Recent Articles



































Hebrew alphabet



         


This article is mainly about Hebrew letters. For Hebrew diacritical marks, see niqqud (for the vowel points) and cantillation.

The Hebrew alphabet is a set of 22 letters used for writing the Hebrew language. It is has also been used in mildly adapted forms for writing several languages of the Jewish diaspora, most famously Yiddish, Ladino, and Judaeo-Arabic (for a full and detailed list, see Jewish languages).

Hebrew speakers call their alphabet the ʾālep̄-bêṯ (א ʾālep̄ and ב bêṯ are the first two letters of the Hebrew alphabet). 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, or the Assyrian script), 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 9th century BC from the Phoenician script; the Samaritans still write Hebrew in a variant of this script for religious works (see Samaritan alphabet.)

[Top]

Description

Both the old Hebrew script and the modern Jewish 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 ʾālep̄, ה hê, ו wāw, or י yôḏ has combined with a previous vowel and become silent or by imitation of such cases in spelling of other forms.

To preserve the proper vowel sounds, scholars developed several different sets of diacritic symbols (points or נקדות nəquddôṯ, nikkudot, nikkud). One of these, the Tiberian system eventually prevailed. Aaron ben Moses ben Asher, and his family for several generations, are credited for creating 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, and decorative "crowns" used only for Torah scrolls.

Hebrew letters may also be used as numbers; see the entry on Hebrew numerals. This use of letters as numbers is used in Qabbālāh (Jewish mysticism) in a practice known as gematria.

[Top]

The ʾālep̄-bêṯ

א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כך ל םמ נן ס ע פף צץ ק ר ש ת

The following section 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).

[Top]

א

[Top]

ב

[Top]

ג

[Top]

ד

[Top]

ה

[Top]

ו

[Top]

ז

[Top]

ח

[Top]

ט

[Top]

י

[Top]

ך כ

[Top]

ל

[Top]

ן נ

[Top]

ס

[Top]

ע

[Top]

ף פ

[Top]

ץ צ

[Top]

ק

[Top]

ר

[Top]

ש

[Top]

ת

[Top]

Notes

[Top]

Ancient Hebrew

Some of the variations in sound mentioned above are due to a systematic feature of Ancient Hebrew. The six consonants /p t k b d g/ were pronounced differently depending on their position. (The full details are very complex; this summary omits some points.) They were pronounced as stops [p t k b d g] at the beginning of a syllable, or when doubled. They were pronounced as fricatives [p̄ ṯ ḵ ḇ ḏ ḡ] when preceded by a vowel. The stop and double pronunciations were indicated by the dot dāḡēš. In Modern Hebrew the sounds [ḏ] and [ḡ] have reverted to [d] and [g], and [ṯ] has become [t], so only the remaining three letters show variation.

ו wāw was a semivowel /w/ (as in English, not as in German).

ח ḥêṯ and ע ʿáyin were pharyngeal fricatives, צ ṣāḏê was an emphatic /s/, ט ṭêṯ was an emphatic /t/, and ק qôp̄ was /q/. All these are common Semitic consonants.

ש śîn (the /s/ variant of ש šîn) was originally different from both ש šîn and ס sāmeḵ, but had become /s/ the same as ס sāmeḵ 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/).

[Top]

History

Archeological evidence indicates that the original Hebrew script is related to the Phoenician script that was in wide use in the Middle East region at the end of the 2nd millennium BC. Recent findings point to the direction that the Phoenician alphabet was derived from the ancient Cretans or Minoans (Crete is a Mediterranean island in what is now Greece) who reached the shores of the Middle-East as early as 2,500 ~ 3,000 BC. Eventually this alphabet evolved in Europe into the Greek and Roman alphabets. This script was borrowed by the Hebrews during the 12th or 11th century BC, and around the 9th century BC, a distinct Hebrew variant, the original "Hebrew script", emerged. This script was widely used in the ancient kingdoms of Israel and Judah until they fell in the 8th and 6th centuries BC, respectively.

Following the Babylonian exile, Jews gradually stopped using the Hebrew script, and instead adopted the Babylonian Aramaic script (which was also originally derived from the Phoenician script). This script, used for writing Hebrew, later evolved into the Jewish, or "square" script, that is still used today. "Square"-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. According to traditional Jewish thought, the Hebrew writing system contained all the current letters at the time of Moses, although Ezra is known for his contribution to the square form.

Following the decline of Hebrew and Aramaic as the spoken languages of the Jews, the Hebrew alphabet was adopted 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 end of the 19th century, despite several unsuccessful attempts to replace it with the Latin alphabet.

[Top]

Hebrew in Unicode

The Unicode Hebrew block extends from U+0590 to U+05FF. It includes letters, ligatures, combining diacritical marks (niqqud and cantillation marks) and punctuation.


  0123456789ABCDEF
590 ֐֑֖֛֚֒֓֔֕֗֘֙֜֝֞֟
5A0 ֢֣֤֥֦֧֪֭֮֠֡֨֩֫֬֯
5B0 ְֱֲֳִֵֶַָֹֺֻּֽ־ֿ
5C0 ׀ׁׂ׃ׅׄ׆ׇ׈׉׊׋׌׍׎׏
5D0 אבגדהוזחטיךכלםמן
5E0 נסעףפץצקרשת׫׬׭׮ׯ
5F0 װױײ׳״׵׶׷׸׹׺׻׼׽׾׿


[Top]

See also

[Top]




  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License