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The ancient Egyptian Water-jugs-in-stand hieroglyph, is Gardiner sign listed no. W17, W18, within the Gardiner signs for ''vessels of stone and earthenware.'' The hieroglyph is used as an ideogram in ''(kh)nt''-(ḫnt), for 'a stand (for vases)'. It is also used phonetically for (ḫnt).〔Betrò, 1995. ''Hieroglyphics: The Writings of Ancient Egypt'', ''Water jugs in a stand'', p. 216.〕 ==Egyptian "khenti"== The ''water-jugs-in-stand hieroglyph'' is often written with the complement of three other hieroglyphs, the water ripple, *Z4 As Egyptian "khenti",〔Budge, 1978, (1920). ''An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary'', 'khenti' , and other " 'Khenti'-Title-constructs", pp. 309-311.〕 foremost is used extensively to refer to gods, often in charge of a region, or position, as ''foremost of xxxx''. Anubis, or Osiris are often referred to as "Foremost", or "Chief" of the 'western cemetery', (where the sun sets). File:Queen Ashit relief.jpg|relief File:Inscriptions site de gizeh.JPG|Giza File:TombChapelLintel-RoyalStewardMemi-ROM.png|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「Water-jugs-in-stand (hieroglyph)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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