samaritans still write Hebrew in a variant of this script for religious works (see Samaritan alphabet).
Contents |
[edit] Short table
The Hebrew alphabet consists of the following letters. Five letters have a different form (known as the Sofit form) at the ends of words: these are shown in the table below the normal form.
Alef | Bet/Vet | Gimel | Dalet | He | Vav | Zayin | Khet | Tet | Yod | Kaf/Khaf |
א | ב | ג | ד | ה | ו | ז | ח | ט | י | כ |
ך | ||||||||||
Lamed | Mem | Nun | Samekh | Ayin | Pe/Fe | Tsadik | Kuf | Resh | Shin/Sin | Tav |
ל | מ | נ | ס | ע | פ | צ | ק | ר | ש | ת |
ם | ן | ף | ץ |
[edit] Description
Both the old Hebrew script and the modern Hebrew script have only one case, but in the modern script some letters have special final forms used only at the end of a word. This is similar to the Arabic alphabet, although much simpler.
The Hebrew alphabet is an abjad: vowels are normally not indicated. Where they are, it is because a weak consonant such as א alef, ה hey, ו vav or י yod has combined with a previous vowel and become silent, or by imitation of such cases in the spelling of other forms. When used to write Yiddish, the Hebrew writing system uses consonants to indicate all the vowels (see Yiddish orthography), except where Hebrew words are written in Yiddish.
To preserve the proper vowel sounds, scholars developed several different sets of vocalisation and diacritical symbols called nikud (ניקוד; literally: "applying points"). One of these, the Tiberian system, eventually prevailed. Aaron ben Moses ben Asher, and his family for several generations, are credited for refining and maintaining the system. These points are normally used only for special purposes, such as Biblical books intended for study, in poetry or when teaching the language to children. The Tiberian system also includes a set of cantillation marks used to indicate how scriptural passages should be chanted, used in synagogue recitations of scripture (although these marks do not appear in the scrolls), called "Trope".
Hebrew letters may also be used as numbers; see the entry on Hebrew numerals. This use of letters as numbers is common in Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) in a practice known as gematria.
[edit] Main table
The following table is a breakdown of each letter in the Hebrew alphabet, describing its written glyph or glyphs, its name or names, its Latin script transliteration values used in academic work, and its pronunciation in reconstructed historical forms and dialects using the International Phonetic Alphabet. If two glyphs are shown for a letter, then the left-most glyph is the Final form of the letter (or right-most glyph if your browser doesn't support right-to-left text layout).
[edit] Name and transliteration
Symbol | Name | Transliteration | Corresponding Phoenician letter |
||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Academic | Unicode | Israeli | Ashkenazi | Academic | Israeli | ||||||
Unicode | Font- friendly |
ISO-8859-1- friendly |
Uni. | Font- friendly |
ISO- friendly |
||||||
א | ʾā́lep̄ | ’āleph | 'àleph | alef | alef | alef | ʾ | ’ | ' | - (1) | aleph |
ב | bêṯ, ḇêṯ | bêth, bhêth | bêth, bhêth | bet | bet, vet | beis, veis | b, ḇ | b, bh | b, bh | b, v | beth |
