From what I've heard, it takes approximately 6 months for someone to finish parts 1, 2, and 3 if they really work at it. Even then you will only have known the basics of the language, but will still be able to carry simple conversations in said language.
I would suggest continuing your studies elsewhere after you've finished learning from Rosetta, as there is much more to it.
"For twenty years scholars tried to decode the slab. "
From:
http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/Homework/Egypt/rosetta.htm
22 years
Well, a few months to find someone skilled enough to steal it, and it takes as long for it to arrive at your house as you go cheapo on the chopper pilot.
The Rosetta Stone.
The Rosetta Stone led to the ability to decode hieroglyphicsArchaeologists found the Rosetta Stone. The Rosetta Stone had many languages on it including hieroglyphics.Later on college students figured out the secret of hieroglyphics.The Rosetta stone found by some person, and deciphered 24 years later. it was writen in three different languages. Hieroglythics, greek and something else.
No, the Rosetta Stone had nothing to do with the Bible really. The Rosetta Stone was written by Egyptian priests to celebrate the rise of a Hellenistic king. It helps decode the ancient hieroglyphic manuscripts that evidentiate the bible.
The Rosetta Stone is the key that helped scholars decode some Egyptian hieroglyphics.
The Rosetta stone and the Coptic language were what Champollion used to get a start on deciphering hieroglyphs. However, it soon became necessary to consider other inscriptions in order to broaden the vocabulary.
The Rosetta Stone is what we used to decode hieroglyphics
The Rosetta Stone.
The Rosetta Stone led to the ability to decode hieroglyphicsArchaeologists found the Rosetta Stone. The Rosetta Stone had many languages on it including hieroglyphics.Later on college students figured out the secret of hieroglyphics.The Rosetta stone found by some person, and deciphered 24 years later. it was writen in three different languages. Hieroglythics, greek and something else.
No, the Rosetta Stone had nothing to do with the Bible really. The Rosetta Stone was written by Egyptian priests to celebrate the rise of a Hellenistic king. It helps decode the ancient hieroglyphic manuscripts that evidentiate the bible.
The Rosetta stone.
The Rosetta Stone is the key that helped scholars decode some Egyptian hieroglyphics.
A Greek version of the text was also on the stone, which we still use today.
The Rosetta Stone is the artifact that helped crack the code of the hieroglyphics. The Stone spells out a royal decree in a variety of languages, and the difference between the languages helped scholars figure out what each of them meant.
The Rosetta stone and the Coptic language were what Champollion used to get a start on deciphering hieroglyphs. However, it soon became necessary to consider other inscriptions in order to broaden the vocabulary.
Jean-Francois Champollion unlocked the hieroglyphics in 1821-22. (Thomas Young was his fellow researcher)
"For twenty years scholars tried to decode the slab. " ="overflow:hidden;background-color:transparent;text-align:left;text-decoration:none;border:mediumnone">
the Rosetta stone was named after the city of Rosetta