SAMEKH


'Samekh' or 'Simketh' is the fifteenth letter in many Semitic alphabets, including Phoenician, Hebrew, and Aramaic, representing . The Arabic alphabet, however, uses a letter based on Phoenician šin to represent (see there).
The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Chi (Χ) and Xi (Ξ), and Latin X.

Contents
Origins
Hebrew Samekh
Pronunciation
Significance
Notes

Origins


The origin of Samekh is unclear. The Phoenician letter may continue a glyph from the Middle Bronze Age alphabets, either based on a hieroglyph for a fish like Nun (''samak'' is fish in Arabic), or a tent peg / some kind of prop (''s'mikhah'' in modern Hebrew means to support), and thus may be derived from the Egyptian hieroglyph ''djed''.
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Hebrew Samekh


Pronunciation

Samekh represents , a voiceless alveolar fricative. Unlike most Semitic consonants, the pronunciation of remains constant between vowels and before voiced consonants.
Significance

Samekh in gematria has the value 60.
Samekh and Mem form the abbreviation for the Angel of Death, whose name in Hebrew is ''Samael''. It also stands for centimetre.
Samekh is said to have been the miracle of the Ten Commandments. records that the tablets "were written on both their sides." The Babyloanian Talmud (tractate Shabbat 104a) explains that there were miracles involved with the carving on the tablets. One was that the carving went the full thickness of the tablets. The stone in the center part of the letter Samekh should have fallen out, as it was not connected to the rest of the tablet, but it did not; it miraculously remained in place. Scholars disagree, as the Ten Commandments would have been written in the style of the period, and thus Samekh would have been similar to the Phoenician pictogram seen in the table. However, the parallel version in the Jerusalem Talmud asserts the same miracle about Ayin and Tet, both having hollows in its ancient form.

Notes



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