ح
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| Heth | ||||||||||
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| تمثيل المقطع الصوتي | ħ, (χ, x) | |||||||||
| الموقع في الأبجدية | 8 | |||||||||
| القيمة الحسابية | 8 | |||||||||
| المشتقات الأبجدية للفينيقي | ||||||||||
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Heth, sometimes written Chet or Ḥet, is the eighth letter of the Semitic abjads, including Phoenician ḥēt 𐤇, Hebrew ḥēt ח, Aramaic ḥēṯ 𐡇, Syriac ḥēṯ ܚ, and Arabic ḥāʾ ح. It is also related to the Ancient North Arabian 𐪂, South Arabian 𐩢, and Ge'ez ሐ.
Heth originally represented a voiceless fricative, either pharyngeal /ħ/, or velar /x/. In Arabic, two corresponding letters were created for both phonemic sounds: unmodified ḥāʾ ح represents /ħ/, while ḫāʾ خ represents /x/.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek eta Η, Etruscan
, Latin H, and Cyrillic И. While H is a consonant in the Latin alphabet, the Greek and Cyrillic equivalents represent vowel sounds, though the letter was originally a consonant in Greek and this usage later evolved into the rough breathing character.[1] The Phoenician letter also gave rise to the archaic Greek letter heta, as well as a variant of Cyrillic letter I, short I. The Arabic letter (ح) is sometimes transliterated as Ch in English.
Origins
The shape of the letter Ḥet probably goes back either to the Egyptian hieroglyph for 'courtyard' (ḥwt):
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(compare عبرية: חָצֵר, romanized: ḥaṣēr of identical meaning, which begins with Ḥet).
or to the one for 'thread, wick' representing a wick of twisted flax: (ḥ)[2][3]
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(compare عبرية: חוּט, romanized: ḥuṭ of identical meaning, which begins with Ḥet).
Possibly named ḥasir in the Proto-Sinaitic script.
The corresponding South Arabian letters are ḥ and
ḫ, corresponding to the Ge'ez letters Ḥawṭ ሐ and Ḫarm ኀ.
This letter is usually transcribed as ḥ, h with a dot underneath. In some romanization systems, a (capital) Ch is also used.
Arabic ḥāʾ
| Ḥāʾ حاء | |
|---|---|
| ح | |
| الاستخدام | |
| نظام الكتابة | Arabic script |
| النوع | Abjad |
| لغة المنشأ | Arabic language |
| القيم الصوتية | ħ |
| الموقع الأبجدي | 6 |
| التاريخ | |
| التطور | 𐤇
|
The letter is named حَاءْ ḥāʾ and is the sixth letter of the alphabet. Its shape varies depending on its position in the word, and its initial and medial form resembles a bird's beak:
| الموقع في الكلمة: | منعزل | نهائي | بالوسط | ابتدائي |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| گليف من: (مساعدة) |
ح | ـح | ـحـ | حـ |
This form is used to denote three letters, the other two being خ ḫāʾ and ج ǧīm. In Maltese, the corresponding letter to ح is ħ.
Pronunciation
In Arabic, ḥāʾ is similar to the English [h], but it is much "raspier",[4] IPA: [ħ]~[ʜ]. (Pharyngeal H)
In Persian, it is [h], like ⟨ه⟩ and the English h.
Hebrew het
| Orthographic variants | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Various print fonts | Cursive Hebrew |
Rashi script | ||
| Serif | Sans-serif | Monospaced | ||
| ח | ח | ח | ملف:Het (Rashi-script - Hebrew letter).svg | |
Pronunciation
In Modern Israeli Hebrew (and Ashkenazi Hebrew, although not under strict pronunciation), the letter Ḥet (عبرية: חֵית) usually has the sound value of a voiceless uvular fricative (/χ/), as the historical phonemes of the letters Ḥet ח (/ħ/) and Khaf כ (/x/) merged, both becoming the voiceless uvular fricative (/χ/). In more rare Ashkenazi phonologies, it is pronounced as a voiceless pharyngeal fricative (/ħ/).
