-
Semitic linguistics that a
large majority of
these consonantal roots are
triliterals (although
there are a
number of quadriliterals, and in some languages...
- was
written with a
unique triliteral that was read as nfr: However, it is
considerably more
common to add to that
triliteral, the
uniliterals for f and...
-
Unsourced material may be
challenged and removed. Find sources: "Egyptian
triliteral signs" – news · newspapers · books · scholar ·
JSTOR (September 2024)...
-
verbal noun of Form IV
originating from the verb سلم (salama), from the
triliteral root س-ل-م (S-L-M),
which forms a
large class of
words mostly relating...
- A
Carroll diagram,
Lewis Carroll's square,
biliteral diagram or a two-way
table is a
diagram used for
grouping things in a yes/no fashion.
Numbers or objects...
-
subsets of hieroglyphs:
Determinatives Uniliteral signs Biliteral signs Triliteral signs Egyptian numerals Egyptian hieroglyphs Transliteration of Ancient...
- nine. The
basic word in Egyptian,
similar to
Semitic and Berber, is a
triliteral or
biliteral root of
consonants and semiconsonants.
Suffixes are added...
- 'festival', 'celebration', 'feast day', or 'holiday'. The word عيد is a
triliteral root (ʕ-y-d), with ****ociated root
meanings of "to go back, to rescind...
-
closest English translation is 'holy' or 'sacred'. (It
shares the same
triliteral Semitic root, Q-D-Š, as the
Hebrew kodesh.)
Another use of the same root...
- ḥajj is
similar to the Hebrew: חג ḥag,
which means "festival", from the
triliteral Semitic root ح-ج-ج. The term was used to
refer to the
three pilgrimage...