ג | gímmel, ḡímel | gímel, ghímel | gímel, ghímel | gimel | gimel | gimmel | g, ḡ | g, gh | g, gh | g | gimel |
ד | dā́leṯ, ḏā́leṯ | dāleth, dhāleth | dàleth, dhàleth | dalet | dalet | doles | d, ḏ | d, dh | d, dh | d | daleth |
ה | ? | hê | hê | he | he | hei | h, Ḏ | ? | ? | h (2) | he |
ו | wāw | wāw | wàw | vav | vav | vov, vof | ? | w | w | v | waw |
ז | ? | záyin | záyin | zayin | zayin | zayin | ? | z | z | z | zayin |
ח | ḥêṯ, (3) ḫêṯ | ħêth, (3) xêth | h`êth, (3) xêth | het | khet | ches | ḥ, (3) ḫ | ħ, (3) x | h`, (3) x | kh (ch,h) (4) | heth |
ט | ṭêṯ | ţêth | t`êth | tet | tet | tes | ṭ | ţ | t` | t | teth |
י | yôḏ | yôdh | yôdh | yod | yod | yud | ? | y | y | y (8) | yodh |
ך כ | kāp̄, ḵāp̄ | kāph, khāph | kàph, khàph | kaf | kaf, khaf | kof, chof | k, ḵ | k, kh | k, kh | k, kh (ch) | kaph |
ל | lā́meḏ | lāmedh | làmedh | lamed | lamed | lomed | ? | l | l | l | lamedh |
ם מ | mēm | mēm | mèm | mem | mem | mem | ? | m | m | m | mem |
ן נ | ? | nûn | nûn | nun | nun | nun | ? | n | n | n | nun |
ס | sā́mekh | sāmekh | sàmekh | samekh | samekh | somech | ? | s | s | s | samekh |
ע | ʿáyin, (3) ġáyin | ‘áyin, (3) ġáyin | `áyin, (3) 3áyin | ayin | ayin | ayin, oyin | ʿ, (3) ġ | ‘, (3) ġ | `, (3) 3 | - (9) | 'ayin |
ף פ | pê, p̄ê | pê, phê | pê, phê | pe | pe, fe | pei, fei | p, p̄ | p, ph | p, ph | p, f | pe |
ץ צ | ṣāḏê | şādhê | s`àdhê | tsadi | tsadi | tsodi, tsodik | ṣ | ş | s` | ts (tz,z) | tsade |
ק | qōp̄ | qôph | qôph | qof | kuf | kuf | ? | k | k | k (q) | qoph |
ר | rêš | rêš | rêsh | resh | resh | reish | ? | r | r | r | resh |
ש | šîn, śîn | šîn, śîn | shîn, lhîn | shin | shin, sin | shin, sin | š, ś | š, ś | sh, lh | sh, s | shin |
ת | tāw, ṯāw | tāw, thāw | tàw, thàw | tav | tav | tov, tof, sov, sof | t, ṯ | t, th | t, th | t | taw |
[edit] Numerical value and pronunciation
Symbol | Numerical Value |
Pronunciation (IPA) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Israeli | Ashkenazi | Sephardi | Yemenite | Tiberian | Reconstructed | |||
Mishnaic | Biblical | |||||||
א | 1 | [ʔ] | [ - ] | [ʔ, -] | [ʔ, -] | [ʔ, -] | [ʔ, -] | [ʔ] |
ב | 2 | [b, v] | [b, v~v̥] | [b, b~β~v] | [b] | [b, v] | [b, β] | [b] |
ג | 3 | [g] | [g~g̊] | [g, g~ɣ] | [ʤ, ɣ] | [ɡ, ɣ] | [ɡ, ɣ] | [ɡ] |
ד | 4 | [d] | [d~d̥] | [d̪~ð] | [d̪, ð] | [d̪, ð] | [d̪, ð] | [d̪] |
ה | 5 | [h~ʔ, -] | [h, -] | [h, -] | [h, -] | [h, -] | [h, -] | [h] |
ו | 6 | [v] | [v~v̥] | [v] | [w] | [w] | [w] | [w] |
ז | 7 | [z] | [z~z̥] | [z] | [z] | [z] | [z] | [dz] |
ח | 8 | [χ~ħ] | [x] | [ħ] | [ħ] | [ħ] | [ħ, x] | [ħ, x] |
ט | 9 | [t] | [t] | [t̪] | [t̴̪] (5) | [t̴̪] | [t̪ˁ] (6) | [t̪ʼ] (7) |
י | 10 | [j] | [j] | [j] | [j] | [j] | [j] | [j] |
ך כ | 20 | [k, χ] | [k, x] | [k, x] | [k, x] | [k, x] | [k, x] | [k] |
ל | 30 | [l] | [l~ɫ] | [l] | [l] | [l] | [l] | [l] |
ם מ | 40 | [m] | [m] | [m] | [m] | [m] | [m] | [m] |
ן נ | 50 | [n] | [n] | [n̪] | [n̪] | [n̪] | [n̪] | [n̪] |
ס | 60 | [s] | [s] | [s] | [s] | [s] | [s] | [ts] |
ע | 70 | [ʔ~ʕ, – ] | [ - ] | [ʕ, ŋ, – ] | [ʕ] | [ʕ] | [ʕ, ɣ] | [ʕ, ɣ] |
ף פ | 80 | [p, f] | [p, f] | [p, f] | [f] | [p, f] | [p, ɸ] | [p] |
ץ צ | 90 | [ʦ] | [ʦ] | [ʦ] | [s̴] (5) | [s̴] | [sˁ] (6) | [ʦʼ, ʧʼ, tɬʼ] (7) |
ק | 100 | [k] | [k] | [k] | [ɡ] | [q] | [q] | [kʼ] (7) |
ר | 200 | [ʁ] | [ʀ] | [r~ɾ] | [r~ɾ] | [ɾ] | [ɾ] | [ɾ] |
