There are no vowels in Egyptian hieroglyphics. The falcon is often mistakenly used as an A, but this is incorrect.
24 of the thousands of hieroglyphics are called unilaterals, and they can be considered an early type of alphabet, but they only had consonants. The first Alphabet to include vowels was the Greek Alphabet, thousands of years later.
No, that is not the correct spelling for the word.The correct spelling is hieroglyphics.For example:"These hieroglyphics say that whoever disturbs the tomb will be cursed for a thousand years".
hieroglyphics can be considered many things, including any of the following:complexbeautifulartisticdifficultchallengingdistincthistoricalancientEgyptian
English doesn't have 25 vowels.
no
Hieroglyphs do not include any sign representing an eagle (this is a common error on many poorly-researched and misleading websites).There is a sign representing the Egyptian vulture, which stands for the consonant sound 3, or aleph, a glottal stop which is sometimes written as a in translations but it does not represent the English vowel a. The aleph sound also occurs frequently in Hebrew and Arabic.A very similar sign represents a buzzard which has the sound-value tw (particularly at the end of words).Another similar sign has the addition of a single feather projecting from the bird's chest; the sign represents the guinea fowl and has the sound value nH.
probably not
No, all have atleast 1 or more vowels.
Actually, there are more consonants that there are vowels in the alphabet.
A scientist who reads Egyptian hieroglyphics can be described any number of ways, such as:ArcheologistEgyptologistHistorianHistorical AnthropologistLinguistPhilosopher
There isn't any natural language composed only of vowels.