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A letter is a symbol that represents a sound or idea in written language.
The word "enough" can be divided into 4 sounds phonetically as /ɪˈnʌf/. Each symbol represents a different sound in the word.
No, There is no connection between the writing of Ancient Egypt and the writing of China.However, both systems have a similarity: they are both picture writing (also callled pictographic or logographic writing), where one symbol represents a whole word or idea instead of a sound.
The word "bee" has two phonemes: /b/ and /i/. The /b/ sound represents the initial consonant sound, while the /i/ sound represents the vowel sound.
It is wrong to think that the ancient Egyptian writing system had a symbol for each word - there were very few signs that worked like that. Most words had to be spelled out using phonemes (sound signs) representing the consonants of the word, but the vowels were not written.The words for family were written hnw, mhwt, wHytor Abt (where the A represent a consonant sound not found in English).
A symbol an arbitrary sign (written or printed) that has acquired a conventional significance. It is also something visible that by association or convention represents something else that is invisible.
An agma is a symbol used to represent the nasal velar consonant in IPA - similar to a hooked "n", the sound represents the "ng" of the word "sing".
The answer is Nebu.
it's the same word in both the standard Arabic & the Egyptian slang, it's the word " azaleah" which is written as " أزليه "
the answer is "arrow"
The vowel sound for the word "feels" is the "ee" sound, which is represented by the IPA symbol /iː/.
In the word "center," the letter C represents the sound /s/.