Hebrew: Difference between revisions

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The Hebrew alphabet is used for Hebrew (Biblical and modern), Aramaic (Talmud and other sources), Yiddish, Ladino, and a number of other Jewish languages. Here is the Israeli Hebrew keyboard from Debian Linux.

<pre>
; 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 - =
פ ם ן ו ט א ר ק
ף ך ל ח י ע כ ג ד ש
. ץ ת צ מ נ ה ב ס ז
ז</pre>

Biblical Hebrew uses a variety of vowel signs and other marks. Yiddish requires a number of extra letters, including the following.

<pre>
אַ פֿ ײַ װ ױ ײ
</pre>

=Fonts=

Some Free TrueType and OpenType [[fonts]] provided with Linux distributions include Basic Hebrew (Letters, vowel points, Yiddish tsvey-vovn, vov-yod, tsvey-yodn). Some specialist fonts support Biblical Hebrew. Support for other Jewish languages is spotty. Rendering of pointed Hebrew and Yiddish is erratic in current software. Some non-Free fonts such as Code2000 and Everson Mono Unicode also support Basic Hebrew.

*Arial
*Courier New
*DejaVu
*FreeMono, FreeSans, FreeSerif

There are also PostScript Hebrew font packages.

*Culmus. serif (Frank Ruehl), sans serif (Nachlieli) and monospaced (Miriam Mono) fonts. Also included are Aharoni, David, Drugulin, and Ellinia.
*Culmus Fancy. Anka, ComixNo2, Gan, Ozrad, Ktav Yad, Dorian and Gladia.

[[category:Languages (international)]]
[[Category:Fonts]]
[[Category:Keyboard]]

Revision as of 23:41, 16 December 2008

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