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Chapter 4 WRITING AND THE ALPHABET

Word Count: 882    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

RE WR

ic. We start with the pictures or rough drawings which have been found among the remains of the

(Dakota Indian); 2, "morning" (Ojibwa Indian); 3, "nothing" (Oji

nemy." A "fight" could then be shown simply by drawing two arrows directed against each other. Many uncivilized tribes still employ picture writing of this sort. The American Indians devel

ITING; T

the use of the rebus, that is, writing words by pictures of objects which stand for sounds. Such rebuses are found in prehistoric Egyptian writing; for example, the Egyptian words for "sun" and "goose" were so nearly ali

"Our Father," is written by a flag (pan), a stone (

ICTURE WRITING AND LATER

AND SY

of entire words, but of separate syllables. Since the number of different syllables which the voice can utter is limited, it now becomes possible to write all the words of a language with a few hundred signs. The Japanese, who borrowed some of the Chinese symbols

TT

f the voice are analyzed and each is represented by a single sign or letter. Wit

tion: CRE

ear script found in the

of writing, with a tot

s, which appear to mark

of s

N HIERO

pon alphabetic signs alone. Egyptian hieroglyphics [11] are a curious jumble of object- pictures, symbols of ideas, and signs for ent

CIAN A

two letters, each representing a consonant. The Phoenicians do not seem to have invented their alphabetic signs. It is generally believed tha

o systems, however, were not distinct; they were as identical as our own printed and written characters. The third line illustrates old Babylonian cuneiform, in

THE PHOENIC

d sailors and traders who bought and sold throughout the Mediterranean. Wherever they went, they took their alphabet. From the Phoeni

monument records the victory of Mesha king of Moab, over the united armies of Israel and Judah about 850

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Contents

EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 1 THE STUDY OF HISTORY
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 2 PREHISTORIC PEOPLES
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 3 DOMESTICATION OF ANIMALS AND PLANTS
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 4 WRITING AND THE ALPHABET
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 5 PRIMITIVE SCIENCE AND ART
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 6 Europeans.
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 7 C. and A.D. In what century was the year 1917 B.C. the year 1917 A.D.
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 8
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 9 Can you name any savages still living in the Stone Age
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 10 What stone implements have you ever seen Who made them Where were they
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 11 Why should the discovery of fire be regarded as of more significance than the discovery of steam
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 12 and-arrow been of greater importance than the invention of gunpowder
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 13 How does the presence of few tameable animals in the New World help to account for its tardier development as compared with the Old World
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 14 What examples of pastoral and agricultural life among the North American Indians are familiar to you
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 15 In the classification of mankind, where do the Arabs belong the Persians the Germans the inhabitants of the United States
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 16 FOOTNOTES
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 17 PHYSICAL ASIA
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 18 BABYLONIA AND EGYPT
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 19 THE BABYLONIANS AND THE EGYPTIANS
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 20 THE PHOENICIANS AND THE HEBREWS
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EARLY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Chapter 21 THE ASSYRIANS
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