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Hebrew Letter Vav With Holam Letter

וֹ is the Hebrew letter vav with the holam vowel mark, encoded as U+FB4B.

U+FB4B

וֹ is a Hebrew character used in writing with vowel points. It appears as a single shaped glyph in the Unicode Hebrew presentation forms block. Below you’ll find copy options and practical ways to use it.

Hebrew Letter Vav With Holam Letter Meaning

וֹ is the “Hebrew Letter Vav with Holam,” a Hebrew character that combines the letter vav with the holam vowel indication. The holam helps specify how the letter is pronounced and how the surrounding text should be read. In Unicode, it is encoded as U+FB4B, which is part of the Hebrew presentation forms and typically intended for rendering as a specific shaped form. Use it when you need an exact character match (for example, copying text from a source that uses the presentation form glyph) rather than assembling base letters and diacritics manually.

Common uses

  • Copying exact Hebrew glyphs from existing text or typography samples
  • Using the character in digital documents where U+FB4B is required
  • Correctly matching legacy or presentation-form Hebrew content
  • Rendering specific Hebrew text in custom fonts or UI components
  • Designing posters, badges, or social posts that must preserve exact lettering

Examples

וֹ Hebrew Letter Vav with Holam

  • ה וֹ ר א ה
  • מצא וֹ בקטע הטקסט המקורי
  • שימוש נכון ב־וֹ לצורך העתקה
  • הכנס וֹ לתוך התבנית
  • התו וֹ מופיע בצורה מדויקת כאן

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+FB4B
HTML Entityוֹ
HTML Codeוֹ
CSS\FB4B

FAQ

What character is וֹ?

וֹ is the Hebrew Letter Vav with Holam, encoded as Unicode U+FB4B.

How do I copy וֹ reliably for web pages?

You can paste the character directly, or use the HTML entity וֹ in your markup.

Is וֹ the same as writing vav plus holam separately?

וֹ is a specific combined presentation-form glyph. If you assemble base letters and diacritics separately, you may not get the exact same shaped character.

What does the Unicode code point U+FB4B mean for rendering?

U+FB4B identifies this specific shaped Hebrew presentation form. Correct display depends on font support for that glyph.