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  2. Hebrew keyboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_keyboard

    Hebrew keyboard. A standard Hebrew keyboard showing both Hebrew and Latin letters. A Hebrew keyboard (Hebrew: מקלדת עברית, romanized: mikledet ivrit) comes in two different keyboard layouts. Most Hebrew keyboards are bilingual, with Latin characters, usually in a US Qwerty layout. Trilingual keyboard options also exist, with the third ...

  3. Niqqud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niqqud

    Using the Hebrew keyboard layout in macOS, the typist can enter niqqud by pressing the Option key together with a number on the top row of the keyboard. Other combinations such as sofit and hataf can also be entered by pressing either the Shift key and a number, or by pressing the Shift key, Option key, and a number at the same time.

  4. Rashi script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashi_script

    Rashi script. The Rashi script or Sephardic script (Hebrew: כְּתַב רַשִׁ״י, romanized: Ktav Rashi) is a typeface for the Hebrew alphabet based on 15th-century Sephardic semi-cursive handwriting. It is named for the rabbinic commentator Rashi, whose works are customarily printed in the typeface (though Rashi himself died several ...

  5. Shekel sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shekel_sign

    This contradicts the recommendation of the Academy of the Hebrew Language to place the sign to the left of the number in the Hebrew caption. Using the standard Hebrew keyboard (SI 1452), it must be typed as AltGr+A (the letter ש appears on the same key in regular Hebrew mode). The Shekel sign, however, is not engraved on most keyboards sold in ...

  6. Unicode and HTML for the Hebrew alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_and_HTML_for_the...

    The Unicode Hebrew block extends from U+0590 to U+05FF and from U+FB1D to U+FB4F. It includes letters, ligatures, combining diacritical marks (niqqud and cantillation marks) and punctuation. The Numeric Character References are included for HTML. These can be used in many markup languages, and they are often used on web pages to create the ...

  7. Windows-1255 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1255

    Windows-1255 Hebrew is always in logical order (as opposed to visual). Microsoft Hebrew products (Windows, Office and Internet Explorer) brought logically-ordered Hebrew to common use, with the result that Windows-1255 is the Hebrew encoding that can be found most on the Web, having ousted the visually ordered ISO-8859-8, and preferred to the logically ordered ISO-8859-8-I because it provides ...

  8. Ktiv hasar niqqud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ktiv_hasar_niqqud

    Ktiv hasar niqqud (Hebrew pronunciation: [ktiv χaˈsaʁ niˈkud]; Hebrew: כתיב חסר ניקוד, literally "spelling lacking niqqud"), colloquially known as ktiv maleh (IPA: [ktiv maˈle]; כתיב מלא, literally "full spelling"), are the rules for writing Hebrew without vowel points (niqqud), often replacing them with matres lectionis (ו ‎ and י ‎).

  9. Kubutz and shuruk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kubutz_and_shuruk

    The kubutz sign is represented by three diagonal dots " ֻ" underneath a letter.. The shuruk is the letter vav with a dot in the middle and to the left of it. The dot is identical to the grammatically different signs dagesh and mappiq, but in a fully vocalized text it is practically impossible to confuse them: shuruk itself is a vowel sign, so if the letter before the vav doesn't have its own ...