Gimel
Gimel is the third letter of the Semitic abjads, including Phoenician Gīml
Gimel | ||||||||||
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Phonemic representation | d͡ʒ, ʒ, ɡ, ɟ, ɣ | |||||||||
Position in alphabet | 3 | |||||||||
Numerical value | 3 | |||||||||
Alphabetic derivatives of the Phoenician | ||||||||||
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In its unattested, yet hypothetical, Proto-Canaanite form, the letter may have been named after a weapon that was either a staff sling or a throwing stick, ultimately deriving from a Proto-Sinaitic glyph based on the hieroglyph below:
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek gamma (Γ), the Latin C and G and yogh , and the Cyrillic Г and Ґ.
Hebrew gimel
Variations
Orthographic variants | ||||
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Various print fonts | Cursive Hebrew |
Rashi script | ||
Serif | Sans-serif | Monospaced | ||
ג | ג | ג |
Hebrew spelling: גִּימֶל
Bertrand Russell posits that the letter's form is a conventionalized image of a camel.[1][2] The letter may be the shape of the walking animal's head, neck, and forelegs. Barry B. Powell, a specialist in the history of writing, states "It is hard to imagine how gimel = "camel" can be derived from the picture of a camel (it may show his hump, or his head and neck!)".[3]
Gimel is one of the six letters which can 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 bet, gimel, daled, kaph, pe, and taf. Three of them (bet, kaph, and pe) have their sound value changed in modern Hebrew from the fricative to the plosive by adding a dagesh. The other three represent the same pronunciation in modern Hebrew, but have had alternate pronunciations at other times and places. They are essentially pronounced in the fricative as ג gh غ, dh ذ and th ث. In the Temani pronunciation, gimel represents /ɡ/, /ʒ/, or /d͡ʒ/ when with a dagesh, and /ɣ/ without a dagesh. In modern Hebrew, the combination ג׳ (gimel followed by a geresh) is used in loanwords and foreign names to denote [d͡ʒ].
Significance
In gematria, gimel represents the number three.
It is written like a vav with a yud as a "foot", and is traditionally believed to resemble a person in motion; symbolically, a rich man running after a poor man to give him charity. In the Hebrew alphabet gimel directly precedes dalet, which signifies a poor or lowly man, from the Hebrew word dal (b. Shabbat, 104a).[4]
The word gimel is related to gemul, which means 'justified repayment', or the giving of reward and punishment.
Gimel is also one of the seven letters which receive special crowns (called tagin) when written in a Sefer Torah. See shin, ayin, teth, nun, zayin, and tsadi.
The letter gimel is the electoral symbol for the United Torah Judaism party, and the party is often nicknamed Gimmel.[5][6]
In Modern Hebrew, the frequency of usage of gimel, out of all the letters, is 1.26%.
Syriac Gamal/Gomal
Gamal/Gomal |
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In the Syriac alphabet, the third letter is ܓ — Gamal in eastern pronunciation, Gomal in western pronunciation (ܓܵܡܵܠ). It is one of six letters that represent two associated sounds (the others are Bet, Dalet, Kaph, Pe and Taw). When Gamal/Gomal has a hard pronunciation (qûššāyâ ) it represents [ɡ], like "goat". When Gamal/Gomal has a soft pronunciation (rûkkāḵâ ) it traditionally represents [ɣ] (ܓ݂ܵܡܵܠ), or Ghamal/Ghomal. The letter, renamed Jamal/Jomal, is written with a tilde/tie either below or within it to represent the borrowed phoneme [d͡ʒ] (ܓ̰ܡܵܠ), which is used in Garshuni and some Neo-Aramaic languages to write loan and foreign words from Arabic or Persian.
Arabic ǧīm
The Arabic letter ج is named جيم ǧīm [d͡ʒiːm, ʒiːm, ɡiːm, ɟiːm]. It is written in several ways depending on its position in the word:
Position in word: | Isolated | Final | Medial | Initial |
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Glyph form: (Help) |
ج | ـج | ـجـ | جـ |
In most Modern Standard Arabic (Literary Arabic) registers and languages that use the Arabic script (e.g. Persian, Urdu, Pashto, Uyghur, Malay, etc) The standard pronunciation taught outside the Arabic speaking world is an affricate [d͡ʒ], which was the agreed upon pronunciation by the end of the nineteenth century to recite the Qur'an. It is pronounced as a fricative [ʒ] in most of Northern Africa and the Levant, and [ɡ] is the prestigious and most common pronunciation in Egypt which is also found in Southern Arabian Peninsula. Differences in pronunciation occur because speakers of Modern Standard Arabic pronounce words in accordance to their spoken variety of Arabic. In such varieties, cognate words will have consistent differences in pronunciation of the letter:
The three main pronunciations:
- [d͡ʒ]: In most of the Arabian Peninsula, Algeria, Iraq, some parts of the Levant. However, in Algeria and the Arabian Peninsula, it may be softened to [ʒ] in some environments.
- [ʒ]: In most of the Levant and Northwestern Africa.
- [g]: The standard pronunciation in Egypt, parts of Yemen (West and South), and southwestern Oman, also in Soqotri language, as in Hebrew and the other Semitic languages. This pronunciation also exists colloquially in Northwestern Africa in words that contain grooved alveolar sounds (/s/, /z/) but not to pronounce Literary Arabic.
