- Order:
- Duration: 1:30
- Published: 12 Jun 2010
- Uploaded: 23 Jul 2011
- Author: Nan00sha
Bet, Beth, Beh, or Vet is the second letter of many Semitic abjads, including Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew Syriac and Arabic alphabet . Its value is .
This letter's name means "house" in various Semitic languages (Hebrew: bayiṯ, Arabic bayt, Akkadian bītu, bētu, Phoenician byt etc.; ultimately all from Proto-Semitic *bayt-), and appears to derive from a Middle Bronze Age picture of a house by acrophony.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Beta, Latin B, and Cyrillic Б, В.
Hebrew spelling:
The Hebrew letter represents two different phonemes: a "b" sound () (bet) and a "v" sound () (vet). The two are distinguished by a dot (called a dagesh) in the centre of the letter for and no dot for .
This letter is named bet and vet, following the modern Israeli Hebrew pronunciation, bet and vet (), in Israel and by most Jews familiar with Hebrew, although some non-Israeli Ashkenazi speakers pronounce it beis and veis (). It is also named beth, following the Tiberian Hebrew pronunciation, in academic circles.
in modern Hebrew the frequency of the usage of bet, out of all the letters, is 4.98%.
As a prefix, the letter bet may function as a preposition meaning "in", "at", or "with".
Bet is the first letter of the Torah. As Bet is the number 2 in gematria, this is said to symbolize that there are two parts to Torah: the Written Torah and the Oral Torah.
Rashi points out that the letter is closed on three sides and open on one; this is to teach you that you may question about what happened after creation, but not what happened before it, or what is above the heavens or below the earth.
In set theory, the beth numbers stand for powers of infinite sets.
In the Syriac alphabet, the second letter is — Beth (). It is one of six letters that represents two associated sounds (the others are Gimel, Dalet, Kaph, Pe and Taw). When Beth has a hard pronunciation (qûššāyâ) it is a
Beth, when attached to the beginning of a word, represents the preposition 'in, with, at'. As a numeral, the letter represents the number 2, and, using various systems of dashes above or below, can stand for 2,000 and 20,000.
The letter normally renders sound, except in some names and loanwords where it can also render , often arabized as . (as in برسيل (Persil). For , it may be used interchangeably with the Persian letter - pe (with 3 dots) in this case.
Category:Phoenician alphabet Category:Arabic letters Category:Hebrew alphabet
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.