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Yod

Yod, also spelled Yodh, is the tenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet. In modern Hebrew, it is a consonant that typically represents the palatal approximant /j/, as in the English word yes. It can also function as a mater lectionis, indicating the vowels i or e in certain spellings of Hebrew words.

The letter has a numeric value of 10 in gematria, a system of Jewish numerology used in

In everyday Hebrew, Yod appears in many common words, such as yom (day) and yad (hand). It

Linguistically, Yod influenced other writing systems. The Greek letter iota derives from Yodh, and in turn,

Beyond its phonetic and orthographic roles, Yod holds cultural and symbolic significance in Jewish tradition, where

religious
and
scholarly
contexts.
Yod
originates
from
the
Phoenician
letter
Yodh,
which
likely
depicted
a
hand.
The
Hebrew
form
is
the
single-story
letter
י,
and
unlike
several
other
Hebrew
letters,
Yod
does
not
have
a
distinct
final
form
when
it
appears
at
the
end
of
a
word.
also
serves
a
grammatical
function
as
the
prefix
ye-
(or
yo-)
in
certain
imperfect
verb
forms,
signaling
tense
or
aspect
in
Biblical
Hebrew.
the
Latin
letters
I
and
J
trace
their
origins
to
that
lineage.
In
modern
usage,
Yod
continues
to
represent
the
consonant
sound
/j/
and
participates
in
transliteration
and
orthographic
contexts
for
names
and
loanwords.
it
is
often
associated
with
the
divine
name
and
with
themes
of
creation
and
wisdom
due
to
its
status
as
the
first
letter
of
the
Tetragrammaton
in
certain
spellings.