Class 6 egyptian

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Transcript of Class 6 egyptian

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s w dʒ ʒ {HIT, BEAT}s w dʒ ʒ {HIT, BEAT}

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swdʒ, ‘make healthy, safe’

swdʒ, ‘go’

swdʒ, ‘die’

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Knowing how to correctly translate ancient writing systems could be a matter

of life and death … at least on TV.

Knowing how to correctly translate ancient writing systems could be a matter

of life and death … at least on TV.

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Egyptian hieroglyphic writing is a script which can be characterized by the following:

•It is pictorial in that signs are images of actual objects. The sign may not necessarily refer to that object, however.•It combines phonetic signs (phonograms) and logograms with ideograms (determinatives)

“It is a complex system, writing figurative, symbolic, and phonetic all at once, in the same text, the same phrase, I would almost say in the same word.”

Jean-Francois Champollion

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Egyptian hieroglyphic writing is a script which can be characterized by the following:

•The script records only the consonantal structure of the language•Phonograms can be either uniliteral (a sign representing a single consonant), biliteral (a sign representing 2 consonants), triliterals (a sign representing 3 consonants) or full logograms

3 t mn dj htp mjw

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Egyptian hieroglyphic writing is a script which can be characterized by the following:

•Complementation of signs is common, both in the form of semantic complements (determinatives) as well as phonetic complements.

pr pr pr nfrw nfrw nfrt

nfr nfrw

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Egyptian hieroglyphic writing is a script which can be characterized by the following:

•Honorific transposition of signs is common, reading signs and words outside of the order in which they are spelled.

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Menkheperre

nṯrnfr

nb tʒwy

The good god.Lord of theTwo Lands.

r’r’

mnmn

ḫprḫpr

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Thutmose III Hatshepsut Thutmose IIAkhenaten

Tutankhamen

??

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Tutankhamen's Cartouches

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Tutankhamen's Cartouches

nb

r‘ ḫpr

plural(-w)

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Tutankhamen's Cartouches

nb

r‘

plural(-w)

mn

n t-w-t

‘nḫ

ḥḳʒ-ỉwnw-šm‘

ḫpr ỉ

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mn

nt

‘nḫ

ḥḳʒ

wt

ỉwnwỉwnwšm‘

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"great queen"

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"great queen"

"may she havelife and youth"

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Coptic

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Evidence for the Nature of Ancient Egyptian Vowels

(1) Comparison of Egyptian with other Afroasiatic languages (e.g., Chadic, Ethiopian, Arabic, Hebrew), e.g., Egyptian qʒ b and Semitic *qrb ‘interior’.

(2) Citations of Egyptian words in other ancient writing systems (e.g., Hittite):

- Tutankhamen's prænomen is transliterated Nib-khurur-riya(sh)in the Hittite document “Deeds of Suppiluliuma” (Güterbock 1956),suggesting that nb = nib, ḫpr = khupur and r‘ = riya(sh).

- The same document refers to Ankhesenamen as Daham-unzu ‘theking's wife’ indicating a dental pronunciation of the possessive t- aswell as unpronounced feminine suffixes (-t). Taken together, thissuggests the pronunciation ṱa-ham ‘his-wife’ and unsuw ‘king’.

(3) Reflexes in Coptic, which used a Greek-derived script that recorded vowels.

Based on these lines of evidence, Smith (2001: 55) proposes that the name of the Egyptian sun god underwent the following changes in pronunciation over time:

rí:‘uw (Old Kingdom) > rí:‘a (ca. 1400 BC) > re: (Coptic).

- Outline based on Loprieno (1995:29-30) and Reany (2001:54-59)

nb-ḫpr-w-r‘

ḥm-t-nsw-t

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m-mʒ‘-‘ ḫrw

m-mʒ‘-‘ ḫ-r-ḫrw-w {OF THE MOUTH}

mʒ‘-‘ ḫrw

mʒ‘ ḫrw

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•Meir

The Tomb of Senbi at Meir

A governor during the reign of Amenemhat I (1991-1962 BC), Senbi's rock-cut tomb was carved and lavishly painted with ‘Elysian’ scenes of the afterlife.

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

= scribe

write + {male, occupation}

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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stt rmw ỉn senbỉ mʒ‘ ḫrw‘Spearing fish (pl.) by Senbi, the justified"

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‘m‘ʒ r ʒpdw ỉn senbỉ mʒ‘ ḫrw‘Throwing at birds by Senbi, the justified"

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Tomb of Senbi at Meir

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