Lesson 5 — The Hebrew Alphabet

Names, sounds, and final forms of every letter

Hebrew is written right-to-left. It has 22 letters, all consonants. Five letters have special final forms when they appear at the end of a word. Vowel sounds are typically indicated by niqqud (vowel points) in beginner texts and are omitted in standard adult print.

Tip: Five letters have final forms used only at the end of a word: כ→ך, מ→ם, נ→ן, פ→ף, צ→ץ
The 22 Hebrew Letters
LetterNameSoundFinal FormNotes
אAlefsilent / glottal stopCarries the vowel sound of the niqqud attached to it
בּ / בBet / Vetb (with dagesh) / vבּ with dot = b sound; without = v sound
גGimelg (hard)Always hard like in "go"
דDaletd
הHeh (often silent at word end)
וVavv / o / uUsed as consonant (v) and as vowel letter (o, u)
זZayinz
חKhetkh (guttural, like loch)Back-of-throat sound
טTettSame sound as Tav in modern Hebrew
יYody / iAlso used as vowel letter
כּ / כKaf / Khafk (with dagesh) / khךSame guttural kh sound as Khet when without dagesh
לLamedl
מMemmם
נNunnן
סSamekhsSame sound as Sin in modern Hebrew
עAyinsilent / gutturalLike Alef, carries the vowel; traditionally guttural
פּ / פPe / Fep (with dagesh) / fף
צTsadits (as in "bits")ץ
קQofkSame k sound as Kaf with dagesh in modern Hebrew
רReshr (uvular)Similar to French r
שׁ / שׂShin / Sinsh / sDot above right = sh; dot above left = s
תTavtSame t sound as Tet in modern Hebrew
Final Forms: Five letters change shape when they appear at the very end of a word. These are called sofit (final) forms: כ becomes ך, מ becomes ם, נ becomes ן, פ becomes ף, and צ becomes ץ. You must use the correct final form — using the wrong one is a spelling error.