Category Archives: symbol of 5

V


V

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V
Basic Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd    
Ee Ff Gg Hh
Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn
Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt
Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz

V (play /ˈv/; named vee)[1] is the twenty-second letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet.

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[edit] Letter

The letter V comes from the Semitic letter Waw, as do the modern letters F, U, W, and Y. See F for details.
In Greek, the letter upsilon ‹Υ› was adapted from waw to represent, at first, the vowel /u/ as in “moon”. This was later fronted to /y/, the front rounded vowel spelled ‹ü› in German.
In Latin, a stemless variant shape of the upsilon was borrowed in early times as V—either directly from the Western Greek alphabet or from the Etruscan alphabet as an intermediary—to represent the same /u/ sound, as well as the consonantal /w/. Thus, num — originally spelled ‹NVM› — was pronounced /num/ and via was pronounced /ˈwia/. From the 1st century A.D. on, depending on Vulgar Latin dialect, consonantal /w/ developed into /β/ (only kept in Spanish and Catalan), then later to /v/.
In Roman numerals, the letter V is used to represent the number 5. It was used because it resembled the convention of counting by notches carved in wood, with every fifth notch double-cut to form a “V”.
During the Late Middle Ages, two forms of ‹v› developed, which were both used for its ancestor ‹u› and modern ‹v›. The pointed form ‹v› was written at the beginning of a word, while a rounded form ‹u› was used in the middle or end, regardless of sound. So whereas valor and excuse appeared as in modern printing, have and upon were printed ‹haue› and ‹vpon›. The first distinction between the letters ‹u› and ‹v› is recorded in a Gothic alphabet from 1386, where ‹v› preceded ‹u›. By the mid-16th century, the ‹v› form was used to represent the consonant and ‹u› the vowel sound, giving us the modern letter ‹u›. Capital ‹U› was not accepted as a distinct letter until many years later.[2]
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, /v/ represents the voiced labiodental fricative. See Help:IPA.
Like J, K, Q, W, and Y, V is not used very frequently in English. However, it appears frequently in the Spanish (where its pronunciation is the same as B) and French languages.
This letter, like Q and X, is not used in the Polish alphabet. /v/ is spelled with the letter ‹w› instead, following the convention of German.

[edit] Other names

In Japanese, V is often called “bui” (ブイ). This name is an approximation of the English name which substitutes the voiced bilabial plosive for the voiced labiodental fricative (which does not exist in native Japanese phonology) and differentiates it from “bī” (ビー), the Japanese name of the letter B. The sound can be written with the relatively recently developed katakana character 「ヴ」 (vu)[4] va, vi, vu, ve, vo (ヴァ, ヴィ, ヴ, ヴェ, ヴォ?), though in practice the pronunciation is usually not the strictly labiodental fricative found in English. Moreover, some words are more often spelled with the b equivalent character instead of vu due to the long-time use of the word without it (e.g. “violin” is more often found as baiorin (バイオリン?) than as vaiorin (ヴァイオリン?) due partly to inertia, and to some extent due to the more native Japanese sound).
In Chinese pinyin, letter ‹v› is missing, as there is no sound [v] in Standard Mandarin but the letter ‹v› is used by most input methods to enter letter ‹ü›, since it is missing on most keyboards. Romanised Chinese is a popular method to enter Chinese text phonetically.
In Irish, the letter ‹v› is mostly used in loanwords, such as veidhlín from English violin. However the sound [v] appears naturally in Irish when /b/ is lenited or “softened”, represented in the orthography by ‹bh›, so that bhí is pronounced [vʲiː], an bhean (the woman) is pronounced [ən̪ˠ ˈvʲan̪ˠ], etc.

