Bet (ב) which is prounced either B or V, depending on its place in the word.
The letter resh (ר) is in the Hebrew alphabet.
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
There is no "letter b" in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is a letter that sounds like 'b' and it is called Bet (בּ).
Gematriya is a numerical version of the Hebrew alphabet. For example, the first letter of the Hebrew Alphabet is the letter Aleph. This letter's Gematriya translation is 1 then the second letter Bet=2 Gimel= 3 Daled=4 Hey=5 etc. except there are many letters that do not correspond to the number in the alphabet that it is.
The second letter in the alphabet is B.
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)
the second letter in Arabic alphabet is(ب)
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׳
The book of Psalms is actually the ancient Hebrew songbook, and Psalm 119 is an especially long song, with 176 verses. To make it easier for the temple singers to remember the lines, the psalmist designed it as an alphabetic psalm.ALEPH is the first letter of the Hebrew Alphabet, BETH is the second....etc...There are 22 stanzas in Ps 119, and EACH LINE of the first stanza, under the Hebrew letter Aleph, starts with the letter Aleph in Hebrew.Each line of the second stanza starts with the second Hebrew letter Beth, and EACH LINE follows suit, and it goes on like this through the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet(8 Hebrew lines to a stanza).The Hebrew Temple singers didn't have books to read from, they had to memorize these songs. This technique helped.