Lamedh
Lamedh or lamed is the twelfth letter of the Semitic abjads, including Hebrew lāmeḏ, Aramaic lāmaḏ ?, Syriac lāmaḏ ܠ, Arabic lām, and Phoenician lāmd ?. Its sound value is. It is also related to the Ancient North Arabian ?, South Arabian ?, and Ge'ez ለ.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Lambda, Latin L, and Cyrillic El.
Origin
The letter is usually considered to have originated from the representation of an ox-goad, i.e. a cattle prod, or a shepherd's crook, i.e. a pastoral staff. In Proto-Semitic a goad was called *lamed-.Arabic lām
The letter is named لام lām.Orthography
Its form depends on its position in the word:Grammatical functions
Lām has functions as a grammatical particle when used as a prefix:- Prepositional lām
- Lām of ownership
- Lām of association
- Lām of purpose
- Lām of absolute negation
- Imperative lām
- Lām of affirmative emphasis
The other construction, is used as an emphatic particle in very formal Arabic and in certain fixed constructions, such as لَقد laqad and in the conditional structure لو...لَـ law...la, effectively one of the forms of 'if...then...'.
Hebrew lamed
Hebrew spelling: לָמֶדPronunciation
Lamed transcribes as an alveolar lateral approximant.Significance
Lamed in gematria represents the number 30.With the letter Vav it refers to the Lamedvavniks, the 36 righteous people who save the world from destruction.
As an abbreviation, it can stand for litre. Also, a sign on a car with a Lamed on it means that the driver is a student of driving. It is also used as the Electoral symbol for the Yisrael Beiteinu party.
As a prefix, it can have two purposes:
- It can be attached to verb roots, designating the infinitive.
- It can also act as a preposition meaning "to" or "for".
Syriac lamadh
Character encodings
Variants:*