ש | 300 | [ʃ, s] | [ʃ, s] | [ʃ, s] | [ʃ, s] | [ʃ, s] | [ʃ, s] | [ʧ, tɬ, s] |
ת | 400 | [t] | [t, s] | [t̪, θ] | [t̪, θ] | [t̪, θ] | [t̪, θ] | [t̪] |
[edit] Notes
- unwritten in initial and final positions, though often not written at all
- unwritten in final positions
- archaic
- h initial or after consonants, ch everywhere else
- velarized or pharyngealized
- pharyngealized
- sometimes said to be ejective but more likely glottalized.
- i in final positions or before consonants
- often not written at all
- Historically, the consonants ב bet, ג gimel, ד dalet, כ kaf, פ pe and ת tav each had two sounds: one hard (plosive consonant), and one soft (fricative consonant), depending on the position of the letter and other factors. 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, פ pe, and ת tav (tav only changes in Ashkenazic pronunciation). To learn the pronunciation of the letters with the dagesh, go to the table at the beggining of this article and look at the first consinent cluster of each affected letter (tav makes the [s] sound). The rest of the letters do not change in pronunciation. In masoretic manuscripts, the soft fricative consonants are indicated by a small line on top of the letter; this diacritical mark is called raphe (רפה), but its use has been largely discontinued in printed texts.
- א alef, ה he, ו vav and י yod are consonants that can sometimes fill the position of a vowel. vav and yod in particular are more often vowels than they are consonants.
- ש shin and sin are two separate phonemes written with the same letter. They are not mutually allophonic. When vowel diacritics are used, the two phonemes are differentiated with a shin-dot or sin-dot; the shin-dot is above the upper-right side of the letter, and sin-dot is above the upper-left side of the letter.
- In Israel's general population, many consonants have merged to the same pronunciation. They are:
- א alef with ayin and (varyingly) ה he
- ב bet (without dagesh) with ו vav
- ח het with כ kaf (without dagesh)
- ט tet with ת tav (both with and without dagesh)
- כ kaf (with dagesh) with ק qof
- ס samekh with שׂ sin (but not with שׁ shin)
- צ tsadi with the consonant cluster תס tav-samekh
[edit] Vowel formation
Some of the letters, in addition to their consonantal function, also act as matres lectionis to represent vowels, as follows:
Symbol | Name | Vowel formation |
---|---|---|
א | alef | ê, ệ, ậ, â, ô |
ה | he | ê, ệ, ậ, â, ô |
ו | vav | ô, û |
י | yod | î, ê, ệ |
[edit] Vowels and consonants in Ancient Hebrew
Some of the variations in sound mentioned above are due to a systematic feature of Ancient Hebrew. The six consonants /b g d k p t/ were pronounced differently depending on their position. These letters were also called BeGeDKePHeT (pronounced /beɪgɛd'kɛfɛt/) letters. (The full details are very complex; this summary omits some points.) They were pronounced as stops [b g d k p t] at the beginning of a syllable, or when doubled. They were pronounced as fricatives [p̄ ṯ ḵ ḇ ḏ ḡ] — IPA [f θ x v ð ɣ] when preceded by a vowel. The stop and double pronunciations were indicated by the dagesh. In Modern Hebrew the sounds [ḏ] and [ḡ] have reverted to [d] and [g] respectively, and [ṯ] has become [t], so only the remaining three consonants /b k p/ show variation.
