Gershayim
Gershayim | ||
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punctuation mark | ״ | פַּרְדֵּ״ס |
cantillation mark | ֞ | וּרְד֞וּ |
compare with quotation marks
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"פַּרְדֵּ״ס", "וּרְד֞וּ" |
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Gershayim (Hebrew: גֵּרְשַׁיִם, without niqqud גרשיים), also occasionally grashayim[1] (גְּרָשַׁיִם), can refer to either of two distinct typographical marks in the Hebrew language. The name literally means "double geresh".
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 a Hebrew 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]
- 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/ "being synchronized" is סנכר״נ (s–n–k–r–n).
- In older texts, to indicate the , is spelled טרוי״ש.
Cantillation mark
Gershayim is a disjunctive
Tanakh (Jewish bible) - ◌֞. 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 |
See also
Look up ״ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
References
- ^ a b Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar, §15f.
- ^ a b c Hebrew punctuation guidelines, § 31, Academy of the Hebrew Language Archived October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar, §5k ff.