Proto-Sinaitic

English dictionary entry

Meanings

name
  1. An ancient consonantal script (abjad), found in a small corpus of about 40 inscriptions and fragments dating to the Middle Bronze Age, the vast majority from Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt. It was written by speakers of a Semitic language or languages, possibly Canaanite, who repurposed Egyptian hieroglyphs to write Semitic consonants. It is considered the earliest trace of alphabetic writing and the common ancestor of both the Ancient South Arabian script and the Phoenician alphabet.
  2. Referring to several early consonantal scripts (abjads) used in Egypt and the Levant during the Bronze Age adapted from Egyptian hieroglyphs using acrophonic spelling to write a Semitic language or languages, possibly Canaanite. Considered collectively as early traces of alphabetic writing and as evidence for a common ancestor of the Phoenician and Ancient South Arabian scripts.
adj
  1. Describing the script or scripts known as Proto-Sinaitic (plural Proto-Sinaitic)
  2. describing only the form of this script found in the Sinai Peninsula.
  3. describing all extant forms and variants of this early script found throughout Egypt (Sinai and Nilotic Egypt) and the Levant (Canaan)

Word forms

Proto-Sinaitic more Proto-Sinaitic most Proto-Sinaitic

Etymology

From proto- + Sinaitic.

Synonyms

Early Alphabetic

Translations

French: protosinaïtique German: protosinaitisch Italian: protosinaitico Polish: protosynajski Spanish: protosinaítico
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.