No, the dagesh has no numerical value, and is not used in numbers.
it is a horizontal line above certain letters, representing the opposite of a dagesh. But rafe is only used in Yiddish, not Hebrew.
The .DGS file format is used by Dagesh Pro, a little-used word processor application aimed at the Hebrew word processing market. Now that MS Word and other major apps support Hebrew, this file format is considered obsolete.
In Hebrew, the "pH" sound is represented by the letter "פ" (Pey), which can have a "f" sound when it has a dot (dagesh) inside it, making it pronounced as "P." Without the dot, it is pronounced as "F." To achieve the "pH" sound specifically, one would typically use the "פ" (Pey) without the dagesh, making it sound like "F."
It doesn't.First of all Greek letters do not have numerical values. Secondly, in Hebrew, it adds up to 375:אדולף היטלרא = 1ד = 4ו = 6ל = 30פ = 80ה = 5י = 10ט = 9ל =30ר = 200________375
The Hebrew word for water is מים (mayim), and it's numerical value is 90.
if you are referring to the dot inside Hebrew letters, it has multiple functions. Dagesh Hazak = indicates the consonant is a double letter Dagesh Kal = indicates that bet, pe, and kaf, have the sound of b, p, k rather than v, f, and k. Mappiq = in a final he, indicates the "h" is pronounced (no longer followed). If you are referring to any other dots in Hebrew, they are vowels.
Ratios ARE numerical.
David (דוד) = 14
"tiv" does not appear to be a Hebrew word.
Khaf (כ)
Nun (× )
Pei (פ)