Egyptian Language


Hieroglyphs without Mystery: An Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Writing
Hieroglyphics: The Writings of Ancient Egypt
Middle Egyptian Grammar
Hieroglyphic Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Literature of the Middle Kingdom
Introduction to Middle Egyptian Grammar Through Ancient Writings
The Riddle of the Rosetta: How an English Polymath and a French Polyglot Discovered the Meaning of Egyptian Hieroglyphs
The Dawning Moon of the Mind: Unlocking the Pyramid Texts
Sacred Signs: Hieroglyphs in Ancient Egypt
The Myth of Egypt and Its Hieroglyphs in European Tradition
Hieroglyphs: A Very Short Introduction
Grandiloquent Words: A Pictoric Lexicon of Ostrobogulous Locutions
A Collection of Hieroglyphs: A contribution to the history of Egyptian writing
Stories of the high priests of Memphis; the Sethon of Herodotus and the demotic tales of Khamuas
Cracking Codes: The Rosetta Stone and Decipherment
Fundamentals of Egyptian Grammar, I: Elements (reprint with Minor Additions and Corrections)
Fritz Leiber
But Anra was far cleverer than I at reading. He loved letters as passionately as I did the outside. For him, they were alive. I remember shim showing me some Egyptian hieroglyphs and telling me that they were all animals and insects. And then he showed me some Egyptian hieratics and demotics and told me those were the same animals in disguise. But Hebrew, he said, was best of all, for each letter was a magic charm.
Fritz Leiber, Swords in the Mist

Hermes Trismegistus
But this discourse, expressed in our paternal language, keeps clear the meaning of its words. The very quality of speech and of the Egyptian words have in themselves the energy of the object they speak of. Therefore, my king, in so far as you have the power (who are all powerful), keep the discourse uninterpreted, lest mysteries of such greatness come to the Greeks, lest the extravagant, flaccid and (as it were) dandified Greek idiom extinguish something stately and concise, the energetic idiom ...more
Hermes Trismegistus, Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius

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