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How to Read Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs

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  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 296

  • @SideQuestYT
    @SideQuestYT  Před 8 měsíci +56

    A big thank you to Speakly for supporting our adventures across history! Try Speakly for free for 7 days, and get a 60% discount if you join the annual subscription: speakly.app.link/sidequest

  • @saladmcjones7798
    @saladmcjones7798 Před 8 měsíci +235

    I love the idea of a once enthusiastic and sophisticated scribe being relegated to inscribing redundant hieroglyphics thinking "I'm a poet surrounded by idiots..."

    • @skidelrymar
      @skidelrymar Před 7 měsíci +7

      in british english sounds better

  • @tywinlannister8015
    @tywinlannister8015 Před 7 měsíci +207

    As someone who actually learned to decipher those as part of training in Egyptology and Assyriology, this is fairly accurate, although I would add the following important information to what was said.
    As stated, the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics were in use for three millennia. Naturally, like every language, it was subjected to language drift. The way they were written, the rules of language, and even the vocabulary shifted in that time.
    So when translating hieroglyphics, you have to understand that scholars typically don't treat them as a single language, for it would be as nonsensical as trying to match say French with Latin. Similar but different enough to cause problems.
    So you separate these in Old Egyptian, Middle Egyptian, Late Egyptian. Roughly, Old Egyptian is the pyramid texts (Old Kingdom). Middle Egyptian matches the apex of Egyptian culture (Middle Kingdom) coinciding with the Ramesside epoch which saw an incredibly large production of written material in hieroglyphics, and Late Egyptian pretty much what was found on the Rosetta stone and things of that era.
    That still covers centuries each time. But it is already more reliable and accurate than just treating the language as singular. It evolved a lot naturally, especially with external influences.

    • @vale.antoni
      @vale.antoni Před 7 měsíci +5

      Does this explain the inconsistencies with reading direction, or is that not an aspect language drift would change? (I guess Latin did stay in their lane for the past 2000 or so years)

    • @tywinlannister8015
      @tywinlannister8015 Před 7 měsíci +19

      @@vale.antoni Actually it does not. The reading direction is as far as I am aware, still a mystery.
      It seems relatively safe to assume that "searching for the direction the figure is looking" is not the way the people of that era figured it out.
      So there is most likely a contextual elemental that has been overlooked, but so far that's the best we have.

    • @lahma69
      @lahma69 Před 7 měsíci +7

      Wow, it's pretty awesome to have insight from someone who actually studied the Egyptian language. Thanks for providing the additional info and context!

    • @simpledev6066
      @simpledev6066 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yeah, thanks for explaining it to us.

    • @leroygardner8529
      @leroygardner8529 Před 7 měsíci

      ive never seen someone so wrong before

  • @ISoldßinLadensViagraOnEbayఔ
    @ISoldßinLadensViagraOnEbayఔ Před 8 měsíci +573

    As an Egyptian Pharaoh who ruled 2 slaves and 1 palm tree at my heyday during 420 BC (and proud landowner of a 2 meter tall pyramid for 7 minutes until it was used as a nuclear testing site for the USSR), I can confirm that your video is accurate.

  • @isaacbarrett3511
    @isaacbarrett3511 Před 8 měsíci +85

    The progression of language is always an interesting matter to consider. We often take speech and a written language for granted, but it has been key to the development of civilization and more.

  • @samanthahardy9903
    @samanthahardy9903 Před 8 měsíci +118

    This reminds me of a history class project we did at school back in the 1980's. We were all tasked with creating a mini newspaper from the perspective of Egyptions long ago. Everyone wrote articles in different scripts. It was a lot of fun creating our own hieroglyphics.

    • @Pibola64
      @Pibola64 Před 8 měsíci +5

      wait, so you didn't use the actual hieroglyphs, just made up your own?
      boy that doesn't sound frustrating to read at all 🙂

  • @kayerin5749
    @kayerin5749 Před 7 měsíci +33

    I remember at school we were assigned to read "The Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkien (which I thought was pronounced "Irr" Tolkien because of the font used to print his name!) Anyway I was intrigued by the language printed around the end sheet papers of the book, and set out to translate them. I was delighted to find that they made sense in English! I don't think I could do it today (it's been about 60 years!) but of course now I know that Professor Tolkien's mastery was not just literature but language as well. In fact I understand that he and his brother had invented worlds and languages to play with as children!

