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The phonetic signs themselves can be separated into different classes,
according to the number of consonants they write. The most used signs
are the uniliteral signs which, as their names state, represent one
consonant. Had the Egyptians restricted themselves to these signs,
they would have used an alphabetic writing, but they did not. And,
contrarily to what a naive view of evolution might suggest, their
system was closer to an alphabetic writing in the sixth dynasty than
in the ptolemaic times.
The uniliteral signs are shown in table 1.
Along with these signs, biliteral and triliteral signs, representing
respectively two and three consonants were used. Most of the time,
some of the consonant represented by the sign were written twice,
once with the bi- or tri- literal sign, and once with a uniliteral
sign. For example, the biliteral sign
is to be read , and
is . But
reads and not .
This had some aesthetic uses, but was mainly important in hieratic, the
very cursive script used in everyday life, where it was easier to
misinterpret signs. The redundancy achieved thanks to the
supplementary uniliteral signs allowed to distinguish similar
looking signs.
Table 1:
Alphabetical signs
sign |
conventional writing |
Ascii Rendering |
pronunciation |
|
|
A |
conventionally, a. in fact somewhere between n, l, and r |
|
|
i |
i |
|
|
a |
usually pronunced a, but really a ayn |
|
|
w |
w |
|
|
w |
w |
|
|
b |
b |
|
|
p |
p |
|
|
f |
f |
|
|
m |
m |
|
|
n |
n |
|
|
n |
n |
|
|
r |
r |
|
|
h |
h |
|
|
H |
emphatic h as in arabic |
|
|
x |
like the spanish j |
|
|
X |
like the german ch in ich |
|
|
s |
s (but in the Old Kingdom, z) |
|
|
s |
s |
|
|
S |
sh |
|
|
q |
the q in Saqqarah |
|
|
k |
k |
|
|
g |
g |
|
|
t |
t |
|
|
T |
tj |
|
|
d |
d |
|
|
D |
dj |
Next: The determinatives
Up: The Writing System
Previous: The Three Kinds of
Serge Rosmorduc
2/26/1998