Demotiс Egyptian language was the state of the Egyptian language used in the New Kingdom of Egypt and Third Intermediate Period of Egypt. The formation and development of the demotic language as a separate language from the New Egyptian was strongly influenced by Aramaic and Ancient Greek.[1]
Demotiс Egyptian | |
---|---|
Demotic | |
𐦲𐧒 | |
Pronunciation | [xɛm] |
Native to | Ancient Egypt: New Kingdom of Egypt, Third Intermediate Period |
Date | c. 700 BC |
Region | North Africa |
Ethnicity | Ancient Egyptians |
Extinct | c. 115 AD |
Afroasiatic
| |
Early forms | |
Demotic script | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Roman Egypt |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | egy |
ISO 639-3 | egy – inclusive codeIndividual code: cop – Greek Demotic |
Glottolog | demo1234 Demotic Egyptian |
Monuments
editAmong the monuments of a new daily language literature, comparing to the previous stages of the Egyptian language comes fairy genre, a fable. These fables were intimately entwined with the mythology and narrated the adventures of the mythological characters of the Egyptian religion. Leiden papyrus, dating from the I-II centuries BC, contains such fables.[2]
References
edit- ^ "Демотический язык" (PDF) (in Russian). Egyptology.Ru. Retrieved 2015-03-16.
- ^ Коростовцев. Литература демотическая. — Фундаментальная электронная библиотека. (in Russian)
Bibliography
edit- Janet H. Johnson: Thus Wrote ’Onchsheshonqy – An Introductory Grammar of Demotic (Third Edition). Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Chicago 2000, ISBN 0-918986-76-1.
- Janet H. Johnson: The Demotic Verbal System, Janet H. Johnson. Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Chicago 1976, ISBN 0-918986-02-8.
- R. S. Simpson: Demotic Grammar in the Ptolemaic Sacerdotal Decrees. Griffith Institute Monographs, Griffith Institute, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 1996, ISBN 0-900416-65-3.