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Tav

Tav is the twenty-second and final letter of the Hebrew alphabet. In modern Hebrew, it is written as ת and represents the voiceless alveolar stop /t/. Its traditional numerical value in Hebrew numerals is 400. The letter does not have a distinct final form; unlike some other Hebrew letters, Tav appears the same in all positions within a word.

The origin of Tav lies in the Phoenician letter taw, a symbol that historically carried the meaning

In linguistic and typographic contexts, Tav is treated as a consonant with a stable /t/ sound in

of
a
mark
or
sign.
From
Phoenician,
the
form
and
name
evolved
through
the
ancient
Hebrew
script
into
the
contemporary
square
script
used
today.
As
the
last
letter
of
the
Hebrew
alphabet,
Tav
often
appears
in
common
Hebrew
words
such
as
Torah
(
תורה
)
and
tov
(good)
in
everyday
usage
and
religious
texts
alike.
modern
Hebrew.
Its
absence
of
a
separate
final
form
distinguishes
it
from
several
other
letters
that
have
distinct
final
shapes.
Tav
also
participates
in
various
word
constructions
and
is
a
frequent
initial
or
internal
letter
across
a
wide
range
of
Hebrew
vocabulary.