E


E

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E
Basic Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd    
Ee Ff Gg Hh
Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn
Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt
Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz

E (play /ˈ/; named e, plural ees)[1] is the fifth letter and a vowel in the basic modern Latin alphabet. It is the most commonly used letter in the Czech,[2] Danish,[2] Dutch,[2] English,[3] French,[4] German,[5] Hungarian,[2] Latin,[2] Norwegian,[2] Spanish,[6] and Swedish languages.[2]

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[edit] History

Egyptian hieroglyph
q’
Proto-Semitic
H
Phoenician
he
Etruscan
E
Greek
Epsilon
Roman/Cyrillic
E
A28
Proto-semiticE-01.png PhoenicianE-01.svg Alfabeto camuno-e.svg Epsilon uc lc.svg Roman E

‹E› differs little from its derived source, the Greek letter epsilon ‹Ε›. In etymology, the Semitic probably first represented a praying or calling human figure (hillul ‘jubilation’), and was probably based on a similar Egyptian hieroglyph that indicated a different pronunciation. In Semitic, the letter represented /h/ (and /e/ in foreign words), in Greek became epsilon with the value /e/. Etruscans and Romans followed this usage. Although Middle English spelling used ‹e› to represent long and short /e/, the Great Vowel Shift, changed long /eː/ (as in me or bee) to /iː/ while short /e/ (as in met or bed) remains a mid vowel.

Number prefix


Number prefix

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Number prefixes are prefixes derived from numbers or numerals. In English and other European languages, they are used to coin numerous series of words, such as unicycle – bicycle – tricycle, dyad – triad – tetrad, biped – quadruped, September – October – November, decimal – hexadecimal, sexagenarian – octogenarian, centipede – millipede, etc. There are two principal systems, taken from Latin and Greek, each with several subsystems; in addition, Sanskrit occupies a marginal position. There is also an international set of SI prefixes, which are used in the metric system, and which for the most part are either distorted from the forms below or not based on actual number words.

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[edit] Table of number prefixes in English

In the following prefixes, a final vowel is normally dropped before a root that begins with a vowel, with the exceptions of bi-, which is bis- before a vowel, and of the other monosyllables, du-, di-, dvi-, tri-, which are invariable.
The cardinal series are derived from cardinal numbers, such as English one, two, three. The multiple series are based on adverbial numbers like English once, twice, thrice. The distributives originally meant one each, two each or one by one, two by two, etc., though that meaning is now frequently lost. The ordinal series is based on ordinal numbers such as English first, second, third. For numbers higher than 2, the ordinal forms are also used for fractions; only the fraction ½ has special forms.
For the hundreds, there are competing forms: those in -gent-, from the original Latin, and those in -cent-, derived from centi- etc. plus the prefixes for 1–9.

