This article is within the scope of WikiProject Languages, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of languages on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.LanguagesWikipedia:WikiProject LanguagesTemplate:WikiProject Languageslanguage
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Judaism, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Judaism-related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.JudaismWikipedia:WikiProject JudaismTemplate:WikiProject JudaismJudaism
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Israel, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Israel on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.IsraelWikipedia:WikiProject IsraelTemplate:WikiProject IsraelIsrael-related
An editor recently removed the content below with the edit summary, "removed interesting, but irrelevant Hebrew "word game" ". I don't see the basic concept as irrelevant to this article. (That is, the concept that acrostic word games had an influence on acronym usage in Hebrew.) But maybe this is not the best way to include it. Food for thought.
<snip>It is also a common part of Jewish thought to make inferences based on hidden acrostics. For example the Hebrew words for "man" (he: ????) and "woman" (he: ????) can be used to draw the inference that marriage, the joining of a man and a woman, is a spiritual relationship, because if one removes from each of the words "man" and "woman", one of the letters in the word "God" (he: ?-?), all that is left when "God" is removed from the joining of the two, is the word for destruction (he: ??? lit: fire) in place of each. So much can be interpreted from Hebrew, and attributed to or inferred from it, that an interpretational system, called exegesis, has been developed along these lines.</snip>