Taw
Taw, sometimes transliterated as taw or tav, is the name of the Semitic letter that historically represented the voiceless alveolar stop /t/. In Phoenician and related ancient scripts it was called taw; in Hebrew it is known as tav. The character’s lineage extends into the Greek alphabet as tau and, through Greek, into Latin and other scripts used in the Western tradition.
Origins and development: Taw is one of the earliest consonant signs in the Phoenician alphabet, which formed
Hebrew usage: In the Hebrew alphabet, tav is the 22nd letter and has the numeric value 400
Greek and Latin descendants: The Phoenician taw gave rise to the Greek letter tau (Τ, τ), which in
Symbolism and related terms: The name tau in Greek tradition is sometimes linked to the same origin