Ἰαω

Etymology
From, related to. In written use by Hellenistic Jews in the before the Christian era, when it became standard to substitute.

It is unclear whether the Greek term initially represented Iaō or Iahō; the former persisted among Jews and Christians into late antiquity. In the 4th century CE Jerome, who translated the Latin Vulgate Bible from Hebrew and Greek, mentions both Iaoh and or, the latter matching the transliteration of Aramaic-Hebrew. The contracted form mirrors 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬/.

Proper noun

 * 1)  Yahweh; the Tetragrammaton YHWH
 * 2) * c. 50 –50, Septuagint manuscript 4Q120 (4QpapLXXLevb), Leviticus 4:27:
 * "grc"
 * "grc"

- εαν [δε ψυχη μια αμαρτ]η[ι α]κουσιως εκ [του λαου της γης] εν τωι ποιησαι μιαν απ[ο πασων] των εντολων ιαω ου πο[ιηθησε]...


 * 1) Dionysus, based on conflation between the epithet Sabaoth and the Phrygian god of wine.