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Two hieratic funerary papyri of NesminHaikal, Fayza Mohamed Hussein January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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The Egyptian language at the time of the nineteenth dynastyBlumsohn, David 06 1900 (has links)
The Nineteenth Dynasty, which ushered in the Ramesside period in ± 1308 B.C.E.
is an important period in which to study the development of the Egyptian
language, falling as it does between the time of the Middle Egyptian (ME) idiom
and the Late Egyptian (LE) language. Regarding the Egyptian language,
Gardiner (1982:1) writes" ... the idiom in which the public records of the Twentieth
Dynasty are couched differs widely from that found, for example in the royal
decrees of the Sixth Dynasty". There was a gradual change from a "synthetic"
language in ME into an "analytical" one in LE and later Coptic. The synthetic
tenses are first supplemented and then gradually replaced by "analytic" forms.
And this happened during the time of the Nineteenth Dynasty.
This thesis addresses the Nineteenth Dynasty texts, with respect to grammar,
semantics and syntax (mainly verbal forms). It studies the occurrence of Middle
Egyptian synthetic forms and Late Egyptian analytic forms in the Nineteenth
Dynasty texts and makes observations on forms which appear to be unique to the
Nineteenth Dynasty Egyptian (NDE) too.
This study describes and analyses the language, both in a synchronic way - "frozen"
in its time (as a type of grammar book), and comparing literary and non-literary
uses of the time, - and in a diachronic manner, seeking to show the evolution and
development of language forms, their ancestors and their successors.
A study of these texts as shown in this thesis demonstrates that the written
language of the Nineteenth Dynasty is a unique blend of grammatical and
syntactic forms: pure ME forms, LE literary and non-literary forms, as well as
forms peculiar to NDE. Thus NDE is "an independent self-sufficient system,
which is neither Middle Egyptian nor Late Egyptian of the Twentieth Dynasty."
(Groll 1973:70) / Classics & Modern European Languages / D. Litt. et Phil. (Semitic Languages)
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The Egyptian language at the time of the nineteenth dynastyBlumsohn, David 06 1900 (has links)
The Nineteenth Dynasty, which ushered in the Ramesside period in ± 1308 B.C.E.
is an important period in which to study the development of the Egyptian
language, falling as it does between the time of the Middle Egyptian (ME) idiom
and the Late Egyptian (LE) language. Regarding the Egyptian language,
Gardiner (1982:1) writes" ... the idiom in which the public records of the Twentieth
Dynasty are couched differs widely from that found, for example in the royal
decrees of the Sixth Dynasty". There was a gradual change from a "synthetic"
language in ME into an "analytical" one in LE and later Coptic. The synthetic
tenses are first supplemented and then gradually replaced by "analytic" forms.
And this happened during the time of the Nineteenth Dynasty.
This thesis addresses the Nineteenth Dynasty texts, with respect to grammar,
semantics and syntax (mainly verbal forms). It studies the occurrence of Middle
Egyptian synthetic forms and Late Egyptian analytic forms in the Nineteenth
Dynasty texts and makes observations on forms which appear to be unique to the
Nineteenth Dynasty Egyptian (NDE) too.
This study describes and analyses the language, both in a synchronic way - "frozen"
in its time (as a type of grammar book), and comparing literary and non-literary
uses of the time, - and in a diachronic manner, seeking to show the evolution and
development of language forms, their ancestors and their successors.
A study of these texts as shown in this thesis demonstrates that the written
language of the Nineteenth Dynasty is a unique blend of grammatical and
syntactic forms: pure ME forms, LE literary and non-literary forms, as well as
forms peculiar to NDE. Thus NDE is "an independent self-sufficient system,
which is neither Middle Egyptian nor Late Egyptian of the Twentieth Dynasty."
(Groll 1973:70) / Classics and Modern European Languages / D. Litt. et Phil. (Semitic Languages)
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