Taf
Taf is a term most often encountered in discussions of Semitic writing systems, where it refers to the letter that corresponds to the “t” sound. In the Hebrew alphabet, the twenty-second and final letter is ת, commonly transliterated as tav or taw in modern usage. In some older or non-Hebrew sources, the same character is spelled "taf." The letter represents the voiceless alveolar stop /t/ and carries the Hebrew numeral value of 400.
The name and form of the letter have historical roots in the Phoenician script, from which the
In digital text encoding, the Hebrew letter tav is assigned the Unicode code point U+05EA. Its usage