Number Latin prefixes Greek prefixes Sanskrit[1]
Cardinal Multiple Distributive Ordinal Cardinal Multiple
½ semi- demi-[2] hemi-
1 uni- sim-[3] singul- prim- hen-[4] mono-, haplo-[4] eka-
sesqui-
2 du- bi-, bis- bin- second- di-, dy- dis- dvi-
3 tri- ter- tern- terti- tri- tris- tri-
4 quadri-,
quadru-[5]
quater- quatern- quart- tetra- tetrakis- chatur-
5 quinque- quin-,
quinquen-
quinti- penta- pentakis- pancha-
6 sexa-[6] sen- sext- hexa- hexakis- shat-
7 septem-, septi- septen- septim- hepta- heptakis- sapta-
8 octo- octon- octav- ogdo-,
octa-, octo-
octakis- ashta-
9 novem- noven- nona- ennea- enneakis- navam-
10 decem-, dec- den- decim- deca- decakis- dasham-
11 undec-, unden-, undecim- hendeca- undecakis- ekadasham-
12 duodec- duoden- duodecim- dodeca- dodecakis- dvadasham-
13 tredec-, etc. triskaideca- tridecakis- trayodasham-
14 quattuordec- tetrakaideca- tetradecakis- chaturdasham-
15 quinquadec-, quindec- pentakaideca- pentadecakis- panchadasham-
16 sedec-,
sexdec- (but hexadecimal[6])
hexakaideca-,
hexadeca-
hexadecakis-
17 septendec- heptakaideca-
18 octodec- octakaideca-
19 novemdec-,
novendec-
enneakaideca-
20* viginti- vicen-,
vigen-
vigesim- icosa-, icosi-,
eicosa-
eicosakis-
30 triginti- tricen- trigesim- triaconta-
40 quadraginti- quadragen- quadragesim- tetraconta-
50 quinquaginti- quinquagen- quinquagesim- pentaconta-
60 sexaginti- sexagen- sexagesima- hexaconta-
70 septuaginti- septuagen- septuagesima- heptaconta-
80 octogint- octogen- octogesim- octaconta-
90 nonagint- nonagen- nonagesim- enneaconta-
100 centi- centen- centesim- hecato-,
hecatont-
200 ducenti- ducen-,
bicenten-
300 trecenti- trecen-,
tercenten-,
tricenten-
400 quadringenti- quadringen-,
quatercenten-,
quadricenten-
500 quingenti-,
quincenti-
quingen-,
quingenten-,
quincenten-
600 sescenti-, sexcenti- sescen-,
sexcenten-
hexacosioi-
700 septingenti- septingen-,
septingenten-,
septcenten-
800 octingenti- octingen-,
octingenten-,
octocenten-
900 nongenti- nongen-
1000 milli- millen- millesim- chili-
10,000 myria-
For Latinate 21, 22, etc., the pattern for the teens is followed: unvigint-, duovigint-, etc. For higher numbers, the reverse order may be found: 36 trigintisex-. For Greek, the word kai ‘and’ is used: icosikaihena-, icosikaidi-, pentacontakaipentad, etc. In these and in the teens, the kai is frequently omitted, though not in triskaidecaphobia. Sesqui- is used in Latin combinations for 1½ (sesquicentennial) and quasqui- for 1¼; multi- and poly- are used in Latin and Greek combinations for ‘many’ (multilateral, polygon). In chemical nomenclature, 11 is generally mixed Latin-Greek undec-, and the 20s are based on -cos-, for example tricos- for 23.

[edit] Occurrences

Hamas


Hamas

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Hamas
حركة المقاومة الاسلامية
Founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin
Chief of the Political Bureau Khaled Mashaal[1][2]
Deputy Chief of the Political Bureau Mousa Abu Marzouq[1][2]
Prime Minister Ismail Haniyah[1]
Foreign Minister Mahmoud Zahar[1]
Founded 1987 (1987)
Preceded by Palestinian Muslim Brethren
Headquarters Gaza, Palestinian territories
Ideology Islamism,[3] Islamic fundamentalism,[4] Palestinian nationalism, religious nationalism
Religion Sunni Islam
Politics of Palestine
Political parties
Elections
Hamas (حماس Ḥamās, an acronym of حركة المقاومة الاسلامية Ḥarakat al-Muqāwamat al-Islāmiyyah, meaning “Islamic Resistance Movement”) is the Palestinian Islamist socio-political organization, with an affiliated military wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades,[5][6][7] and described by most analysts as fundamentalist or Islamist,[8] the group was established in 1987 as an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood.[9]Canada,[10] Israel, European Union,[11] and the United States[12][13][14] classify Hamas as a terrorist organization.
Based largely based upon the principles of Islamic fundamentalism that were gaining momentum throughout the Arab world in the 1980s, Hamas was founded during the First Intifada.[15] The Hamas affiliated Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades are responsible for the majority of violence and killings attributed to Hamas and militants have conducted numerous attacks against Israeli civilians and soldiers. Tactics have included rocket attacks and from April 1993, until they ceased in January 2005, suicide bombings. Hamas violence has been directed at Israel, Egypt, and rivaling Palestinian movements in the West Bank and Gaza. [16]
In the January 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections Hamas won a decisive majority in the Palestinian Parliament,[17] defeating the PLO-affiliated Fatah party. Following the elections, the United States and the EU halted financial assistance to the Hamas-led administration.[18][19] In March 2007 a national unity government, headed by Hamas’s Ismail Haniya, was briefly formed, but this failed to restart international financial assistance.[20] Tensions over control of Palestinian security forces soon erupted into the 2007 Battle of Gaza,[21] after which Hamas retained control of Gaza while its officials were ousted from government positions in the West Bank.[21][22] Israel and Egypt then imposed an economic blockade on Gaza, on the grounds that Fatah forces were no longer providing security there.[23]
In June 2008, Hamas ceased rocket attacks on Israel following an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire, but attacks by other organizations continued despite Hamas efforts to prevent them.[24] Two months before the end of the ceasefire the conflict escalated, after a November 4 Israeli incursion into Gaza killed seven Hamas militants, which led to a renewal of Hamas rocket attacks.[24][25] In late December 2008, Israel attacked Gaza,[26][27] withdrawing its forces from the territory in mid-January 2009.
Hamas’s 1988 charter calls for replacing the State of Israel with a Palestinian Islamic state in the area that is now Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.[28] However, in July 2009, Khaled Meshal, Hamas’s Damascus-based political bureau chief, stated Hamas’s willingness to cooperate with “a resolution to the Arab-Israeli conflict which included a Palestinian state based on 1967 borders,” provided that Palestinian refugees be given the right to return to Israel and that East Jerusalem be recognized as the new state’s capital.[29][30] Hamas has in the past described its conflict with Israel as political and not religious,[31][31][32][33] but some journalists and advocacy groups believe that the Hamas Charter and statements by Hamas leaders have been influenced by antisemitic conspiracy theories.[34]

