The Hebrew alphabet originally had 23 letters from "aleph to ghah". Ghah meaning "dark, twisted, rope".
The ghah represented the mixing of the fallen "sons of God" mating with the daughters of men creating the mighty men of old, the men of renown, which represents the dna double helix (two or twin suns).
It was later blended with the "ayin" to represent high spin state dna that opens the third eye.
Yahushua, "the single brazen serpent" set on a staff, represents a single strand of DNA with 24 chromosomes: 23 chromosomes for man and 1 chromosome for God. 23 letters 23 chromosomes.
Tav (ת) which has the sound of T
The last letter of the Hebrew Alphabet is Tav, ת, and it is pronounced like a T. In ancient times, it was pronounced like Th at the end of a word, but that has disappeared from Modern Hebrew.
There are only 22 letters in the Hebrew alphabet.
There is a highly supported theory about a missing Hebrew letter ghayin, but this letter would not have been the last letter of the alphabet. While this letter definitely existed in ancient Semitic languages, particularly Egyptian, and some modern Semitic languages such as Arabic, it no longer exists in any version of Hebrew.
Instead it has been absorbed into the letter ע (ayin). While the evidence exists showing that this is in fact a separate letter, there is very little evidence for reconstructing its original pictograph. The Ugarit and Arabic languages wrote this letter the same as the ayin but with an additional line or dot. The closest candidate for this letter is the Egyptian uniliteral symbol ? (a twisted rope), which is found in some ancient Semitic inscriptions.
Note some interesting examples of the missing ghayin:
Gaza in Arabic = Ghaza (غزة)
Gaza in Hebrew = ʿaza or Aza (עזה)
Gomorrah in Arabic = Ghamura (عمورة)Gomorrah in Hebrew = ʿamorah (עֲמֹרָה)
In the Arabic language this letter is called the ghayn and is probably related to the Hebrew word ghah meaning "twisted."
Because the Greek language transliterates this letter with a gamma ("g" sound) we know that this letter originally had a type of "g" sound, possibly a "ng" as in the word "ring" or the gh sound of the Arabic letter غ
If the letter ghayin were in the Hebrew alphabet today, it's likely it would have been written near the letter ayin, making it either the 16th or 17th letter.
The 20th letter of the Hebrew alphabet is Reish. רי"ש
Yod (י), pronounced like an English y sound. This letter is also used in the vowel combinations for ee, ay, and I.
"Lamed" - pronunciation: "L"
Qof (ק) which has the sound of k
Qof (ק), also called kuf.
MEM
The letter j is the tenth letter in the English alphabet.
There is no "letter b" in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is a letter that sounds like 'b' and it is called Bet (בּ).
There is no letter A in the Hebrew alphabet. In fact, the Hebrew alphabet doesn't have any vowels in it at all.To form vowels in Hebrew, marks are added to the letters. For example:A as in make = אֵיA as in Father = אָ אַ or אֲA as in cat = doesn't exist in Hebrew
The letter "resh" can be found in the Hebrew alphabet.
The tenth letter of the modern English alphabet is the letter J.
The last letter of the Greek alphabet is Tau The last letter of the Hebrew alphabet is Tav
The Hebrew name of the 22nd (and last) letter of the Hebrew alphabet is Tav (ת) but it doesn't have an English name, only a Hebrew name.
Gimel (×’) which is the 3rd letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
dalet (ד)
There is no such thing as a Jewish alphabet. If you mean Hebrew, there is no letter for J in Hebrew. In Modern Hebrew, words with the "J" sound are written with the letter for g plus an apostrophe: ג׳
it is the 11th letter of the alphabet and it looks like this: ×›
There is no "letter k" in the Hebrew alphabet. But there are 2 Hebrew letters that have the same sound as the English letter k: they are כ and ק.