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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Phonetic complement 11 found (21 total)
alternate case: phonetic complement
Mutbenret
(887 words)
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of Queen Tanodjmy is written with the "bener" sign followed by a phonetic complement m, indicating that the ostensible "bener" in that instance is to
Mutnedjmet
(1,079 words)
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of Queen Tanodjmy, which is certainly to be read this way, with a phonetic complement confirming this reading, "nedjem," for what is otherwise the "bener"
Scribe equipment (hieroglyph)
(555 words)
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dictionary and books of E. A. W. Budge. This reading is found as a phonetic complement using the signs for z and š, leading to the misunderstanding. However
Tarḫunz
(2,276 words)
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and Luwian Storm God, D10 (Tarhunt-), generally followed by the phonetic complement -(t/daš)ša. Hutter (2003), p. 222. HT 1 ii 34ff. Manfred Hutter (1995)
Menes
(2,824 words)
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Narmer alternating with the gameboard sign (mn), together with its phonetic complement , the n sign, which is always shown when the full name of Menes is
Land of Punt
(3,973 words)
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Egyptian spelling "pwenet" the second "n" is a phonetic complement to "wen" and is not spoken the last sign is the determinative for country, land Wall
Historical Chinese phonology
(6,490 words)
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disappear. Their presence, however, is revealed by the use of a "phonetic complement " with the corresponding tightly bound pre-initial in their character
Cuneiform
(9,523 words)
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spell out the words laboriously, in preference to using signs with a phonetic complement .[clarification needed] Yet even in those days, the Babylonian syllabary
Narmer
(10,429 words)
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Narmer alternating with the gameboard sign (mn), together with its phonetic complement , the n sign, which is always shown when the full name of Menes is
Hyksos
(11,142 words)
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1900 BC. The crook (𓋾, ḥqꜣ) means "ruler", the hill (𓈎) is a phonetic complement q/ḳ to 𓋾 while 𓈉 stands for (foreign) "country", pronounced ḫꜣst
Decipherment of ancient Egyptian scripts
(8,865 words)
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it as m. Neither had he struck upon the concept now known as a "phonetic complement ": a uniliteral sign that was added at the end of a word, re-spelling