Egyptian Hieroglyphic Alphabet (2015)

(discoveringegypt.com)

40 points | by teleforce 6 days ago ago

16 comments

  • cwnyth 2 days ago ago

    That website is a super simplistic breakdown. There is so much more to actual hieroglyphs. You get semi-alphabetic, bi-consonantal, tri-consonantal, determinative, and logographic functions all in the same system, and the order you see it isn't always the order it's read.

  • antihipocrat 3 days ago ago

    School left me with the impression that hieroglyphs were primitive constructs - purely logographic and ideographic. It was a shock to later learn that they are also alphabetic and phonetic.

    The opportunities for creative expression are amazing in such a system

    • jhbadger 3 days ago ago

      Yes, the system is reminiscent of written Japanese in that way in that a word is sometimes spelled out phonetically, sometimes with an ideograph, and sometimes both for good measure if one or the other isn't viewed as clear enough.

    • RataNova 2 days ago ago

      No wonder the scribes were so highly regarded

    • glimshe 2 days ago ago

      Very few, if any, real world writing systems are purely ideographic.

    • 3 days ago ago
      [deleted]
  • WalterBright 2 days ago ago

    The Egyptians were evolving from picture to phonetic alphabets, because picture languages don't work very well. (What's the picture for "slow"?)

    In modern times, our alphabet is devolving into a picture language, due to a disorder called "iconitis".

    • nradov 2 days ago ago

      In a few decades we'll probably see emojis showing up in formal writing like textbooks, news articles, and scholarly journals. Our descendants will find it odd and quaint to read English texts without them.

      • WalterBright 2 days ago ago

        No, they won't. Nobody will remember 10,000 emojis.

        I used emojis for a while on phone texting. I eventually realized they were juvenile and stupid, and stopped.

        Save the artwork for wonderful things like the illustrations in the Pooh books.

    • 2 days ago ago
      [deleted]
    • downboots 2 days ago ago

      ๑ï

      • thaumasiotes 2 days ago ago

        If you believe people who have no idea what they're saying, it's "慢".

        I like yours though.

        In the actual development of writing, it isn't likely that a picture of a snail would be used to represent a semantically related word. Even in the earliest systems, where you could use a picture of a snail to represent the word "snail", it would be limited to (a) the word "snail", or (b) some other word that was pronounced identically. This is how it worked in Egyptian, Akkadian, and Chinese.

        For example, 慢 is the Mandarin word for "slow", and it's pronounced "màn". There is a logic to its appearance: the component on the left, 忄, represents that it is a mental state† (I'm not sure why this was felt to be true of "fast" and "slow", but it was), and the component on the right, 曼, just so happens to be pronounced "màn".

        (Most sound indications in Chinese characters are no longer that exact. They used to match better, but many centuries of language change followed. 丁 is dīng; 打 is dǎ.)

        † Some more typical characters in the same category: 情 "feeling" (n.), 怕 "fear" (v.), 懂 "understand" (v.), 恨 "hate" (v.).

      • maxbond 2 days ago ago

        Those darn Lombards! I'm going to stick it to them in this marginalia.

    • RataNova 2 days ago ago

      Maybe we're not devolving so much as looping

  • RataNova 2 days ago ago

    Fascinating how something so visually intricate also served such a functional role in record-keeping and language. I'd always assumed hieroglyphs were mostly decorative or ceremonial