  • @erreryhj
    @erreryhj Před 8 měsíci +88

    I'm Egyptian, we still use words from the ancient Egyptian language in our dialect of Arabic, the most common example is the word for woman, in Arabic its "imra'ah" but in our dialect we say "set" which means woman but in the ancient Egyptian language

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před 8 měsíci +3

      Better write those down for science lol

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 8 měsíci +13

      Honestly, every so often I just so happen on a link between a Coptic word and an Egyptian Arabic one, and my mind gets blown. It helps that I am an Egyptian with Coptic proficiency, of course. That said, many of these are possibly coincidental, but if the meanings line up, and I can't see how the Arabic word is actually formal Arabic, then it's not unlikely that the Arabic word originates in the Coptic one. For example, I just so happened on the word "forg" (ϥⲱⲣϫ, I believe) that is very similar to Egyptian vernacular, both having some sense of "view" or "watchable" (I'm being very rough in translation).

    • @danielbarry5547
      @danielbarry5547 Před 7 měsíci +4

      ​Arabic I believe comes from the demotic script, I dont think muslims had a script until they reached Egypt and they used the demotic form to create their own. Shoot I just found out there's a ton of different types of Arabic

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 7 měsíci +8

      @@danielbarry5547 this is easy to refute if you've ever heard of the Nabatean script, a natively arabian script from around modern Jordan that predates Islam by at least a century. It's far from the only one, too, it just so happens to be eerily similar to modern Arabic script.

    • @danielbarry5547
      @danielbarry5547 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@minamagdy4126 I see what you mean, all three looked alike!

  • @someonerandom704
    @someonerandom704 Před 8 měsíci +15

    Chinese works like this sorta with its phonosemantic compounds. 時, 侍, and 詩 for instance all mean completely different things but are pronounced similarly to 寺

  • @LucaLameire
    @LucaLameire Před 5 měsíci +11

    I’ve been learning this for two years, so proud to be able to read this. Now i can finally understand the emojis my egyptian friend sends me

    • @OublietteTight
      @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci +2

      I heard somewhere that the modern study of emojis is being taken seriously because of its potential translation problems within disputes in court cases. I thought it was a BS story, but apparently people are using emojis instead of words in situations that are beyond just sending funny texts. The world is a crazy place sometimes. 😅
      p.s. adding a joke...
      Some people actually just like eggplant. Real eggplant. Like for food. 😂

  • @user-qm8qc9fx5k
    @user-qm8qc9fx5k Před 8 měsíci +63

    It's also important to note that not havings simbols for vowels was quite common in tge middle east. You can see it also in hebrew and arabic for example

    • @williamvunga7397
      @williamvunga7397 Před 7 měsíci

      Why is that?

    • @MalekitGJ
      @MalekitGJ Před 7 měsíci +6

      ​@@williamvunga7397i think it has to do with the idea that "Consonants" at the time were viewed as whole "Syllables".
      Like in Spanish: B(be) C(se) F(efe) S(ese) M(em) L(el) etc.

    • @el_ias2094
      @el_ias2094 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@MalekitGJ but the spanish letters don't represent syllables, only single phonemes... Many languages use several phonemes to spell a specific letter, that doesn't mean that they represent whole syllables

    • @MalekitGJ
      @MalekitGJ Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@el_ias2094 i know rational thinking is becoming a scarce resource but:
      Really? Think about what i wrote and how the Spanish alphabet "pronounce" those consonants, now extrapolate to how this would be similar to how ancient people through about their own written language.

    • @clumbus894
      @clumbus894 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​​@@williamvunga7397The Afroasiatic languages all share a unique feature of consonant "stems" in words, where you use the same set of consonants for an idea and then swap out the vowels for the different words or conjugations and what have you. So "ktb" is "writing" and kitab is the word for book. They also generally have a low number of vowels (arabic has like, 3). Then you can just recognize the words because of context.

