释义 |
‖ dagesh, daghesh, n. Heb. Gram.|ˈdɑːgɛʃ| [med.Heb. dāghēsh, f. Syriac d'ghash to prick.] A point or dot placed within a Hebrew letter, denoting either that it is doubled (dagesh forte), or that it is not aspirated (dagesh lene).
1591Percivall Sp. Dict. B j, B..very often..is sounded like the Hebrew {hebbeth} when it is in the middest of a word without daggesh. 1749B. Martin Dict. Introd. Eng. Tongue 9 If any of the aspirated letters has the point (call'd Dagesh) in them, they are then pronounced without the H. 1834A. Willis Hebr. Gram. 5 A point is sometimes inserted in the middle of a consonant affecting the pronunciation, and called Dagesh or Mappik. Hence ˈdagesh v. trans., to mark with a dagesh. Also ˈdagessate v., ˈdagessate, -ated pa. pple.
1668[see incrassated ppl. a. b]. 1751Wesley Wks. (1872) XIV. 156 In some Verbs..the middle Radical is dageshed. 1871Bolton tr. Delitzsch's Psalms II. 259 note, The dageshing of the opening mute of the following word. |