ו vav was a semivowel /w/ (as in English, not as in German).
ח het and ע ayin were pharyngeal fricatives, צ tsadi was an emphatic /s/, ט tet was an emphatic /t/, and ק qof was /q/. All these are common Semitic consonants.
שׂ sin (the /s/ variant of ש shin) was originally different from both שׁ shin and ס samekh, but had become /s/ the same as ס samekh by the time the vowel pointing was devised. Because of cognates with other Semitic languages, this phoneme is known to have originally been a lateral consonant, most likely IPA the fricative /ɬ/ (as in Welsh ll) or the affricate /tɬ/ (as in Náhuatl tl).
[edit] History
The original Hebrew script developed alongside others in the region during the course of the late second and first millennia BCE; it is closely related to the Phoenician script, which itself probably gave rise to the use of alphabetic writing in Greece (Greek). It is sometimes claimed that around the 10th century BCE[1], a distinct Hebrew variant, the original "Hebrew script", emerged, which was widely used in the ancient kingdoms of Israel and Judah until they fell in the 8th and 6th centuries BCE, respectively. It is not straightforward, however, to distinguish Israelite/Judahite scripts from others which were in use in the immediate area, most notably by the Moabites and Ammonites.
Following the Babylonian exile, Jews gradually stopped using the Hebrew script, and instead adopted the Aramaic script (another offshoot of the same family of scripts). This script, used for writing Hebrew, later evolved into the Jewish, or "square" script, that is still used today. Closely related scripts were in use all over the Middle East for several hundred years, but following the rise of Christianity (and later, the rise of Islam), they gave way to the Roman and Arabic alphabets, respectively.
The Hebrew alphabet was later adapted in order to write down the languages of the Jewish diaspora (Karaim, Judæo-Arabic, Ladino, Yiddish, etc.). The Hebrew alphabet was retained as the alphabet used for writing down the Hebrew language during its rebirth in the 18th to 19th century.
[edit] Unicode table
The Unicode Hebrew block extends from U+0590 to U+05FF and from U+FB1D to U+FB40. It includes letters, ligatures, combining diacritical marks (niqqud and cantillation marks) and punctuation.
…0 | …1 | …2 | …3 | …4 | …5 | …6 | …7 | …8 | …9 | …A | …B | …C | …D | …E | …F | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
U+059… | ֑ | ֒ | ֓ | ֔ | ֕ | ֖ | ֗ | ֘ | ֙ | ֚ | ֛ | ֜ | ֝ | ֞ | ֟
|
||
U+05A… | ֠ | ֡ | ֢ | ֣ | ֤ | ֥ | ֦ | ֧ | ֨ | ֩ | ֪ | ֫ | ֬ | ֭ | ֮ | ֯ | |
U+05B… | ְ | ֱ | ֲ | ֳ | ִ | ֵ | ֶ | ַ | ָ | ֹ | ֺ | ֻ | ּ | ֽ | ־ | ֿ | |
U+05C… | ׀ | ׁ | ׂ | ׃ | ׄ | ׅ | ׆ | ׇ | |||||||||
U+05D… | א | ב | ג | ד | ה | ו | ז | ח | ט | י | ך | כ | ל | ם | מ | ן | |
U+05E… | נ | ס | ע | ף | פ | ץ | צ | ק | ר | ש | ת | ||||||
U+05F… | װ | ױ | ײ | ׳ | ״ | | |||||||||||
U+FB1… | יִ | ﬞ | ײַ | ||||||||||||||
U+FB2… | ﬠ | ﬡ | ﬢ | ﬣ | ﬤ | ﬥ | ﬦ | ﬧ | ﬨ | ﬩ | שׁ | שׂ | שּׁ | שּׂ | אַ | אָ | |
U+FB3… | אּ | בּ | גּ | דּ | הּ | וּ | זּ | טּ | יּ | ךּ | כּ | לּ | מּ | ||||
U+FB4… | נּ | סּ | ףּ | פּ | צּ | קּ | רּ | שּ | תּ | וֹ | בֿ | כֿ | פֿ | ﭏ |
Note: The ligature characters װ ױ ײ are intended for Yiddish. They are not used in Hebrew.
