all 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet are considered feminine.
In the Hebrew alphabet, all the letters are considered gender-neutral. There are no letters specifically designated as masculine or feminine.
There is no form of Hebrew writing that is specifically masculine or feminine. It depends on what you consider feminine. There is only one Hebrew cursive alphabet, but everyone's personal style is different.
If you are asking which letters are not in the Ancient Hebrew alphabet, there are none. The Ancient Hebrew alphabet is identical to the Modern Hebrew alphabet.
dollar is masculine in Hebrew (דולר).
The Hebrew alphabet only has 22 letters. (the 5 Final forms do not count as separate letters, and are not listed in the alphabet).The letters in alphabetical order are:אבגדהוזחטיכלמנסעפצקרשת
hatuna is feminine
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters and words. My love (masculine) = אהובי My love (feminine) = אהובתי My life = חיי My friend (masculine) = חברי My friend (feminine) = חברתי
Masculine: Ochel אוכל
beautiful = yafeh (masculine) or yafah (feminine) amazing = madhim (masculine) or madhimah (feminine)
sheleg (שלג) is masculine
Hebrew doesn't have those letters in its alphabet. In fact, there is no equivalent for the letter J at all, except in Modern Hebrew. Furthermore, there are no vowels in the Hebrew alphabet.
Hebrew uses the same numerals as everyone else. For traditional Jewish purposes, the letters of the alphabet can also be used as numbers. 6 would be vav (ו). The word six is שש (pronounced shesh) for feminine nouns and שישה (sheesha) for masculine nouns.
mufkar (masculine) mufkeret (feminine)