Nilly, are the letters for M.Sh.L. (lemme look this up) mem shin lamed?
Natter 40: The Nice One
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Nicole! Another lovely Buffista with whom I hadn't posted in forever! How are you doing?
I'm not mathy, ho.
Hee.
Amy, I'm so behind in "Great Write" (like, a thousand posts behind), and I insist on actually catching up there, because I love reading what's going on there and the drabbles and people's creativity. But it means that I never get to post with people who frequent mostly there, as well as never being able to offer to take part (beta read, throw ideas, be happy for people, whatever) in what is actually going on there. I need Rowlf's time machine.
Aside from the major plumbing problem in the house at the moment, which my husband is dealing with
Oy for plumbing problem, but yay for husband dealing eith it.
Good lord, you people were up early!
I got up at the reasonable hour of 7:30 and went running in the hills. Yay for running. Boo for being so out of shape, ah well.
Now I have to decide what to do with my day: paint the kitchen? Garden? Clean house? Edit a story?
t waves at Nilly
The weather here is disturbingly beautiful these days: sunny and warm and it should be grey and rainy. Not that I'm complaining.
[Edited to wave at Suela]
are the letters for M.Sh.L. (lemme look this up) mem shin lamed?
Yup.
There are two ways of writing letters in Hebrew, though. Similar to capital and small (is that how you call it?) letters in English, but only in the sense of having 2 kinds of symbols for each letter. In Hebrew, you use only one of them, not switching between kinds anywhere (definitely not mid-word). One of them is mostly what is used in printing, the other in writing by hand.
I wonder which of the two you're going to use. If I were writing it, I'd use the non-printing kind of writing, because I'd write proofs with a pencil, not type it. But in books, it's printed, so they use the printed-version of letters-writing.
sarameg, you can delete your post now.
Well, I hadn't gotten to writing it yet, but I was poking around with Google, because... I don't want to study. Anyway, is this what you mean by written and printed form? So you'd write something roughly like Ne(dot)delta (or pe(dot)delta)? That's my attempt at transliteration.
םשל ?
Whoah. Dude. All hail Insert->Symbols and cut-and-paste!
I would like to go to London! Although I should go someplace else first, as I've been to London. How's late May?
How about London and Paris?
How about London and Paris?
New York, London, Paris, Munich - everybody's talking about pop music.
is this what you mean by written and printed form?
Yup, exactly this.
Ne(dot)delta
N.e.(delta) is what I'd write with a pencil on a paper. (dots between each of the letters, as far as I write them).
or pe(dot)delta
The "p" ting is because several letters have "final" letters, when they appear at the end of words. Do you see, in your link, how Kaf, Mem, Noon, Peh and Tsadee all have two forms of writing the letters, both in the printed and in the written version? The second form is the "final" letter. The "p" is the final version of the "N", which is mem. So it will never apppear at the beginning of a word.
םשל ?
Whoah. Dude. All hail Insert->Symbols and cut-and-paste!
That's the printed version, only the first letter, the square "o", is wrong, since it's the printed version of the final letter, the printed version of the "p". You should have - let's see if I can cut and paste - "מ"
[Edit: it looks OK on my screen. Does it also look like the letter near the "ם", the square "o", for you?]
Got it. Sweet! I like learning stuff.
So, printed: משל
Beause I see MS Word says the one I did was "HEBREW FINAL MEM".
X-post!