  • @nikirangga
    @nikirangga Před 6 měsíci +6

    As an indonesian, i thank you for providing knowledge about the origins of our ancient script, which comes from Brahmi. And our ancient script are Kawi, Javanese, Lontara, old sundanese & Sundanese

  • @XtremeNation69
    @XtremeNation69 Před 8 měsíci +79

    I can finally become an archeologist without college debt

    • @RipRLeeErmey
      @RipRLeeErmey Před 8 měsíci +3

      Better off an Egyptologist. Archaeology is a tad too broad.

    • @momoosSVK
      @momoosSVK Před 8 měsíci

      @@RipRLeeErmey Egyptology is a pyramid scheme. You learn it, realize its useless, study for PhD, teach others.

    • @NL-ws5fv
      @NL-ws5fv Před 8 měsíci +3

      As a real archeologist working for an environmental solutions firm, I recommend looking into getting the credentials anyway. That's what anyone cares about, sadly.

    • @NL-ws5fv
      @NL-ws5fv Před 8 měsíci

      Still, I feel for you for not accumulating the college debt. 😅

    • @ryuunosuk3
      @ryuunosuk3 Před 8 měsíci

      hahahahahaha, funny, debt, student, american, funny american kid with college debt, funny, upvote for you funny american kid, you are funny

  • @NoisqueVoaProduction
    @NoisqueVoaProduction Před 7 měsíci +13

    Just one small add on the writing sequence (from left to right (L2R) or right to left (R2L), there is also the boustrophedon way, where you alternate from one to the other each line, like a "snake". That way, it minimizes the length of your eyes reading it.
    Also, Egypcians could write so that 2 texts faced the center of the temple, for aesthetic reasons.

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademy Před 8 měsíci +11

    ~9:55 Nfr was probably pronounced something like "Nafir" in Old Egyptian and "Nafi'" in Middle Egyptian, "Nefer" is Egyptological pronunciation. Egyptological pronunciation is not meant to be accurate, it just fills in the vowel spaces with a default "e" to make it easier to read Egyptian words out-loud without knowing how they were originally said.

  • @zeb9302
    @zeb9302 Před 8 měsíci +16

    Reminds me of the little bit of Japanese I've studied: phonetic characters (two sets of them!) mixed with logographic kanji, which sometimes have the pronunciations written next to them if the kanji is thought to be too obscure.

  • @vincentclark5739
    @vincentclark5739 Před 7 měsíci +5

    I’m glad I was busy for a while so now I can come back and binge multiple videos from this channel. I love the narrator and animations. They chose interesting topics as well!

  • @acestillwell98
    @acestillwell98 Před 7 měsíci +7

    This is pretty close to how Old Norse runes work as well. There was no defined spelling at first, and was pretty much sounded out, but the Futhark runes aren't meant for Norse, and because of that, spoken runes do not sound like Norse. For example, a popular variation of the runes lacked a G sound, so they just used a K. the Old Norse word for king is konungr, but if you seen it in runes, it would sound like kunukR (the R is stressed). So if you take something written in runes and SPEAK in those runes, it'll sound mostly like gibberish.
    Writting in Old Norse does have a few weird rules, one of which I know of is you don't write the same rune twice in a row in a word. Like the name Gunnfús in Runes would only be spelled k-u-n-f-u-s in runes. Theres no real reason we know of why they do it, but I'm willing to bet its to save time and space.

  • @louvendran7273
    @louvendran7273 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Priceless 😂😂. I grew up on the backend of Empire. His wit, humour & charm takes me back.

  • @chrisguy210
    @chrisguy210 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I find it pleasantly fitting that I could actually imagine a posh Victorian gentleman give a talk on a subject like “the history of hieroglyphics”

  • @rsfaeges5298
    @rsfaeges5298 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I think that my knowledge of hieroglyphs has increased by an order of magnitude thanks to this video! And there i thought that Sidequest videos--which ive misses greatly--were just for fun!

