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Resh is the twentieth letter of the , including Phoenician rēš 𐤓, rēš , rēš 𐡓‎, rēš ܪ, and rāʾ . It is related to the Ancient North Arabian 𐪇‎‎, South Arabian 𐩧, and Ge'ez ረ. Its sound value is one of a number of : usually or , but also or in Hebrew and some North Mesopotamian Arabic dialects.

In most Semitic alphabets, the letter resh (and its equivalents) is quite similar to the letter (and its equivalents). In the , the letters became so similar that now they are only distinguished by a dot: resh has a dot above the letter, and the otherwise identical dalet has a dot below the letter. In the Arabic alphabet, has a longer tail than . In the Aramaic and Hebrew square alphabet, resh is a rounded single stroke while dalet is a right-angle of two strokes.

The Phoenician letter gave rise to the (Ρ/ρ), Etruscan , R, Glagolitic Ⱃ, and Р and Armenian Ռ and Ր.


Origins
Resh is usually assumed to mean head, as in and descendants. D1


Arabic rāʾ
The letter is named راء in Arabic. It is written in several ways depending on its position in the word:

It ranges between an , an , and a (the last of which is only found in a few modern varieties). It is pronounced as a postalveolar approximant ɹ̠ in the traditional .


Derived letter in other languages
The standard for Arabic scripts also lists a variant with a full stroke (Unicode character U+075b: ݛ), suggesting that this form is used in certain Northern and Western African languages and some dialects in .

In the , a variant of the letter rāʾ uses a ring below for the retroflex consonant and another uses dots above and below the tail for the voiced fricative or :


Hebrew resh
ררר

Hebrew spelling: רֵישׁ

In , Resh () represents a rhotic consonant that has different realizations for different dialects:

As a general rule, Resh, along with , Aleph, He, and Het, do not receive a . There are a handful of exceptions to this rule.Book Em laMikra haShalem written by Nisan Sharoni In Chapter 14:7 page 62 of the Ashdod. ספר אם למקרא השׁלם על

ידי ניסן שׁרוני ׀ אשׁדוֹד ׀ תשׁס״א ׀ עמוד

62

In the 7 article of the chapter, the Rav says that the letters ״אהחער״ generally do not take a dagesh.

₪ בּאוֹתיוֹת ״אהחער״ ־לֹא יָבֹא דָגֵשׁ, בְּדֶרֶךְ כְּלָל. ₪ מכלול נז

In the footnote 6 — Not to write it in Hebrew — ; it says: Except in a few cases where there is an exception to the rule… dagesh can be seen in Alef and Reish. See Mesorah haGedolah 43:26 and מכלול נז Minchas Shai 43:26. In the , Resh is treated as most other consonants in that it can receive a dagesh hazak under certain circumstances. In the most widely accepted version of the , there are 17 instances of Resh being marked with a dagesh. The list is: 1 Samuel 1:6, 1 Samuel 10:24, 1 Samuel 17:25, 2 Kings 6:32, Jeremiah 39:12, Ezekiel 16:4 ×2, Habakkuk 3:13, Psalms 52:5, Proverbs 3:8, Proverbs 11:21, Proverbs 14:10, Proverbs 15:1, Job 39:9 (?), Song of Songs 5:2, Ezra 9:6, 2 Chronicles 26:10 (?)

In , Resh represents the number 200.


As abbreviation
Resh as an abbreviation can stand for (or , , Rabban, Rabbenu, and other similar constructions).

Resh may be found after a person's name on a to indicate that the person had been a Rabbi or to indicate the other use of , as a generic term for a teacher or a personal spiritual guide.


Syriac resh

Character encodings

See also
  • Rhoticity in English
  • English-language vowel changes before historic /r/


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