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      • Ancient Egyptians spoke Egyptian – a dead language, just like Latin (modern Egyptians speak Arabic). The Egyptian language had a lifespan of more than four thousand years – the longest continuously attested language in the world! It first appeared in writing around 3000 BC and was actively used until the 11th century AD.
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  2. Oct 19, 2018 · Egyptian is closely related to languages such as Amharic, Arabic, and Hebrew. The history of the language which has spurred four millennia is divided into six periods or phases as listed below. Archaic Egyptian. The Archaic phase of the language consists of some of the earliest hieroglyphic writings such as those depicted on the Naqada II pottery.

    • Joseph Kiprop
  3. Aug 19, 2023 · One of the fundamental questions about ancient Egypt is: What language was spoken by the ancient Egyptians? Understanding the Ancient Egyptian Civilization. The ancient Egyptians...

  4. Habla español & Gaeilge acu. Explore the history of the ancient Egyptian language and understand its classification. See the dialects of the ancient Egyptian language and discover its syntax....

  5. Mar 29, 2021 · Ancient Egyptians spoke Egyptian – a dead language, just like Latin (modern Egyptians speak Arabic). The Egyptian language had a lifespan of more than four thousand years – the longest...

  6. This book, derived from the acclaimed Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World’s Ancient Languages, describes the ancient languages of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Aksum, for the convenience of students and specialists working in that area.

  7. The civilization of Ancient Egypt existed between around 5500 BCE and 30 BCE. It occupied the area of the valley and Delta of the River Nile northward from its First Cataract in the north-east corner of Africa. With desert to the west, east, and south and sea to the north and further east, the Nile Valley delineated the Egyptian state.

  8. This article provides a personal overview of the last 25-year linguistic research on ancient Egyptian, the language spoken and written in Egypt since the origin of the written Egyptian civilization (c. 3150 BC) until the disappearance of Coptic as a living language (17 th century AC), the longest-attested human language.