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Nice look into this ancient language

  • @FrostyFrostySnow
    @FrostyFrostySnow Před 7 měsíci +3

    Big fan of Ancient Egypt and Side Quest (also those jokes at the end made me chuckle)

  • @mkk3a
    @mkk3a Před 7 měsíci +1

    One of the best videos on CZcams about the hieroglyphs.

  • @henkkaj73
    @henkkaj73 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Another absolutely fascinating SideQuest story! Thank you, can't wait for the next one!

  • @Lukasaske
    @Lukasaske Před 8 měsíci +2

    9:05 'Wildly inconsistent' is another way to say 'artistic' 😏

  • @everythingomnia5843
    @everythingomnia5843 Před 4 měsíci

    Honestly one of the best most educational videos I have ever watched. And I recently survived going thru chem in college and passed Organic Chem 2.

  • @aramisdagaz9
    @aramisdagaz9 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I’ve read somewhere that Egyptologists get around the lack of vowels in written Egyptian by adding an “e” when in doubt. If it seems like some ancient Egyptian words or names have a lot of e’s, they’re technically just placeholders for vowels.

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 8 měsíci +3

      This is very similar to Coptic's symbol "jenkim", which by default has an e sound (it is the Coptic symbol for a glottal stop, attaching to the letter after it as an apostrophe. It carries the following letter's sound if it is a vowel, and is otherwise a preceding e sound, at least in Lower Egyptian Coptic). I bet that this is from where the tradition began in modern academia, although I doubt the veracity of it being original ancient pronounciation at the frequency that it is used.
      Fun fact, the same happens whenever even a modern Egyptian feels that there are too few vowels, which happens to be a lot due to the frequency of vowels that Arabic speakers expect to pronounce (abjad scripts tend to do that to you). Since we don't feel comfortable with 2 consonant sounds in a row except separated by a syllable break (mostly), we tend to add e sounds all over the word in pronounciations, even where the pronounciation becomes incorrect, such as in a foreign language. For example, "spicy" may be rendered as "esbicy" or "sebicy". Funnily enough, this happens even to Coptic itself, as, much like other alphabet languages, it wasn't designed for the Arabic speaker to always be comfortable pronouncing it correctly. This tends to the addition of apocryphal jenkims. By the way, this trend exists with non-Egyptian Arabs as well, and may well be independent of Egyptian culture.

    • @OublietteTight
      @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci +1

      I studied thru art history instead of languages. I have noticed that the vowel choices have changed over a couple modern decades. Amen became Amun, for example.

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I didn't recognize "oodj-ah" when you said it, but I did recognize the hieroglyphs as part of "`anx, wdja, sneb".

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci +1

    An art professor taught me that the direction of the writing and etched figures had to do with how a surface was approached. When entering a decorated space it would be wrong to have anything displayed backwards. Heading inside a tomb for example, reading starts from where you start...
    So on your right, the figures face right. In the left, they face left. In both cases, you start reading from what is closest. To them it made no sense to go inside then read toward the exit. Especially if the intended reader is the tomb occupant. The dead person would be heading inside only once. The words and pictures might be prayers or instructions on how to deal with Anubis or Ammit, among many other challenges. No one wants to be heading into the afterlife having read backwards, half the cheat sheet as complete, jibberish. There is no telling the beasts and demons... oh wait. I need to go back out and read the other half of my tomb.
    A big modern issue with understanding this was that so many pieces of ancient Egyptian art was yanked out of their original locations.
    It was also probably considered rude to turn backwards to the Pharaoh. Etched figures, be they little birds or great big deities were meant to greet the ruler face to face. Gods do not hand out tickets to eternity backwards. Everything on the walls faced the entry to face the approaching dead. A God with its back turned is not handing you an ankh.

  • @muhammadazrilnaufalmakmur
    @muhammadazrilnaufalmakmur Před 8 měsíci +19

    i learned Sundanese and Javanese in school, too! The alphabet was quite complicated, but nice

    • @raidernation2163
      @raidernation2163 Před 8 měsíci

      Are you from Jakarta?

