Egyptian biliteral signs

Biliteral Egyptian hieroglyphs are symbols which represent a specific sequence of two consonants, also two vowels, or combinational of both, in the language. In the written Egyptian language, three types of hieroglyphs existed: those that represented one value (called uniliterals, the alphabetic signs), those that represented two (called biliteral), and those that represented three (called triliteral).

In the following list, aleph is transliterated as ꜣ, ayin as ꜥ and yodh as ı͗.

Common biliteral Egyptian hieroglyphs

Biliteral signs

3w

3b

3ḫ

ı͗w

ı͗w

ı͗b

ı͗m

ı͗n / nw

ı͗n

ı͗n

ı͗r

ı͗r

ı͗s

ı͗ṯ

ˁ3

ˁb

ˁq

ˁḏ

w3


wp

wn

wr

wḏ

b3

bẖ

p3

pr

pḥ

pḏ / pd

pḏ / pd

m3

mı͗

mw

mn

mn

mr

mr

3b

mḥ

ms

mt

mt / mwt
md

nb

nm

nn

nḥ

ns

nḏ

rw

rs

ḥ3

ḥw

ḥp

ḥm

ḥm

ḥn

ḥr

ḥs

ḥḏ

ḫ3

ḫʾ

ḫw

ḫt

ẖ3

ẖn

ẖn

ẖr

s3

sꜣ

sa

s3

s3

sw

sp

sn

sk

st / sṯ

š3

šw

šm

šn

šs

šd

qs

qd

k3

km

gm

gs

tꜣ

t3

tı͗

tp

tp

tm

ṯ3

mı͗

dı͗

ḏ3

ḏw

ḏr

ḏd

See also

External links


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