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Qoph Information

Qoph or Qop (In Modern Hebrew: Kuf/Kof, Arabic: Qāf) is the nineteenth letter in many Semitic abjads, including Phoenician, Aramaic, Syriac, Hebrew ק and Arabic alphabet qāf ق (in abjadi order). Its sound value is an emphatic [] or [q]. The OHED (Oxford Hebrew English Dictionary) gives the letter Qoph a transliteration value of Q or a K and a final transliteration value as a ck. In Hebrew Gematria, it has the numerical value of 100.

It became over time the letter Q in the Latin alphabet, and the letter Qoppa in certain early varieties of the Greek alphabet.

Contents

Origins of Qoph

Semitic alphabets

Phoenician (c.1050 – 200 BCE)
𐤀𐤁𐤂𐤃𐤄𐤅𐤆𐤇𐤈𐤉𐤊𐤋𐤌𐤍𐤎𐤏𐤐𐤑𐤒𐤓𐤔𐤕

Semitic abjads


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 ء Numerals · Numeration


The origin of Qoph is usually thought to be a sewing needle. Specifically the eye of needle, as the Paleo-Hebrew glyph strongly resembles a needle.(In Hebrew, Qoph, spelled in Hebrew letters as קוף, means "hole." It is also hypothesized that the Qoph could also be a monkey as they share the same spelling. There are two vocalizations for קוף. Qoph means monkey and Quph means needle.[1] Both pronunciations are common.

Others have proposed that it originated from a pictogram of someone's head and neck (Qaf in Arabic meant the nape); qaw is also reconstructed as a proto-Afro-Asiatic word for neck (ḫḫ in Egyptian), and in some dialects of Arabic, qoph is pronounced as a [hamza] ء, a glottal stop in the back of the throat - similar to the part of the throat used to make the sound of the qoph. In hieroglyphs, two determinatives for neck, F10 and F11 Gardiner's sign list#D. Parts of the Human Body (F12 for "nape"), are both vertical lines topped with heads with horns. F10 is a line underneath an ox head (and a cross toward the bottom of the line), which could conceivably have evolved into the Arabic aleph with a hamza on top (the pronounced (and sometimes written) Egyptian Arabic way of saying qaf). The Arabic hamza far more closely resembles the earlier iterations of Aleph Aleph than does the aleph character itself, which is just a vertical line on top of which the hamza can sit Aleph#Arabic Alif.

Hebrew Qof

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

Hebrew spelling: קוֹף

Hebrew Pronunciation

In modern Israeli Hebrew, Qof usually represents /k/; i.e., no distinction is made between Qof and Kaph. However, many historical groups have made that distinction, with Qof being pronounced [q] by Iraqi Jews and other Mizrahim, or even as [ɡ] by Yemenite Jews under the influence of Yemeni Arabic.

Significance of Qof

Qof in gematria represents the number 100. Sarah is described in Genesis Rabba as "בת ק' כבת כ' שנה לחטא", literally At Qof years of age, she was like Kaph years of age in sin (i.e. when she was 100 years old, she was as sinless as when she was 20).

Qof is used in an Israeli phrase: after a child will say something false, one might say "B'Shin Qoph, Resh" (With Shin, Qoph, Resh). These letters spell Sheqer, which is the Hebrew word for a lie. It would be akin to an English speaker saying "That's an L-I-E."

Arabic qāf

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

Position in word: Isolated Final Medial Initial
Form of letter: ق‎ ـق‎ ـقـ‎ قـ‎
The text in the folio appears below in modern script. Note how the Qaf's and Fa's are rendered:

As noted above, Modern Standard Arabic has the voiceless uvular plosive /q/ as its standard pronunciation of the letter, but dialectical pronunciations vary as follows:

This variance has led to the confusion over the spelling of Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi's name in Latin letters. In Western Arabic dialects the sound [q] is more preserved but can also be sometimes pronounced [ɡ] or as a simple [k] under Berber and French influence.

Position in word: Isolated Final Medial Initial
Form of letter: ٯ‎ ـٯ‎ ـڧـ‎ ڧـ‎

The Maghrebi style of writing qaf is different. Once the prevalent style, it is now only used in Maghribi countries for writing Qur'an with the exception of Libya which adopted the Mashriqi form. There is no possibility of confusing it with the letter fa' as it is written with a dot underneath (ڢ‎) in the Maghribi script.[2]

Persian

In Persian language the letter is pronounced [ɣ]~[ɢ].

References

  1. ^ Milon. "Error: no |title= specified when using {{ }}". http://www.milon.co.il/general/general.php?term=%D7%A7%D7%95%D7%A3.
  2. ^ Muhammad Ghoniem, M S M Saifullah, cAbd ar-Rahmân Robert Squires & cAbdus Samad, Are There Scribal Errors In The Qur'ân?, see qif on a traffic sign written ڧڢ‎ which is written elsewhere as قف, Retrieved 2011-August-27
Hebrew · עִבְרִית
Overviews Language · Alphabet · History · Transliteration to English / from English · Numerology
Eras Biblical · Mishnaic · Medieval · Modern
Dialects Israelian · Judahite
Reading traditions Ashkenazi · Sephardi · Italian · Mizrahi (Syrian) · Yemenite · Samaritan · Tiberian (extinct) · Palestinian (extinct) · Babylonian (extinct)
Orthography
Eras Biblical · Mishnaic · Modern
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 Tiberian · Babylonian · Palestinian · Samaritan Shva · Hiriq · Zeire · Segol · Patach · Kamatz · Holam · Shuruk · Kubutz · Dagesh · Mappiq · Rafe · Sin/Shin Dot
Spelling with Niqqud / missing / full · Mater lectionis · Acronyms
Punctuation Diacritics · Meteg · Cantillation · Geresh · Gershayim · Inverted nun · Shekel sign · Numerals
Phonology Biblical Hebrew · Modern Hebrew · Philippi's law · Barth's law · Law of attenuation
Grammar Biblical · Modern Verbal morphology · Semitic roots · Prefixes · Suffixes · Segolate · Waw-consecutive
Academic Revival · Academy · Study · Ulpan · Keyboard · Hebrew / Israeli literature · Names · Surnames · Unicode and HTML
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Arabic · العربية
Overviews Language · Alphabet · History · Romanization · Numerology · Influence on other languages
Alphabet Arabic numerals · Eastern numerals · Diacritics · Hamza · Tāʾ marbūṭah
Letters ʾAlif · Bāʾ · Tāʾ · Ṯāʾ · Ǧīm · Ḥāʾ · Ḫāʾ · Dāl · Ḏāl · Rāʾ · Zayn · Sīn · Šīn · Ṣād · Ḍād · Ṭāʾ · Ẓāʾ · ʿAyn · Ġayn · Fāʾ · Qāf · Kāf · Lām · Mīm · Nūn · Hāʾ · Wāw · Yāʾ
Eras Ancient North Arabian · Classical · Modern
Notable varieties Standardized: Modern Standard Arabic, Regional: Egyptian · Iraqi · Levantine · Maghrebi · Sudanese · Arabian · Judeo-Arabic
Academic Literature · Names
Linguistics Phonology · Sun and moon letters · ʾIʿrāb (inflection) · Grammar · Triliteral root · Mater lectionis · IPA · Quranic Arabic Corpus

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Noun

qoph (plural qophs)
  1. The nineteenth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others).
External links
  • Qoph on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

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Psalm 119 (Qoph)

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