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Kaph Information

Kaph (also spelled Kap or Kaf) is the eleventh letter of many Semitic abjads, including Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew Kaf כ, Arabic alphabet Kāf ﻙ, Persian alphabet ک. Its value is IPA: [k] (the voiceless velar plosive).

The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Kappa (Κ), Latin K, and the equivalent in the Cyrillic alphabet (К).

Contents

Origin of Kaph

Semitic alphabets
Phoenician (c.1050 – 200 BCE)
𐤀 𐤁 𐤂 𐤃 𐤄 𐤅 𐤆 𐤇 𐤈 𐤉 𐤊 𐤋 𐤌 𐤍 𐤎 𐤏 𐤐 𐤑 𐤒 𐤓 𐤔 𐤕

Semitic abjads · Genealogy


Hebrew (400 BCE – present)
א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כך ל מם נן ס ע פף צץ ק ר ש ת

History · Transliteration Niqqud · Dagesh · Gematria Cantillation · Numeration


Syriac (200 BCE – present)
ܐ ܒ ܓ ܕ ܗ ܘ ܙ ܚ ܛ ܝ ܟܟ ܠ ܡܡ ܢܢ ܣ ܥ ܦ ܨ ܩ ܪ ܫ ܬ
Arabic (400 CE – present)

ا ب ت ث ج ح خ د ذ ر ز س ش ص ض ط ظ ع غ ف ق ك ل م ن ه و ي

History · Transliteration Diacritics · [[Hamza|Hamza ء]] Numerals · Numeration


Kaph is thought to have been derived from a pictogram of a hand (in both modern Arabic and modern Hebrew, kaph means palm).

Hebrew Kaf

Orthographic variants
Various Print Fonts Cursive Hebrew Rashi Script
Serif Sans-serif Monospaced
כ כ כ

Hebrew spelling: כָּף

Hebrew Pronunciation

Main article: Hebrew phonology

The letter Kaf is one of the six letters which can receive a Dagesh Kal. The six are Bet, Gimel, Daleth, Kaph, Pe, and Tav (see Hebrew Alphabet for more about these letters).

There are two orthographic variants of this letter which alter the pronunciation:

Name Symbol IPA Transliteration Example
Kaf כּ /k/ k kangaroo
Chaf כ /x/ or /χ/ ch or kh loch

Kaph with the dagesh

When the Kaph has a "dot" in its center, known as a dagesh, then it represents a voiceless velar plosive ([k]). There are various rules in Hebrew grammar that stipulate when and why a dagesh is used.

Kaph without the dagesh (Chaph)

When this letter appears as כ without the dagesh ("dot") in its center then it represents a voiceless velar fricative (IPA: [x]); like the ch in German "Bach".

In modern Israeli Hebrew the sound value of Chaph is the same as that of Heth, but many communities have differentiated between them.

Final form of Kaf

Orthographic variants
Various Print Fonts Cursive Hebrew Rashi Script
Standard Sans-serif Serif
ך ך ך

If the letter is at the end of a word the symbol is drawn differently. However, it does not change the pronunciation or transliteration in any way. The name for the letter is, Final Kaf (Hebrew: Kaf Sofit‎). There are five Hebrew letters that take final forms, Tsadi, Mem, Nun, and Pei. Like Kaf can be written in English with "ph" instead of "f", so can the word sofit.

Name Alternate Name Symbol
Final Kaf Kaf Sofit ךּ
Final Chaf Chaf Sofit ך

No longer commonly used in modern Hebrew, biblical Hebrew had a Kaph Sophit (Final Kaph):

Both the final forms of Chaph and Kaph take vowels. It is the only Hebrew final letter in which a vowel is necessary, and it is also the only vowel-taking final in which the consonant sound is pronounced first. The two vowels a final Chaph or Kaph takes are sh'va and chataf kamats. In most Hebrew fonts they are written directly inside the curve rather than in line with the vowels that precede them.

Significance of Kaph in Hebrew

In gematria, Kaph represents the number 20. Its final form represents 500 but this is rarely used, Tav and Qoph (400+100) being used instead.

As a prefix, Kaph is a preposition:

Arabic kāf

The letter is named kāf, and is written is several ways depending in its position in the word:

Position in word: Isolated Initial Medial Final
Form of letter: ك كـ ـكـ ـك

Kaf is almost universally pronounced as the voiceless velar plosive /k/, but in Iraqi and Kuwaiti Arabic it is sometimes pronounced as a voiceless postalveolar affricate /tʃ/ (possibly under Persian influence[verification needed]).

