Niqqud is a dotting system for Hebrew letters that combines the functions of vowel marks and dots in the Arabic writing system.[1]
References
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| Overviews |
- Language
- Alphabet
- History
- Ancient inscriptions
- Transliteration to English / from English
- Gematria
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| Eras |
- Biblical (northern dialect)
- Mishnaic
- Medieval
- Modern
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| Reading traditions |
- Ashkenazi
- Sephardi
- Italian
- Mizrahi (Syrian)
- Yemenite
- Samaritan
- Tiberian (extinct)
- Palestinian (extinct)
- Babylonian (extinct)
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| Orthography | | Eras | |
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| Scripts |
- Rashi
- Braille
- Ashuri
- Cursive
- Crowning
- Paleo-Hebrew
- Solitreo
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| Alphabet | |
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| Niqqud |
- Tiberian
- Babylonian
- Palestinian
- Samaritan
- Shva
- Hiriq
- Tzere
- Segol
- Pataḥ
- Kamatz
- Holam
- Kubutz/shuruk
- Dagesh
- Mappiq
- Maqaf
- Meteg
- Rafe
- Sin/Shin dot
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| Spelling |
- with Niqqud / missing / full
- Mater lectionis
- Abbreviations
- Plene scriptum
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| Punctuation | |
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| Phonology |
- Biblical Hebrew
- Modern Hebrew
- Philippi's law
- Law of attenuation
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| Grammar |
- Verbal morphology
- Semitic roots
- Prefixes
- Suffixes
- Segolate
- Vav-consecutive
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| Academic |
- Revival
- Academy
- Study
- Ulpan
- Keyboard
- Hebrew / ancient / modern Israeli literature
- Names
- Surnames
- Unicode and HTML
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| Reference works |
- Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar
- Gesenius' Hebrew and Chaldee Lexicon to the Old Testament Scriptures
- Brown–Driver–Briggs
- Strong's Concordance
- Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament
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