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Chumash (Judaism)


Chumash (Judaism)

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Chumash (Hebrew: חומש‎, pronounced [χuˈmaʃ] or pronounced [ħu’maʃ] ; also Ḥumash) is one of the Hebrew names for the Five Books of Moses, also known as the Pentateuch or Torah. The word comes from the Hebrew word for five, Ḥamesh. A more formal term is Ḥamishah Ḥumshei Torah, “five fifths of the Law”.

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[edit] Origin of the term

The word “ḥumash” may be a misreading of ḥomesh, meaning “one-fifth”, alluding to any one of the five books: as the Hebrew חומש has no vowel signs, it could be read either way. It could also be regarded as a back-formed singular of ḥumashim/ḥumshei (which is in fact the plural of ḥomesh).
In early scribal practice there was a distinction between a Sefer Torah, containing the entire Pentateuch on a parchment scroll, and a copy of one of the five books on its own, which was generally bound in codex form, like a modern book, and had a lesser degree of sanctity. The term ḥomesh strictly applies to one of these. Thus, ḥomesh B’reshit strictly means “the Genesis fifth”, but was misread as ḥumash, B’reshit[1] and interpreted as meaning “The Pentateuch: Genesis”, as if “ḥumash” was the name of the book and “Bereshit” the name of one of its parts.
In the legal codes, such as MaimonidesMishneh Torah, it is laid down that any copy of the Pentateuch which does not comply with the strict rules for a Sefer Torah, for example because it is not a parchment scroll or contains vowel signs, has only the same sanctity as a copy of an individual book (ḥomesh). In this way, the word ḥomesh (or ḥumash) came to have the extended sense of any copy of the Pentateuch other than a Sefer Torah.

[edit] Usage

The word ḥumash generally only refers to “book” bound editions of the Pentateuch, whereas the “scroll” form is called a Sefer Torah (“book [of the] Torah”).
In modern Jewish practice:

  • A printed ḥumash usually sets out the Hebrew text of the Torah with vowel points and cantillation marks, separated into its 54 constituent weekly Torah portionsparashiyyot), together with the haftarah for each portion and, often, translations and notes. (
  • A ḥumash-Rashi also contains the Targum of Onkelos and the commentary of Rashi, and usually has no vernacular translation of the text.
  • A Tikkun Soferim or Tiqqun Qore’im sets out, in parallel columns, the unvocalized text of the Pentateuch as it would appear in a Torah scroll and the normal printed text as it appears in a Chumash; it sometimes includes haftarot and the five megillot. It exists as an aid for Torah scribes and for those preparing to read from the Sefer Torah in the synagogue.
  • A multi-volume set in Hebrew only, often but not always including the entire Tanakh with masoretic notes (sometimes), Targumim and several classical commentaries, is referred to as Mikraot Gedolot.

