Gershayim
Gershayim (Hebrew: גֵּרְשַׁיִם, without niqqud גרשיים), also occasionally grashayim[1] (Hebrew: גְּרָשַׁיִם), is two distinct typographical marks in the Hebrew language. The name literally means "double geresh".
Gershayim | ||
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punctuation mark | ״ | פַּרְדֵּ״ס |
cantillation mark | ֞ | וּרְד֞וּ |
compare with quotation marks | ||
"פַּרְדֵּ״ס", "וּרְד֞וּ" |
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Punctuation mark
Gershayim most commonly refers to the punctuation mark ⟨״⟩. It is always written before the last letter of the non-inflected form of a word or numeral. It is used in the following ways:
- To indicate an acronym.[2] For example: דּוּ״חַ (singular), דּוּ״חוֹת (plural), "report" represents דין וחשבון; and מ״כ (masculine), מַ״כִּית (feminine), "squad commander" represents מפקד כיתה.
- To indicate a multi-digit Hebrew numeral. For example: י״ח represents 18.[3] (Single-digit numerals are indicated with a following geresh.)
- To indicate the names of Hebrew letters, differentiating them from any homographs.[2] Compare הוּא שִׂרְטֵט עַיִן "he sketched an eye" with הוּא שִׂרְטֵט עַיִ״ן "he sketched an ayin".
- To indicate Hebrew word roots.[2] For example: the root of תַּשְׁבֵּצִים/taʃbeˈtsim/ "crossword puzzles" is שב״צ (š—b—ṣ); the root of לְהַטּוֹת /lehaˈtot/ "to tilt, to conjugate" is נט״ה (n—ṭ—h); and the root of הִסְתַּנְכְּרְנוּת /histankreˈnut/ "becoming synchronized" is סנכר״נ (s–n–k–r–n).
- In older texts, to indicate the transliteration of a foreign word. This use corresponds to English's use of italics. For example: in printed works of Rashi, the town of Rashi's birth, Troyes, is spelled טרוי״ש.
Cantillation mark
Gershayim is a disjunctive cantillation accent in the Tanakh - ֞. It is placed above the stressed syllable, as in וַיִּקַּ֞ח (Genesis 22:3).[1]
Computer encoding
Most keyboards do not have a key for the gershayim. As a result, a quotation mark is often substituted for it.
Appearance | Code Points | Name |
---|---|---|
״ | U+05F4 | HEBREW PUNCTUATION GERSHAYIM |
֞ | U+059E | HEBREW ACCENT GERSHAYIM |
gollark: It is not currently interfaced with points.
gollark: Fascinating idea. Is this resilient against possible cryoapioformic colony collapse?
gollark: Less efficient I guess, but that's not a concern given the availability of contrahumor.
gollark: Ah, I see.
gollark: We're using humor differential generators? I thought it used humor-contrahumor annihilation.
See also
Look up ״ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Hebrew acronyms
- Hebrew alphabet
- Hebrew diacritics
- Hebrew punctuation
References
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