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and is called by another name small patha. As in בַ næ. עַ æ. פַ phæ. The fifth is hiric, namely one point under a letter, and it is worth our i. As in צִ zi. קִ ki. רִ ri. The sixth is holem, likewise one point, but one that is placed only over a letter, and it is worth a Latin o. As in וֹ o. לֹ lo. מֹ mo. רֹ ro. The seventh Kibuz with... [note: text unclear, appears to discuss vowel variations in different regions] is kibuz ֻ, a sound namely midway between u and i, that is, the Greek ypsilon or the French u. As in אֻ u. בֻ bu. גֻ gu. The eighth is furec or meloppum. Namely one point, receivable only into the belly of the letter uau, and it is worth a Latin u. As in וּ u. בּוּ bu. הוּ hu. And note that when uau with that point has another vowel point placed Scheua, that is, a light and open vowel, it seems to sound as in [gardino] or firming as in [Abrahe]... below placed underneath, it is not that ventral furec, but a dages rendering it stronger, strengthening only the letter uau. As in וַּ ua or fa. וֵּ fa, etc. The ninth is hateph or scheua: namely two points placed alternately, and it is read as a very short e: sometimes it is clearly snatched away, or it terminates a syllable with its own [vowel] it is released as if through...