- are high,
often going above the
letters themselves (as
opposed to the
gershayim,
which is
level with the top of letters). An
example of this
system is...
-
Gershayim (Hebrew: גֵּרְשַׁיִם,
without niqqud גרשיים), also
occasionally grashayim (גְּרָשַׁיִם), can
refer to
either of two
distinct typographical...
- as part of the
niqqud system but are not in
common use)[*];
geresh and
gershayim, two
diacritics that are not
considered a part of niqqud, each of which...
-
Hebrew letter,
while gershayim (a
doubled geresh) are used to
denote acronyms pronounced as a
string of letters;
geresh and
gershayim are also used to denote...
-
ordinary additive forms for 500 to 900 are ת״ק, ת״ר, ת״ש, ת״ת and תת״ק.
Gershayim (U+05F4 in Unicode, and
resembling a
double quote mark) (sometimes erroneously...
-
Gershayim (Hebrew: גֵּרְשַׁיִם, with
variant English spellings) is a
cantillation mark that is
found in the Torah, Haftarah, and
other books of the Hebrew...
-
elaborate than that of
higher level disjunctives. They are pazer, geresh,
gershayim,
telisha gedola,
munach legarmeh and
qarne farah. The
general conjunctive...
-
cantillation marks,
meteg (◌ֽ) and ole (◌֫), were added. True
Hebrew gershayim (״),
quotes („”) and
maqaf (־) were added. RLM and LRM
characters added...
-
called gershayim and is a
punctuation mark used in the
Hebrew language to
denote acronyms. It is
written before the last
letter in the acronym.
Gershayim is...
- see chart.
Hebrew abbreviations use a
special punctuation mark
called gershayim (״). This
character is
frequently approximated using a " (straight quote)...