Showing 1 - 12 results of 12 for search '"Ancient Egyptian language"', query time: 0.12s Refine Results
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    THE ORIGIN OF ARABIC WORDS IN THE ANCIENT EGYPTIAN LANGUAGE by Deena Alesaily

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…As part of the effort to revive this linguistic heritage, I aim to explore the names and vocabularies that have their origins in the ancient Egyptian language and continue to be a part of our modern lexicon. …”
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    Possessive Adjectives in the Late Egyptian grammar and Its popularity In the "D'Orbiney" Papyrus EA.10183 by Mahmoud Hamid Farraj Elhosary

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The emergence of new Possessive articles characteristics led to a change in the system of expressing Possessive in the language, As the ancient Egyptian language did not know what is called possessive Adjectives in the accepted form except at the end of the classical linguistic phase, as in the past, possessive Adjectives were a form of adding the Suffix pronoun as a direct addition to names, and there was more than one way to express Possessive in that period through The context of speech, and with the emergence of the new style of Possessive Adjectives at the end of the classical and late eras, it also became popular in Demotic and Coptic, Where the Possessive article usually corresponds to the thing that is owned in gender and number, Not with the owner, which is expressed by the Suffix pronoun,…”
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    The Esthetic Values of depicting the Crocodile in Pre- Dynasty and Old Kingdom by Youmna Sherif, Ghada Amin, ghada ibrahim

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…The ancient Egyptian contemplates everything in nature and analyzes it and concludes from it religious and worldly matters, and to strongly associate him with the animal through which he learns everything that benefits him and harms him, and sometimes has the power to fear or wish to protect it.The crocodile was an important part of the life of the ancient Egyptian and there was a religious and worldly relationship with him.The crocodile was used in the ancient Egyptian language in various forms of art and a symbol of different things and actions.The crocodile was a part of the ancient Egyptian's daily life, as he faced him daily on his journey of hunting and searching for food, so he photographed him in different situations to highlight the danger he poses to his life, so we find that he was sainted in some areas such as Fayoum, Kom Ambo, Dandra and Gablen and others for his strength, ferocity and high fertility, besides his association with nile, as he was known as a lord of water according to his nature as it is said that the Nile stems from his race, and he also knew that he Lord of the forest areas and swamps for his stability in them. …”
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    The conceptual idea of the opening design in ancient Egyptian domestic (Residential) buildings by Assist.Prof.Dr. Ghada Amin Ramadan

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…And yet I got his attention in study and design and it contained important symbolic values, this prompted us to look for the models that the ancient Egyptian left behind to help complete the design image. and looking for different factors behind the different design of windows and doors from place to place, Hence, the study aims to describe and analyse the openings in ancient Egyptian architecture in terms of windows, entrances and doors because of their aesthetic and functional importance, as well as their symbolic values. in addition to its expression in the ancient Egyptian language and what the words refer to and its association with the form expressed in hieroglyphic writing, As the location of the openings varies, their role and design differs in terms of the elements and foundations of the design used in each of them, and what is actually expressed in some graphic shapes by comparing them to the real models that have been found, though fewer in number. …”
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    War, revolution and egyptology: letters of Eduard Naville and Vladimir Golenishchev (1916–1921) by Ivan Ladynin

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…Sethe, etc.), took the leadership: it developed the theory of the Ancient Egyptian language, and its methodology was followed by scholars entering this fi eld of research from the 1890s onwards (among them Golenishchev’s close friend, the British Egyptologist Alan H. …”
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