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The Three Kinds of Signs  
To speak broadly, hieroglyphs are of three kinds: phonetic signs, ideograms, and determinatives. The first are used for 
writing sounds (actually consonants); for example, the sign   is used for the sound ``kheper'' because the scarab is called 
so; the sign   is used for the consonant ``m'' because the word owl starts with an ``m'', and so on... Ideograms are used 
to write the thing or the idea represented by their drawing. So   is used for writing the word ``bull'', and  , the slate of 
a scribe, is used for writing the word ``scribe.''  
As Egyptian doesn't use space between the words, and doesn't write vowels, this writing would have been very ambiguous, if 
it hadn't used determinatives. These are signs used as a word-ending, to specify the semantic category of a word. For 
example, the signs   read ``iew''. But that might be the verb ``to lament'', or the substantives ``dog'' or ``wrongdoing''. So 
three different determinatives are used:  , which designates any action of the mouth,   for dogs, and  , a sign used 
for small and evil things alike. So the word   means ``to lament,'' whereas   means ``dog'' and   means 
``wrongdoing''.  
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