Kaf is used as a prefix meaning "like", "as", or "as though", as in كطائر, kaṭā'ir, "like a bird"/"as though a bird" (as in Hebrew, above). Unlike the Hebrew, the word is not a contraction; the prefix كَـ ka is one of the Arabic words for "like" or "as" (the other, مثل mithl, is unrelated). The /ka/ prefix has been sometimes added to other words to create fixed constructions; for instance, it is prefixed to ﺫلك ḏālik "this, that" to form the fixed word ﻛﺫلك kaḏālik "like so, likewise."

Kāf is used as a possessive suffix for second-person singular nouns (feminine taking kaf-kasra كِ, /ki/ and masculine kaf-fatḥa كَ /ka/); for instance, كتاب kitāb ("book") becomes كتابكَ kitābuka ("your book", where the person spoken to is masculine) كتابكِ kitābuki ("your book", where the person spoken to is feminine). At the ends of sentences and often in conversation the final vowel is suppressed, and thus كتابك kitābuk ("your book"). In several varieties of vernacular Arabic, however, the kāf with no harakat is the standard second-person possessive, with the Standard Arabic harakah shifted to the letter before the kāf: thus masculine "your book" in these varieties is كتابَك kitābak and feminine "your book" كتابِك kitābik.

Persian_Kaph">

Persian Kaph

In Persian alphabet "Kaph" has a slightly different final form from the Mashriqi Arabic (ک as opposed to ك) and thus takes a different codepoint in Unicode. But it use the same final form as the Maghrebi style arabic.

Position in word: Isolated Initial Medial Final
Form of letter: ک کـ ـکـ ـک

See also

Hebrew · עִבְרִית
Overviews

Language · Alphabet · History · Transliteration to English / to Hebrew · Numerology

Scripts

Rashi · Braille · Ashuri · Cursive · Crowning · Paleo-Hebrew

Alphabet

Alef · Bet · Gimel · Dalet · Hei · Vav · Zayin · Het · Tet · Yud · Kaf · Lamed · Mem · Nun · Samech · Ayin · Pei · Tsadi · Kuf · Reish · Shin · Tav

Niqqud

Shva · Hiriq · Zeire · Segol · Patach · Kamatz · Holam · Shuruk · Kubutz · Dagesh · Mappiq · Rafe · Sin/Shin Dot

Extensions

Diacritics · Cantillation · Geresh · Gershayim · Inverted nun · Shekel sign

Linguistics

Phonology · Verbal morphology · Semitic roots · IPA · Grammar · Prefixes · Suffixes · Punctuation · Numerals · Spelling (with Niqqud / missing / full) · Mater lectionis · Waw-consecutive · Acronyms

Academic

Revival · Academy · Study · Ulpan · Keyboard · Hebrew / Israeli literature · Names · Surnames · Unicode and HTML

Dialects

Ashkenazi · Sephardi · Mizrahi · Yemenite · Tiberian · Samaritan

Eras

Biblical · Mishnaic · Medieval · Modern

Arabic · العربية
Overviews Language · Alphabet · History · Transliteration · Numerology · Influence on other languages
Alphabet Arabic numerals · Eastern numerals · Diacritics · Hamza · Tāʾ marbūṭa
Letters ʾAlif · Bāʾ · Tāʾ · Ṯāʾ · Ǧīm · Ḥāʾ · Ḫāʾ · Dāl · Ḏāl · Rāʾ · Zayn · Sīn · Šīn · Ṣād · Ḍād · Ṭāʾ · Ẓāʾ · ʿAyn · Ġain · Fāʾ · Qāf · Kāf · Lām · Mīm · Nūn · Hāʾ · Wāw · Yāʾ
Eras Ancient North Arabian · Classical · Modern
Major varieties Modern Standard Arabic (formal) · Maghrebi · Egyptian · Sudanese · Levantine · Arabian · Iraqi · Judeo-Arabic
Academic Literature · Names
Calligraphy and scripts Naskh · Kufic · Thuluth · Ruq'ah · Diwani · Muhaqqaq · Maghrebi · Hejazi · Mashq · Nastaʿlīq · Jawi · Pegon
Linguistics Phonology · Sun and moon letters · ʼIʻrab (inflection) · Grammar · Triliteral root · Mater lectionis · IPA · Quranic Arabic Corpus

Categories: Phoenician alphabet | Arabic letters | Hebrew alphabet

 

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Noun

kaph (plural kaphs)
  1. The eleventh letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others).
External links
from: Wiktionary: kaph,
Mon Jun 13 20:11:17 2011