    • @muhammadazrilnaufalmakmur
      @muhammadazrilnaufalmakmur Před 7 měsíci

      @raidernation2163 Bogor to be precise, but my place are kinda weird, it stands on 3 city border, Bogor, Bekasi, and Jakarta

  • @XoLiTlz
    @XoLiTlz Před 8 měsíci +3

    So you're saying that beauty could be pronounced 25 different ways, including Nafar, Nifir, Nofor, and Nufur, but we just chose Nefer?

  • @TheDerpyDeed
    @TheDerpyDeed Před 8 měsíci +3

    "the christians burned all non-christian temples"
    "After the Islamic conquest the christians let Coptic survive as a liturgical language - Yay christianity"
    ...we forgot about the first part VERY quickly...

    • @thechief00
      @thechief00 Před 7 měsíci

      yeah, i usually like this guy's videos but he inserted his own personal religious beliefs into this one way too much.

  • @mester9648
    @mester9648 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I Love your voice, it is so calming.

  • @wawrzynieckorzen78
    @wawrzynieckorzen78 Před 8 měsíci +12

    Well, when it comes to pronunciation we cannot tell exactly - we know that it changed during millenia even in Latin. So modern Latin, medieval Latin or classical Latin sounded different despite using almost the same spelling. Luckily we can trace this evolution.

  • @ahmadganteng7435
    @ahmadganteng7435 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Glad that Jawi, Kawi, Sundaneese and javanese (hanacaraka) is recognized..
    I study hanacaraka for 4 years in elementary and junior high school.
    But never mastered it.. Too bad..

    • @ahmadganteng7435
      @ahmadganteng7435 Před 8 měsíci

      @@muhammadazrilnaufalmakmur Nah, senasib..
      Meski kita nyampai dilevel medioker.. Tapi kan kita sudah ikut berperan aktif melestarikan.. He he he

  • @justokproductions222
    @justokproductions222 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Side quest continues to make amazing videos!

  • @SirKenchalot
    @SirKenchalot Před 8 měsíci +23

    The only reason to learn Egyptian hieroglyphs is to teach it to other people; in other words, it's a pyramid scheme.

  • @notthefbi7932
    @notthefbi7932 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Couldn't come with a good-it's all Greek to me joke 😁
    Great video clearing up how Egyptians complicated their own language 😁

  • @TheMegazonyx
    @TheMegazonyx Před 7 měsíci +1

    Nefer made me imagine the word mirror...
    As in reflect or observe...

  • @Firetoicee
    @Firetoicee Před 8 měsíci +2

    favorite video ever

  • @RipRLeeErmey
    @RipRLeeErmey Před 8 měsíci +1

    2:42 the most zased sentence spoken on this channel.
    Jokes aside, lovely video!

  • @Lass412
    @Lass412 Před 7 měsíci +2

    God, I love this channel

  • @EconGun
    @EconGun Před 8 měsíci +2

    Something on Pahlavi or Cuneiform please!

  • @akshit_sharma1
    @akshit_sharma1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    This early hoorah!!

  • @Durahan82
    @Durahan82 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Good Show 🧐

  • @awesomehpt8938
    @awesomehpt8938 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Now we know how to talk like an Egyptian I want to walk like an Egyptian

  • @TheGreatMasos
    @TheGreatMasos Před 8 měsíci +1

    A good day to start off with a SideQuest video.

  • @atum
    @atum Před 3 měsíci

    Good work
    Thanks

  • @somejerkbag
    @somejerkbag Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hmmm... i didn't know it was phonetic. Great vid 😊

  • @elizabethhowe2110
    @elizabethhowe2110 Před 6 měsíci +4

    They should rename the title. I would actually like to learn the hieroglyphics, not wait until the end to hear that I just wasted my time, sitting thru a cartoon

    • @longsnoutpug7248
      @longsnoutpug7248 Před 2 měsíci

      You said it,so condescending towards us curious beans

  • @joaofranciscoalvesborges6789

    Good show sidequest. Have my thumbs up as usual...

