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Koph

Koph is a transliteration variant used in English-language texts to denote the Hebrew letter qof (ק). It also appears in discussions of Phoenician and other Semitic scripts as a name for the same letter. In Hebrew, qof is the nineteenth letter of the alphabet, following ayin and preceding resh. Its name is carried over from the Semitic tradition, and in gematria it has the numeric value 100. The glyph for this letter is the character ק, and unlike some other Hebrew letters, qof has no distinct final form and is written the same in all positions.

In modern Hebrew pronunciation, qof typically represents the voiceless stop [k], though in some contexts—especially in

In digital text, the Hebrew qof is encoded in Unicode as U+05E7. Across transliteration schemes, qof, qoph,

loanwords
and
careful
speech—it
may
be
realized
as
a
more
uvular
[q].
The
distinction
between
qof
and
kaf
in
pronunciation
is
largely
orthographic
rather
than
phonemic
in
contemporary
usage.
or
kop
are
used
to
render
the
same
letter;
koph
is
less
common
but
appears
in
older
dictionaries
and
some
academic
works.