hieroglyphics.
ANSWERHammurabi spoke Akkadian and wrote in the emerging written text of cuneiform. Cuneiform started as a pictograph, a symbolic way to record trades and stories. Then over a few thousand years, it developed into straight marks and wedge shapes that represent phonetic sounds. The latter being a much quicker way to write, as the symbols for objects run into the thousands and sounds can be reduced to a few hundred strokes.
The use of hieroglyphics is a very ancient way to visually record language. We are introduced to our modern alphabet at a very early age, and for us it seems odd that alphabets were not always the method of visually encoding language. Alphabets seem downright simplistic, but they are in fact very sophisticated systems. Imagine a time before any form of writing. Even the concept of visually encoding language might seem odd, useless or impossible. It must have been an amazing insight on the part of one or many people across cultures that there was a need to record words, and that a way to do it could be developed. I bet that a collection of dozens of abstract squiggles, meaningless on their own, (letters) would not have been the first thought on anyone's mind. Representations of real objects, and then perhaps representations of religious/cultural symbols would have been a more likely starting point. The history of the alphabet is quite interesting and thought-provoking. If you check this history, be sure to find out what linguists have to say about it, too. See links for more information.
.....Egypt.....Answer: The ancient Egyptians had several different names for their own country. Hieroglyphs did not record vowels, so we can not know how these names were said:kmt "the black land", meaning the fertile, dark soil along the Nilehr idbwy "the two banks of Horus", meaning the riverbankstA mri "the beloved country"the letters A and i are used to write consonant sounds that do not exist in English.
All western alphabets seem to have been derived from some kind of 'picture-writing.' However I'm guessing you are looking for Egyptian Hieroglyphics although both the Hittites / Assyrians and the Meso-American civilizations also used pictographic writing.
Iran used to be called Persia. It changed its name in the early 1920s. (Prussia, which sounds similar, is an entirely different country, formerly located in the eastern part of, what is now, United Germany
:D They're called Hieroglyphics
The ancient Egyptians had a form of pictorial writing called hieroglyphs. The hieroglyphs were various pictures that stood for single letter sounds or the sounds of multiple letters put together.The name of the Ancient Egyptian writing system is called "hieroglyphics."These were pictographs, picture symbols that could represent letter sounds, words and phrases.Hieroglyphics.Hieroglyphics.
The Egyptians used hieroglyphics - pictures of objects which represented either words, parts of words, or sounds.
Hieroglyphic writing system.
Heiroglyphics means "sacred carving". It was a form of writing/decorating which the ancient Egyptians developed and used in their royal tombs and on their major architectural works. The images were stylised representations of objects which represented syllables, words or sounds. Combinations of images were used to represent names.
Echolocation
words, pictures ,or sounds that represents facts are called
Diffraction The answer is Echolocation.
Hieroglyphic
its called echolocation or sonar. bats do it and so do dolphins
its called echolocation or sonar. bats do it and so do dolphins
There is no such thing as a hieroglyphic alphabet. The Egyptians used about 700 hieroglyphs to represent the sounds and meaning of their language.See http://www.egyptianhieroglyphs.net/gardiners-sign-list/