The (/ħ/) pronunciation is still common among Israeli Arabs and Mizrahi Jews (particularly among the older generation and popular Mizrahi singers, especially Yemenites), in accordance with oriental Jewish traditions (see, e.g., Mizrahi Hebrew and Yemenite Hebrew).
The ability to pronounce the Arabic letter ḥāʾ (ح) correctly as a voiceless pharyngeal fricative /ħ/ is often used as a shibboleth to distinguish Arabic-speakers from non-Arabic-speakers; in particular, pronunciation of the letter as /x/ is seen as a hallmark of Ashkenazi and Greek Jews.[بحاجة لمصدر]
Ḥet is one of the few Hebrew consonants that can take a vowel at the end of a word. This occurs when patach gnuva comes under the Ḥet at the end of the word. The combination is then pronounced /-aħ/ rather than /-ħa/. For example: פָּתוּחַ (/ˌpaˈtuaħ/), and תַּפּוּחַ (/ˌtaˈpuaħ/).
Variations
Ḥet, along with Aleph, Ayin, Resh, and He, cannot receive a dagesh. As pharyngeal fricatives are difficult for most English speakers to pronounce, loanwords are usually Anglicized to have /h/. Thus challah (חלה), pronounced by native Hebrew speakers as /χala/ or /ħala/ is pronounced /halə/ by most English speakers, who cannot often perceive the difference between [h] and [ħ].
Significance
In gematria, Ḥet represents the number eight.
In chat rooms, online forums, and social networking the letter Ḥet repeated (חחחחחחחחחח) denotes laughter, just as in English, in the saying 'Haha'.
Syriac cheth
| الموقع في الكلمة: | منعزل | نهائي | بالوسط | ابتدائي |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| گليف من: (مساعدة) |
ܚ | ـܚ | ـܚـ | ܚـ |
Character encodings
| الحرف | ח | ح | ܚ | ࠇ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unicode name | HEBREW LETTER HET | ARABIC LETTER HAH | SYRIAC LETTER HETH | SAMARITAN LETTER IT | ||||
| Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
| يونيكود | 1495 | U+05D7 | 1581 | U+062D | 1818 | U+071A | 2055 | U+0807 |
| UTF-8 | 215 151 | D7 97 | 216 173 | D8 AD | 220 154 | DC 9A | 224 160 135 | E0 A0 87 |
| Numeric character reference | ח | ח | ح | ح | ܚ | ܚ | ࠇ | ࠇ |
| الحرف | 𐎈 | 𐡇 | 𐤇 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unicode name | UGARITIC LETTER HOTA | IMPERIAL ARAMAIC LETTER HETH | PHOENICIAN LETTER HET | |||
| Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
| يونيكود | 66440 | U+10388 | 67655 | U+10847 | 67847 | U+10907 |
| UTF-8 | 240 144 142 136 | F0 90 8E 88 | 240 144 161 135 | F0 90 A1 87 | 240 144 164 135 | F0 90 A4 87 |
| Numeric character reference | 𐎈 | 𐎈 | 𐡇 | 𐡇 | 𐤇 | 𐤇 |
See also
- Ħ, ħ : H with stroke
References
- ^ "Herbert Weir Smyth, Greek Grammar". Archived from the original on 2011-12-08. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
- ^ "𓎛 - Wiktionary". Archived from the original on 2020-06-30. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
- ^ "Rosette V-1.3 (6/11/05)". Archived from the original on 2020-06-29. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
- ^ Bouchentouf, Amine (2006). Arabic for Dummies. Wiley Publishing, Inc. p. 15.
External links
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles needing additional references from March 2025
- All articles needing additional references
- مقالات بدون مصدر
- Pages with plain IPA
- Articles containing Old South Arabian-language text
- Articles containing Ge'ez-language text
- Articles containing explicitly cited عربية-language text
- Articles containing Greek-language text
- Articles containing عبرية-language text
- Articles containing مالطية-language text
- Articles containing فارسية-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2023
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- Phoenician alphabet
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