Zayin
Zayin (also spelled Zain or Zayn or simply Zay) is the seventh letter of many Semitic abjads, including Phoenician 𐤆, Aramaic , Hebrew ז, Syriac ܙ and Arabic alphabet ﺯ [zāī]. It represents a voiced alveolar fricative, IPA /z/.
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Zeta (Ζ), Etruscan z , Latin Z, and Cyrillic Ze З.
The Proto-Canaanite glyph appears to be named after a sword or other weapon. (In Hebrew, "Zayin" means sword, and the verb "Lezayen" means to arm). The Proto-Sinaitic glyph according to Brian Colless may have been called ziqq, based on a hieroglyph depicting a "manacle".
Hebrew Zayin
In modern Hebrew, the combination ז׳ (zayin followed by a geresh) is used in loanwords and foreign names to denote [ʒ] as in vision.
Significance
In gematria, Zayin represents the number seven, and when used at the beginning of Hebrew years, it means 7000 (i.e. זתשנד in numbers would be the date 7754).
Zayin is also one of the seven letters which receive a special crown (called a tagin) when written in a Sefer Torah. See Shin, Ayin, Teth, Nun, Gimel, and Tzadi.
In Modern Hebrew, Zayin may also mean penis in a rude or informal way. This is the only Hebrew letter which has an additional meaning as a noun.
Syriac Zain
Zain is a consant with the "z" sound which is a voiced alveolar fricative.
Arabic Zayn
The letter is named, variously, zaynʼ, zāi, and za', and is written in several ways depending on its position in the word:
The similarity to ر is likely a function of the original Syriac forms converging to a single symbol, requiring that one of them be distinguished as a dot; a similar process occurred to ǧim and ḥa'.
Zāī
A variant of Arabic ﺯ. is ژ /ʒ/, used in Persian, Pashto, Kurdish, Urdu and Uyghur (see K̡ona Yezik̡). This is also used to transliterate words of foreign origin, mostly French, in Levantine and Maghrebi Arabic dialects.
Translation
The word "Zayin" occurs as such in the following languages: English, Swedish.
Translation(s) in other languages: Alemannic: ז, Arabic: ز, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ز, Breton: Zayin (lizherenn), Catalan: Zāy, German: Zay (Arabischer Buchstabe), Spanish: Zayn, Persian: ز, French: Zayin (lettre), Italian: Zāī, Hebrew: ז, Malay: Zai, Dutch: Zajin, Japanese: ز, Polish: Zajin, Russian: Зайн (буква арабского алфавита), Finnish: Zajin, Thai: ซาย.
|