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Cambridge Library Collection: Linguistics: Coptic Etymological Dictionary

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  • 414 stránek
  • 15 hodin čtení

Více o knize

Coptic was the language spoken in Egypt from late ancient times to the seventeenth century, when it was overtaken by Arabic as the national language. Derived from ancient Egyptian, the language of the hieroglyphs, it was written in an adapted form of Greek script. This dictionary lists about 2,000 Coptic words whose etymology has been established from ancient Egyptian and Greek sources, covering two-thirds of the known Coptic vocabulary and complementing W. E. Crum's 1939 Coptic Dictionary, still the standard in the field. The Egyptian forms are quoted in hieroglyphic and/or demotic forms. An appendix lists the etymologies of Coptic place-names. The final work of Czech Egyptologist Jaroslav Čern� (1898-1970), Professor of Egyptology at Oxford, the Dictionary was brought through to publication by colleagues after his death.

Nákup knihy

Cambridge Library Collection: Linguistics: Coptic Etymological Dictionary, Jaroslav Černý

Jazyk
Rok vydání
2010
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Titul
Cambridge Library Collection: Linguistics: Coptic Etymological Dictionary
Jazyk
anglicky
Rok vydání
2010
Vazba
měkká
Počet stran
414
ISBN10
1108013996
ISBN13
9781108013994
Série
Anotace
Coptic was the language spoken in Egypt from late ancient times to the seventeenth century, when it was overtaken by Arabic as the national language. Derived from ancient Egyptian, the language of the hieroglyphs, it was written in an adapted form of Greek script. This dictionary lists about 2,000 Coptic words whose etymology has been established from ancient Egyptian and Greek sources, covering two-thirds of the known Coptic vocabulary and complementing W. E. Crum's 1939 Coptic Dictionary, still the standard in the field. The Egyptian forms are quoted in hieroglyphic and/or demotic forms. An appendix lists the etymologies of Coptic place-names. The final work of Czech Egyptologist Jaroslav Čern� (1898-1970), Professor of Egyptology at Oxford, the Dictionary was brought through to publication by colleagues after his death.