  • @saarl
    @saarl Před 8 měsíci +2

    Definetly was fascinated by hieroglyphs as a kid but have since switched to glagolitic, greek and runes. Love writing texts with them as is just has a great look to it and might get into some more scripts to comprise a text of all sorts of glyphs.
    Maybe we can get a video on the history of the cyrilic writing system? It is quite an interesting topic and if theres a video about hierohlyphs might as well go through other writing systems.

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci

    Re: inside verses outside art... context matters. I cannot tell the meaning of an ibis verses a goose, but there were intentional differences when the priests saw hieroglyphics inside verses the public outside. The temple walls included secret sacred instructions inside. Outside was propaganda.
    This is useful for items that are no longer in their original location in modern times. Script meant for the temple workers daily temple jobs with the Deities or meant for a tomb has a very different intent then something outside for the unwashed masses to view but not read. Such differences have a massive influence on context and therefore can help inform scholars like yourself on just what the heck they are trying to translate.
    Light is/was the major factor in this simple difference. Outside light in Egypt is harsh, unforgiving, it can make a surface tough to read. When looking at a pale beige wall with slightly raised details under the unrelenting sun they can just disappear. External carvings were incised, not raised. With an incised edge done deeply enough, there will always be a shadow that remains visible.
    But inside... incising is a nightmare to read. The spaces are already super dark, black even. Pushing a carving deep into a wall and adding more shadow while reading under flickering torch light will not work. Interior carvings were bumped up off the wall surface. They were raised, rounded subtly, meant to catch the low light and possibly appear to spring to life. Being raised made them readable and magically empowered.
    So so so many works of art were pulled out of their original locations before archeology became less of a rich hobby and now is about science. It helps that the ancient Egyptian sun was consistently overwhelming... verses the absolute blackness of a tomb. Ra and Kek be praised. 😊

  • @lucieciepka1031
    @lucieciepka1031 Před 8 měsíci

    This is a very very elaborate add!

  • @darriansea
    @darriansea Před 8 měsíci

    Lots of great information in this

  • @stephenlennon76
    @stephenlennon76 Před 8 měsíci

    Hooray for SideQuest

  • @PakBallandSami
    @PakBallandSami Před 8 měsíci +4

    “Very often conditions are recorded as observable "under thy fingers" [...] Among such observations it is important to notice that the pulsations of the human heart are observed.”
    ― James Henry Breasted,

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci

    ​​​@tywinlannister8015
    It is fascinating to read your information being shared by a word smith. Perspective is a beautiful thing. I cannot read hieroglyphics. Instead, I studied these same sources from the view point of art. I wish I could read the words as well as the pictures. I can explain why Tut's tomb has ancient mold in the paint, or why the head dresses got fancier a time passed, but I often feel illiterate. Thank you. 😊

  • @pun5925
    @pun5925 Před 8 měsíci +1

    legendary

  • @mentalshatter
    @mentalshatter Před 8 měsíci +3

    10:18 Pot, meet kettle.

  • @j_d_w
    @j_d_w Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks Soeakly for sponsoring this video. These video’s are really good. Why would I need an annual subscription when I can be fluent in a language in 3 months? I really doubt myself on learning 4 languages in a year.

  • @lester1016
    @lester1016 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I don't get why you don't have more subscribers. Great videos!

  • @savagepro9060
    @savagepro9060 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Sorry Apple, ancient Egyptians used tablets long before you! In fact, nearby, the Ten Commandments were actually written on TWO tablets---God-Inspired! Moses broke the first and had to return for the second. Thank God, again, they were wireless!

  • @zombie_snax
    @zombie_snax Před 8 měsíci +1

    "Nefaar" means beauty, but sounds like the perfect name for a Disney villain 😂❤

  • @R-Tex.
    @R-Tex. Před 7 měsíci +3

    Still, easier than english😂

  • @timothytanbonliong
    @timothytanbonliong Před 2 měsíci

    I know some hieroglyphics horned viper,lake,unknown,shelter,loaf of bread,folded cloth,vulture,quail chick,reed leaf,stool,hot stand,fore arm,leg,hand,mouth,rope,hobble rope,owl,hillside,basket,snake,cow belly,water,double reed leaf,door bolt,