[edit] HTML code table
These are the Hebrew Numeric Character References. These can be used in many markup languages, and they are often used in Wiki to create the Hebrew glyphs compatible with the majority of web browsers.
Alef-Bet
ג | ב | בּ | א |
ג | ב | בּ | א |
---|---|---|---|
ז | ו | ה | ד |
ז | ו | ה | ד |
כּ | י | ט | ח |
כּ | י | ט | ח |
מ | ל | ך | כ |
מ | ל | ך | כ |
ס | ן | נ | ם |
ס | ן | נ | ם |
ף | פ | פּ | ע |
ף | פ | פּ | ע |
ר | ק | ץ | צ |
ר | ק | ץ | צ |
ת | תּ | שׂ | שׁ |
ת | תּ | שׂ | שׁ |
Vowels and Unique Characters
Short/Hard | Long/Soft |
( ַ ) | ( ָ ) |
ַ | ָ |
---|---|
( ֵ ) | ( ֶ ) |
ֵ | ֶ |
וֹ | ( ֹ ) |
וֹ | ֹ |
וּ | ( ֻ ) |
וּ | ֻ |
( ִ ) | Letter Yud ( י ) |
ִ | י |
Shva Nach ( ְ ) | Shva Nah ( ְ ) |
ְ | ְ |
---|---|
Dagesh ( ּ ) | |
ּ |
[edit] See also
- History of the Hebrew language
- Niqqud
- Gershayim
- Hebrew braille
- Hebrew cursive
- Romanization of Hebrew
- Help:Hebrew
- In his science fiction novel The Forever War, author Joe Haldeman names collapsars after letters of the Hebrew alphabet (examples include Aleph and Yod-42).
[edit] References
(using new citation method)
Roots of the Hebrew Alphabet
- Hoffman, Joel M. 2004. In the Beginning: A Short History of the Hebrew Language..
- Saenz-Badillos, Angel. 1993. A History of the Hebrew Language. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.New York: NYU Press
- Steinberg, David. History of the Hebrew Language.
- Mathers table
- Aleph-Beth Quick Study Chart. February 28, 2005. Qumran Bet Community. Retrieved January 5th, 2006.
- The Ancient Hebrew Language and Alephbet. August 11, 2004. The Ancient Hebrew Research Center. Retrieved January 5th, 2006.
[edit] External links
- Lev Software's Animated AlefBet page
- Background and explanation of all the Hebrew letters
- Al's Hebrew Transliterator, converts latin alphabet transliteration into Hebrew HTML codes
- The Alphabet of Biblical Hebrew
- A free online course to learn the Hebrew consonants
- Hebrew translit for typing Hebrew with an English keyboard
- Transliterate your English name into Hebrew Letters
- Mikledet.com - Send Hebrew emails without having a Hebrew keyboard.
- The Hebrew Alphabet: It's [sic] Inner Structure
- Jewish Encyclopedia: Alphabet, the Hebrew
- official Unicode standards document for Hebrew characters (PDF file)