did the incas have an alphabet
The Inca civilization did not have a written language based on an alphabet. They used a system of knots called quipu for recording information. The quipu consisted of different colored strings with knots tied in various positions to represent numbers and communicate messages.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun "Inca" for the Inca, Incas, or Incan people of Peru.
The Inca tribe spoke Quechua, which was the language of the Inca Empire. Quechua is still spoken by indigenous populations in South America today.
The modern alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet, which in turn evolved from the Etruscan alphabet. The Latin alphabet was introduced to the Romans around the 7th century BCE and was derived from the Greek alphabet.
Inca is pronounced as IN-kuh.
The alphabet "I" is used after the consonant "H" in the English alphabet.
There is no such thing as "the Inca alphabet". The Incans had no writing system. They used knotted strings to record numbers, but there is not much evidence that this system was used for anything else.
There are exactly 42 Incan letters.
There are no words in the Inca empire that have X in it. The incas don't have X in their alphabet.
The Sapa Inca was on the top of the Inca society.
The Sapa Inca or Inka
He decided that the Inca's needed help, so the Inca King wanted to to rule to help out.
Amautas, were the tutors to the Inca nobility
there was no topa inca
Sapa Inca was the ruler of the Inca Empire, considered the emperor or "emperor of emperors." The term means "only Inca" in Quechua and referred to the supreme leader of the Inca society.
Inca's Priests
its not
Sapa Inca