- The
dagesh (Hebrew: דָּגֵשׁ
dagésh) is a
diacritic that is used in the
Hebrew alphabet. It
takes the form of a dot
placed inside a consonant. A
dagesh can...
-
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...
- center,
known as a
dagesh, then it
represents /b/.
There are
various rules in
Hebrew grammar that sti****te when and why a
dagesh is used.[citation needed]...
- an /s/
without the
dagesh and has the
plosive form when it has the
dagesh.
Among Yemen and some
Sephardi areas, tav
without a
dagesh represented a voiceless...
-
exception to the rule…
dagesh can be seen in Alef and Reish. See
Mesorah haGedolah 43:26 and מכלול נז
Minchas Shai 43:26. "Unexpected
Dagesh in Reish". Mi Yodeya...
-
known as a
dagesh, it
represents a
voiceless bilabial plosive, /p/.
There are
various rules in
Hebrew grammar that sti****te when and why a
dagesh is used...
-
receive a
dagesh qal. The two
functions of
dagesh are
distinguished as
either qal (light) or
hazaq (strong). The six
letters that can
receive a
dagesh qal are...
- the left of it. The dot is
identical to the
grammatically different signs dagesh and mappiq, but in a
fully vocalized text it is
practically impossible to...
-
known as a
dagesh, it
represents a
voiceless velar plosive (/k/).
There are
various rules in
Hebrew grammar that sti****te when and why a
dagesh is used...
- and "ו" with a
dagesh look
identical ("וּ") and are only
distinguishable through the fact that in text with nikud, "ו" with a
dagesh will
normally be...