Nick  NICHOLAS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> couple of questions on the final forms of letters in Hebrew and Arabic,
> just for the sake of comparison.
> 
> (1) When a letter with a final variant appears alone --- say as a numeral,
> or in discussion of the letter or phoneme --- does it under any
> circumstances appear in its final form, or is it always medial?

In Arabic, when abjad enumeration for lists is used, jiim (and Ha, and possibly 
others) may take (isolated) initial form.  You might see this standing alone, in 
parentheses, or followed by a dash or period.  This usage is quite common.  You can 
also find particles like "li", "bi", etc. in "isolated initial" form, when the 
ligature (in the literal sense, the ligating stroke) is interrupted by e.g. a quote 
mark.

To complicate things, you can find dictionaries in which headwords violate the 
standard shaping and are written using all isolate forms, although most dictionaries 
seem to use standard shaping.

-gregg reynolds

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