Other pronunciations:
- [ɟ]: In some regions of Sudan and Yemen, as well as being a common reconstruction of the Classical Arabic pronunciation.
- [j]: In eastern Arabian Peninsula in the most colloquial speech but [d͡ʒ] or sometimes [ʒ] to pronounce Literary Arabic loan words.
Egyptians always use the letter to represent [ɡ] as well as in names and loanwords, such as جولف "golf". However, ج may be used in Egypt to transcribe /ʒ~d͡ʒ/ (normally pronounced [ʒ]) or if there is a need to differentiate between them completely then چ can be used instead to represent /ʒ/, which is also a proposal for Mehri and Soqotri languages.
Palatalization
While in most Semitic languages, e.g. Aramaic, Hebrew, Ge'ez, Old South Arabian the Gimel represents a [ɡ], Arabic is considered unique among them where the Gimel or Jīm ⟨ج⟩ was palatalized to an affricate [d͡ʒ] or a fricative [ʒ] in most dialects from classical times. While there is variation in Modern Arabic varieties, most of them reflect this palatalized pronunciation except in Egyptian Arabic and a number of Yemeni and Omani dialects, where it is pronounced as [ɡ] due to their substrate languages being Old South Arabian languages.
It is not well known when this change occurred or the probability of it being connected to the pronunciation of Qāf ⟨ق⟩ as a [ɡ], but in most of the Arabian peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, UAE and parts of Yemen and Oman) which is the homeland of the Arabic language, the ⟨ج⟩ represents a [d͡ʒ] and ⟨ق⟩ represents a [ɡ], except in western and southern Yemen and southern Oman where ⟨ج⟩ represents a [ɡ] and ⟨ق⟩ represents a [q], which shows a strong correlation between the palatalization of ⟨ج⟩ to [d͡ʒ] and the pronunciation of the ⟨ق⟩ as a [ɡ] as shown in the table below:
Language / Dialects | Pronunciation of the letters | |
---|---|---|
ج | ق | |
Proto-Semitic | [g] | [kʼ] |
Parts of Southern Arabia1 | [g] | [q] |
Most of the Arabian Peninsula | [d͡ʒ]2 | [g] |
Modern Standard Arabic | [d͡ʒ]3 | [q] |
Notes:
- Coastal Yemen and southern Oman.
- [ʒ] can be an allophone in some dialects.
- in most Modern Standard Arabic registers ⟨ج⟩ is pronouned [d͡ʒ] or [ʒ], but in Egypt [g], Yemen [ɡ, ɟ], and Sudan [ɟ].
Ethiopian/Sudanese Gimel
The dialect of Eastern Africa often utilizes the gimel sofit when the gimel ends a word. The letter is a traditional gimel with an add-on curve on the bottom.
Character encodings
Preview | ג | ج | گ | ܓ | ࠂ | ℷ | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | HEBREW LETTER GIMEL | ARABIC LETTER JEEM | ARABIC LETTER GAF | SYRIAC LETTER GAMAL | SAMARITAN LETTER GAMAN | GIMEL SYMBOL | ||||||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 1490 | U+05D2 | 1580 | U+062C | 1711 | U+06AF | 1811 | U+0713 | 2050 | U+0802 | 8503 | U+2137 |
UTF-8 | 215 146 | D7 92 | 216 172 | D8 AC | 218 175 | DA AF | 220 147 | DC 93 | 224 160 130 | E0 A0 82 | 226 132 183 | E2 84 B7 |
Numeric character reference | ג | ג | ج | ج | گ | گ | ܓ | ܓ | ࠂ | ࠂ | ℷ | ℷ |
Named character reference | ℷ |
Preview | 𐎂 | 𐡂 | 𐤂 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | UGARITIC LETTER GAMLA | IMPERIAL ARAMAIC LETTER GIMEL | PHOENICIAN LETTER GAML | |||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 66434 | U+10382 | 67650 | U+10842 | 67842 | U+10902 |
UTF-8 | 240 144 142 130 | F0 90 8E 82 | 240 144 161 130 | F0 90 A1 82 | 240 144 164 130 | F0 90 A4 82 |
UTF-16 | 55296 57218 | D800 DF82 | 55298 56386 | D802 DC42 | 55298 56578 | D802 DD02 |
Numeric character reference | 𐎂 | 𐎂 | 𐡂 | 𐡂 | 𐤂 | 𐤂 |
See also
The serif form of the Hebrew letter gimel is occasionally used for the gimel function in mathematics.
References
- Russell, Bertrand (1972). A history of western philosophy (60th print. ed.). New York: Touchstone book. ISBN 9780671314002.
- Stan Tenen - Meru Foundation. "Meru Foundation Research: Letter Portrait: Gimel". meru.org.
- Powell, Barry B. (27 March 2009). Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization. Wiley Blackwell. p. 182. ISBN 978-1405162562.
- Ginzburgh, Yitzchak; Trugman, Avraham Arieh; Wisnefsky, Moshe Yaakov (1991). The Alef-beit: Jewish Thought Revealed Through the Hebrew Letters. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 42, 389. ISBN 9780876685181.
- "Mass Rally for United Torah Judaism - Hamodia.com". Hamodia. 11 March 2015.
- "Gedolim at Special Conference Call to Strengthen UTJ to Uphold Torah, Shabbos and Religious Character - Hamodia.com". Hamodia. 1 April 2019.
External links
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