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   » » Wiki: Kamatz
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'''Qamatz'''
ָ
Transliterationa
English approximationsp a
Similar sound
Example
Other [[Niqqud]]
Shin dot]]

Kamatz or qamatz (, ; alternatively קָמֶץ ) is a () sign represented by two lines (looking like an T) underneath a letter. In , it usually indicates the which is the "a" sound in the word spa and is transliterated as a. In these cases, its sound is identical to the sound of in . In a minority of cases it indicates the phoneme , equal to the sound of . In traditional pronunciation, qamatz is pronounced as the phoneme , which becomes in some contexts in southern Ashkenazi dialects. For this reason, the equivalent phoneme in ( in some dialects, in others) is spelled with an marked with a kamatz〈אָ〉, in Yiddish orthography.


Overview

Qamatz Qaṭan vs. Qamatz Gadol
Patach Patach
KamatzKamatz Gadol
Kamatz Katan
HolamHolam
The Hebrew of the late centuries BCE and early centuries of the had a system with five long vowels and five short vowels .

In the later dialects of the 1st millennium CE, phonemic vowel length disappeared, and instead was automatically determined by the context, with vowels pronounced long in open syllables and short in closed ones. However, the previous vowel phonemes merged in various ways that differed from dialect to dialect:

  • In , which underlies the written system of vowels, short became (indicated by ); long became (indicated by ); while and both merged into an in-between sound (similar to the vowel in English "caught" without the cot-caught merger), which was indicated by qamatz.
  • In the Babylonian vocalization, however, short and long variants simply merged, with and becoming a, while and became o; and this system underlies the pronunciation of .

The result is that in Modern Hebrew, the vowel written with qamatz might be pronounced as either a or o, depending on historical origin. It is often said that the two sounds can be distinguished by context:

  • The qamatz sound of , known as (, , "little qamatz") occurs in a "closed syllable", i.e. one which ends in a consonant marked with a (zero vowel) or with a (which indicates that the consonant was pronounced , i.e. doubled);
  • The qamatz sound of , known as ( , "big qamatz") occurs in an "open syllable", i.e. any other circumstance: one which ends in a consonant followed by a normal vowel, a consonant at the end of a word and with no vowel marking, or a consonant marked with a (originally pronounced ).

Unfortunately, the two varieties of shwa are written identically, and pronounced identically in Modern Hebrew; as a result, there is no reliable way to distinguish the two varieties of qamatz when followed by a vowel marked with a shwa. (In some cases, Biblical texts are marked with a or other cantillation mark that helps to indicate which pronunciation is intended, but this usage is not consistent, and in any case such marks are absent in non-Biblical texts.) It should also be noted that there are examples of qamatz qaṭan appearing in open syllables, such as in the plural of (, "root"), ().

An example of the qamatz qatan is the Modern Hebrew word (, "program").

According to the standard rules as published by the Academy of the Hebrew Language, words which have a qamatz qatan in their base form must be written without a vav, hence the standard vowel-less spelling of is . In practice, however, Modern Hebrew words containing a qamatz qatan do add a vav to indicate the pronunciation; hence the nonstandard (also termed "excessive") spelling is common in newspapers and is even used in several dictionaries, for example . Words which in their base form have a that changes to in declension retain the vav in vowel-less spelling: the noun (, "freedom") is spelled in vowel-less texts; the adjective (, "free") is spelled in vowel-less text, despite the use of qamatz qatan, both according to the standard spelling and in common practice.

Some books print the differently, although the way in which they do is not consistent. For example, in siddur the vertical line of qamatz qatan is longer. In Siddur Sim Shalom, the horizontal line is separated from the bottom. In a book of used by some Breslov hassidim the qamatz qatan is bolder. In the popular niqqud textbook Niqqud halakha le-maase by , the qamatz qatan is printed as an encircled qamatz for didactic purposes.

defines the code point , although its usage is not required.


Ḥaṭaf Qamatz
(, ) is a "reduced qamatz". Like qamatz qatan, it is pronounced , but the rationale for its usage is different: it replaces the on letters which require a shva according to the grammar, but where the traditional pronunciation is . This mostly happens with gutturals, for example in (, "pines", the plural form of , ), but occasionally also on other letters, for example (, "roots", another plural of ); and (, "birds", the plural of ().


Pronunciation and transliteration
The following table contains the and of the different qamatzes in reconstructed historical forms and using the . The transcription in IPA is above and the transliteration is below.

The letters Bet and Het used in this table are only for demonstration, any letter can be used.

Qamatz GadolBig Qamatz
ā
,Qamatz MaleFull Qamatz
a
Qamatz QatanLittle Qamatz
u
Hataf QamatzReduced Qamatz
u


Vowel length comparison
These vowel lengths are not manifested in Modern Hebrew. The short o () and long a ( qamatz) have the same niqqud. Because of this, the short o () is usually promoted to a long o () in Israeli writing, written as a vav , for the sake of disambiguation.

By adding two vertical dots ( ) the vowel is made very short.

asp a
qamatzPataḥReduced pataḥ
oc ore
Reduced qamatz


Unicode encoding
U+05B8QAMATS
U+05B3HATAF QAMATS
U+05C7QAMATS QATAN

Note: the glyph for QAMATS QATAN may appear empty or incorrect if one applies a font that cannot handle the glyph necessary to represent Unicode character U+05C7. Usually this Unicode character isn't used and is substituted with the similar looking QAMATS (U+05B8).


Literature
(2025). 9781575061290

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