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci +1

    ​​@julianr2736 sort of... Cuneiform. You asked about other Rosetta like stones creating big break thoughs? It is not a single big revealing stone, but cuneiform is finally being translated. It was so hard to read because it is not a single language.
    Apparently, it is a purely phonetic script used for several languages.
    A "P" sound is a P sound. T is a T, etc.
    So in cuneiform, the scribe could hear a Sumerian say NuT... and write that down. They could next hear a Egyptian say NuT, same thing, same spelling... but the Sumerian might mean a seed from a tree, while the Egyptian with the same sounds meant the primordial sky goddess of creation, Ra's mother (the Milkyway).
    Context is everything. There are a lot of cuneiform tablets that still need translating and I am not sure what languages are included. Above was just an example. Seems like AI is letting us finally read the clay tablets.

    • @lardgedarkrooster6371
      @lardgedarkrooster6371 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I think we've been deciphering cuneiform for a long time now, and have made big strides in it. Cueniform I heard is mostly part Syllabic and part Ideographic (contrast with Egyptian which is part Abjad and part ideographic). However, this of course depends on the language you're reading. Ugaritic for example is purely an Abjad, but Sumerian, Akkadian, and Persian I believe use Syllabics. I was taught the big breakthrough for deciphering Cuneiform was finding tablets in Persian and working our way through (especially using names, much like for Egyptian). Persian is still spoken today (with many changes ofc), so that was really lucky. Then we're working our way through Akkadian which although it's extinct, it was a Semitic language, so had many cousins still alive today (Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic, Amharic, etc.). Then we're working our way through Sumerian, which is probably a bit harder due to it being an Isolate (not known to be related to any other language). This is of course oversimplified and likely outdated, so I suggest you do your own reading on it

    • @OublietteTight
      @OublietteTight Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@lardgedarkrooster6371 Influential Sumerian had no derivative languages? Wild.

    • @OublietteTight
      @OublietteTight Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@lardgedarkrooster6371 , greetings. You are right, experts (above my pay grade) have been translating cuneiform for a while now. I will not give that credit to AI. What does excite me about AI in this case is the sheer volume of cuneiform tablets that have not been translated yet. Still so much to learn. 😊
      p.s. Took your advice. Began studying Sumeria specifically. Fascinating. Their potential origins especially. Thank you.

    • @lardgedarkrooster6371
      @lardgedarkrooster6371 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@OublietteTight yep. It was gradually replaced by Akkadian (a Semitic language), and then that was replaced mainly by Aramaic, which was replaced mainly by Arabic. A bit sad that Sumerian is no longer spoken but I'm glad linguists are relearning it and glad you took my advice. I hope you find it as interesting as I do

    • @OublietteTight
      @OublietteTight Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@lardgedarkrooster6371 I do find it quite interesting. I am only a history hobbyist, not a professional. My angle of approach is thru art history. The accomplishments of these ancient peoples are wonderful. I often find it frustrating that so much that is dug up is assumed to have religious contexts. The finding of recipes is so refreshing to me. Real people used cuneiform for real life... and we get to hear from them ages later? Again, wonderful.
      The educated guess that the Sumerian people came from a location that is now far beneath sea water has my curiosity peaked. How much of their advanced ideas were actually old for them? We may never know, but trying to find out is so worth the effort.
      p.s. my real passion is investigating other early homonid species, especially Neanderthals. How did they communicate? And 1000+ other questions.

  • @MileHiGuy95
    @MileHiGuy95 Před 8 měsíci

    This reminds me of Really Wild Animals with Dudley Moore

  • @Peydonary
    @Peydonary Před 7 měsíci

    wow, wild. so interesting

  • @Ryan197_
    @Ryan197_ Před 8 měsíci +1

    I love egypt

  • @Bruh-cg2fk
    @Bruh-cg2fk Před 26 dny

    can I learn coptic with speakly?

  • @clearviewmoai
    @clearviewmoai Před 8 měsíci

    In all likelihood hieroglyphs probably evolved to mean different things at different times, especially after the introduction of Greek, thus making it near impossible to know exactly what they meant depending on the era.

