Egyptian language
Extinct
Afro-Asiatic language of the Nile River valley. Its very long history comprises five periods: Old Egyptian (
c. 3000 –
c. 2200
BCE), best exemplified by a corpus of religious inscriptions known as the Pyramid Texts and a group of autobiographical tomb inscriptions; Middle Egyptian (
c. 2200 –
c. 1600
BCE), the classical literary language; Late Egyptian (1550 – 700
BCE), known mainly from manuscripts; Demotic (
c. 700
BCE –
c. 400
CE), used in the periods of Persian, Greek, and Roman dominance and differing from Late Egyptian chiefly in its graphic system; and Coptic (
c. 150
CE – at least the 17th century), the language of Christian Egypt, gradually supplanted as a vernacular by
Arabic from the 9th century on but still preserved to some degree in the liturgy of the
Coptic Orthodox Church. Egyptian was originally written in
hieroglyphs, out of which evolved hieratic, a cursive rendering of hieroglyphs, and demotic, a kind of shorthand reduction of hieratic. Coptic was written in a modified form of the Greek alphabet, with seven signs added from the demotic script for sounds that did not occur in Greek.
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