(also spelled ,
Tsade, , ,
Tzadi,
Sadhe,
Tzaddik) is the eighteenth
letter of the
Semitic abjads, including
Phoenician Çādē ,
Hebrew ˈṢādi ,
Aramaic Ṣādhē ,
Syriac Ṣāḏē , and
Arabic . Its oldest sound value is probably , although there is a variety of pronunciation in different modern Semitic languages and their dialects. It represents the coalescence of three
Proto-Semitic "
emphatic consonants" in
Canaanite.
Arabic, which kept the phonemes separate, introduced variants of and to express the three (see , ). In Aramaic, these emphatic consonants coalesced instead with and , respectively, thus Hebrew ארץ (earth) is ארע in Aramaic.