[edit] Various publications

The Artscroll Chumash

see also Jewish English Bible translations

Pentagon


Pentagon

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Regular pentagon
Regular pentagon.svg
A regular pentagon
Edges and vertices 5
Schläfli symbol {5}
Coxeter–Dynkin diagram CDW ring.pngCDW 5.pngCDW dot.png
Symmetry group Dihedral (D5)
Internal angle
(degrees)
108°
Properties convex, cyclic, equilateral, isogonal, isotoxal
In geometry, a pentagon From the Greek number 5 (pente) is any five-sided polygon. A pentagon may be simple or self-intersecting. The internal angles in a simple pentagon total 540°. A pentagram is an example of a self-intersecting pentagon.

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[edit] Regular pentagons

A regular pentagon has all sides of equal length and all interior angles are equal measure (108°). It has five lines of reflectional symmetry and it has rotational symmetry of order 5 (through 72°, 144°, 216° and 288°). Its Schläfli symbol is {5}. The chords of a regular pentagon are in golden ratio to its sides.
The area of a regular convex pentagon with side length t is given by
A = \frac{{t^2 \sqrt {25 + 10\sqrt 5 } }}{4} = \frac{5t^2 \tan(54^\circ)}{4} \approx 1.720477401 t^2.
A pentagram or pentangle is a regular star pentagon. Its Schläfli symbol is {5/2}. Its sides form the diagonals of a regular convex pentagon – in this arrangement the sides of the two pentagons are in the golden ratio.
When a regular pentagon is inscribed in a circle with radius R, its edge length t is given by the expression
t = R\ {\sqrt { \frac {5-\sqrt{5}}{2}} } = 2R\sin 36^\circ = 2R\sin\frac{\pi}{5} \approx 1.17557050458 R.

May



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1
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9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31




2010

May About this sound (pronunciation) (help·info) is the fifth month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of seven Gregorian months with the length of 31 days.
May is a month of autumn in the Southern Hemisphere and spring in the Northern Hemisphere. Therefore May in the Southern Hemisphere is the seasonal equivalent of November in the Northern Hemisphere and vice versa.
The month May has been named for the Greek goddess Maia, who was identified with the Roman era goddess of fertility, Bona Dea, whose festival was held in May. Conversely, the Roman poet Ovid provides a second etymology, in which he says that the month of May is named for the maiores, Latin for “elders,” and that the following month (June) is named for the iuniores, or “young people” (Fasti VI.88).
In both common Western calendrical systems, no other month begins on the same day of the week as May. This month and June are the only two months that have this trait, though the first day of August in a common year and the first day of October in a leap year are also unique. No other month ends on the same day of the week as May. (See: Months in various calendars)

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Cinco de Mayo


Cinco de Mayo

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Cinco de Mayo
Cinco de Mayo
Battle of Puebla
Observed by US Americans, mixed nationality;
citizens of Puebla, Puebla
Type multinational
Date May 5, 1862
Observances Celebration in the United States of Mexican-American culture and experiences. Only somewhat celebrated in Mexico.
Food, music, folkloric dancing
Cinco de Mayo (Spanish for “fifth of May”) is a holiday held on May 5 that commemorates the Mexican army‘s unlikely victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862, under the leadership of General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín. [2][3] It is celebrated primarily in the state of Puebla and in the United States.[4][5][6][7] While Cinco de Mayo sees limited significance and celebration nationwide in Mexico, the date is observed nationwide in the United States (especially at bars around the country) and other locations around the world, also in bars, as a celebration of Mexican heritage and pride.[8] Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico’s Independence Day,[9] the most important national patriotic holiday in Mexico.

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