Learning Egyptian Hieroglyphs - Lesson 3 (Part I)
by Caroline Seawright

Biliteral Signs

Combinations of two consonants (biliteral signs) are of great importance in Egyptian writing.

Here are some signs with a as the second consonant:

`a `a
pa pa
cha cha
sa, sa (old) sa
ta ta
wa wa
ma ma
ha ha
sha sha
tha tha
ba ba
ha ha
sa sa
ka ka
dja dja

Phonetic Complements

The biliteral signs (and triliteral signs) are almost always accompanied by alphabetic signs that express part or the whole of their sound value.

This means that shaa is read as sha, not shaa. (shaa would be written as shaaa!)

These alphabetic signs, used in that way, are called Phonetic Complements.

The way of combining these signs varies, but from our list above, these signs follow the pattern used by shaa:

wa, ma, ha, ka, tha and dja.

The others, apart from `a, have a pattern where the two consonants surround the biliteral (the first consonant before the biliteral, the second after), as in bbaa ba (not bbaa).

`a uses this pattern: a`a (though a` is also used).

These patterns come through intuitive practise of Egyptian writing.

Although uncommon, there are some words with an absence of the phonetic complements, seen in such words as cha cha 'a thousand', sa stroke determinativeman determinative sa 'son', bakman determinative bak 'servant' and katman carrying basket determinative kat 'work, construction'.

Personal Pronouns

Personal Pronouns appear in several different forms:

  1. Suffix pronouns
  2. Dependant pronouns
  3. Independent pronouns
These will be explained further on and in another lesson.

Suffix Pronouns

Suffixes must follow a preceding word. Here are the ones we will be learning in this lesson:

SuffixHieroglyphSoundMeanings
Singular 1man determinative*y1, me, my
        also femininewoman determinative 
        kings sometimes usehawk determinative, king determinative, god determinative 
Singular 2, masculinek*kThou, thee, thy
Singular 2, feminineth*tshThou, thee, thy
        later on, alsot*t 
Singular 3, masculinef*fHe, him, his, it, its
Singular 3, feminines*sShe, her, hers, its
        later on, alsos*s 
Plural 1n three strokes determinative*nWe, us, our
Plural 2tshn three strokes determinative, tshn*tshnYou, your
        ortshn three strokes determinative, tshn*tn 
Plural 3sn three strokes determinative, sn; s, s three strokes determinative*sn< /i>They, them, their
        orsn three strokes determinative, sn; s three strokes determinative*sn 
Plural 3w three strokes determinative*wThey, them, their
        later onw three strokes determinative*w 
Dual 1n two slash determinative1*nyWe two, us two, our
Dual 2thn two slash determinative1*tshnyYou two, your
Dual 3sn two slash determinative1*snyThey two, their

1 These became obsolete.

Chief Uses of Suffix Pronouns

  1. As genitive after nouns, with the sense of our possessive adjectives.
    Eg. pr stroke determinativef pr*f 'his house' ('house of him'/'a house of his'); nywt stroke determinativesn three strokes determinative nywt*sn 'their town' ('town of them')
  2. After prepositions.
    Eg. n man determinative n*y 'to me'; hn`s hn`*s 'together with her'
  3. As nominative with the simple tenses of the verb.
    Eg. djdk djd*k 'thou sayest'; ear determinativemntsh sdjm*m*tsh 'thou (fem) hast heard'
'Myself', 'Thyself', Etc

In Egyptian there are no special reflexive pronouns. This means that djdfnf djd*f n*f could mean 'he says to himself'.

For emphatic 'myself', 'thyself', etc, we can use djs djs*, later on written as djs with the appended suffix.

This is found:

  1. After nouns, as in sun determinative stroke determinativegod determinativedjsf R` djs*f 'Ra (in person) himself'
  2. To strengthen a suffix when used as a genitive, eg. rnman determinativedjsman determinative rn*y djs*y 'my own name'
  3. Adverbially, with the meaning 'by ones own effort', eg. sncross determinative legs determinativenkqrtwood determinative three stroke determinativedjs three stroke determinativesn three stroke determinative sn n*k qrwt djs*sn 'the bolts open to thee by themselves'
In later times, 'myself', 'thyself', etc, are regularly paraphrased by h` flesh determinativeIII determinativeman determinative h`w*y or h` flesh determinativeIII determinativek h`w*k (literally 'my (thy) members').

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