|
The ancient Egyptian Hare hieroglyph, Gardiner sign listed no. E34 is a portrayal of the ''desert hare'' of Egypt, within the Gardiner signs for mammals. The ancients used the name of ''sekhat'' for the hare.〔Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998. ''Illustrated Hieroglyphics Handbook'', biliteral: B80, p. 232-233.〕 It is an Egyptian language biliteral with the value ''wn'',〔Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998. Biliteral: B80, p. 232-233.〕 (or ''un''), often used in a hieroglyph composition block with the horizontal ''n''. The biliteral expresses the sound "oon", or "oonen",;〔Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998, p. 232-233, p. 232.〕 it is also an ideogram for the verb "to be", or "to exist",〔Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998, p. 232-233, p. 232.〕 (i.e. "is", "are", "was", etc.). The famous Pharaoh Unas, (for his Pyramid texts), is named using the hare hieroglyph. } ==See also== *Gardiner's Sign List#E. Mammals *Pharaoh Unas - (titulary) Image:Thutmose III and Hatshepsut.jpg|Relief Image:Edfu51.JPG|Detail of ''Hare and water-ripple'' quadrat (hieroglyph block) Image:Cartouches Tibère.JPG|Vertical text, hare hieroglyph at beginning FIle:Stele of Amenhotep I.jpg|Partially missing lunette of a stela; Finely executed in shallow, incised-bas relief 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Hare (hieroglyph)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|