  • @WispyKatt
    @WispyKatt Před 8 měsíci

    Interesting!

  • @Germanpussi
    @Germanpussi Před 8 měsíci

    Nicee i love the ancient history , is really crazy the Mummy we're used for train 🚂 fuel , medicine 🧪 or paint ...

  • @catoelder4696
    @catoelder4696 Před 7 měsíci

    AWESOME

  • @Rosfuture
    @Rosfuture Před 8 měsíci

    and how factor the Goa'uld into this?

  • @74jparralel38
    @74jparralel38 Před 7 měsíci

    Yes

  • @marcwilliamsvaldez9328
    @marcwilliamsvaldez9328 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Babe wake up, sidequest droped a vid, lets goooo

  • @RealBelisariusCawl
    @RealBelisariusCawl Před 4 měsíci

    4:00 Yes, as all things eventually do for some reason, it wound up in Britain.
    God save the ̶Q̶u̶e̶e̶n̶ King.
    (I’ll never get used to that.)

  • @babbelfisch789
    @babbelfisch789 Před 8 měsíci

    10:05 the scribes probably charged by the hieroglyph?

  • @escobasingracia962
    @escobasingracia962 Před 8 měsíci

    3:23 don't know how many layers of irony that is

  • @irelandcountryball271
    @irelandcountryball271 Před 8 měsíci

    love you

  • @jerolvilladolid
    @jerolvilladolid Před 7 měsíci +1

    Considering practically no ancient egyptian can read, even the Pharoah. Heiroglyphics is more akin to vandalism on walls than a written language.

  • @akaros96
    @akaros96 Před 7 měsíci

    EPIC VIDEO ! NEXT: GREEK

  • @mistmanjones3555
    @mistmanjones3555 Před 8 měsíci

    I can feel myself becoming smarter while watching this video

  • @OublietteTight
    @OublietteTight Před 4 měsíci

    p.s. Hieroglyphs = big state art in stone
    Hieratic = Formal documents on papyrus
    Demotic = short hand, quick notes, inventories, on whatever is handy
    Coptic = "It's all Greek to me"
    Super oversimplified. Wink.

  • @Easy8_
    @Easy8_ Před 7 měsíci

    I enjoyed the video but the background music, *especially* after the 5 minute mark, was really really awful. It was okay at first but eventually it kind of overpowered the rest of the video.

  • @CreateTeen
    @CreateTeen Před 4 měsíci

    been a while since this video. hope everything is ok

  • @ItsMeTexx
    @ItsMeTexx Před 8 měsíci

    After all these millennia evolving languages we now going back to the logogramic language

  • @CARL_093
    @CARL_093 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks bro
    Can you do a video on asian kingdoms or empires

  • @jlvfr
    @jlvfr Před 8 měsíci +1

    If you want to know how ancient egypcian sounded, just watch the movie _Stargate_ 😎

  • @elysiaroberts
    @elysiaroberts Před 7 měsíci

    It's funny that their writing is so similar to how I take notes.

  • @zch7491
    @zch7491 Před 8 měsíci +1

    "Reformed Egyptian"

  • @pyeitme508
    @pyeitme508 Před 8 měsíci

    Wow

  • @Hayet-jb2sd
    @Hayet-jb2sd Před 6 měsíci

    Taoua that's means que les veritables descendants des pheraons en egypte c'est les coptes et les autres la majorite mnin jaou elhmoums

  • @docstockandbarrel
    @docstockandbarrel Před 7 měsíci

    👍🏻

  • @TimEd.o7o7
    @TimEd.o7o7 Před 7 měsíci

    The ad blurb about Speakly sounds like it actually is useful as a foreign language learning tool compared to that owl scammer. Any Speakly users have any feedback about it?

  • @alexander-kirk
    @alexander-kirk Před 6 měsíci

    Hold on...did I just see you say that Korean Hangul came from Tibetan Phags Pa? Snapping my fingers everywhere in the air right now ತ⁠_⁠ತ

  • @yuanhaiming
    @yuanhaiming Před 3 měsíci +1

    It can be used as a reference for my exam.