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Stephanie Dalley
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John William Pirie, Lilian Hamilton Jeffery, and Alan Johnston
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John Penney
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R. H. Robins
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Anna Morpurgo Davies
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J. F. Healey
Aramaic, a *Semitic language, was used in the ancient near east from early in the 1st millennium
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Albio Cesare Cassio
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Leofranc Holford-Strevens
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Rosalind Thomas
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Benjamin Fortson
The Latin spoken in the British Isles during and shortly after the Roman occupation (43–410
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Anna Morpurgo Davies
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John Penney
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T. G. Wilfong
Coptic is the latest phase of the ancient Egyptian language, written in an alphabet partly derived from Greek and incorporating Greek vocabulary. Strongly associated with Christianity in Egypt, Coptic preserves a wide range of original and translated Christian literature as well as an important body of documentary texts of the later Roman, Byzantine, and early Islamic periods.
Coptic is the latest phase of the ancient Egyptian language, notable for its use of a largely Greek-derived alphabet, its extensive incorporation of Greek vocabulary, and its strong association with Christianity in Egypt. Coptic texts include a wide range of documentary texts of the later Roman, Byzantine, and early Islamic periods; an extensive and rich body of original and translated Christian literature (of particular importance for the early history of Christian monasticism); and unique witnesses to major Gnostic, Manichaean, and Hermetic texts. Coptic was ultimately supplanted by Arabic as the language of daily life in Egypt, but it continues in use to the present as a liturgical language within Christian communities in Egypt (and expatriate Coptic communities across the world).
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Benjamin Fortson
Cuneiform denotes any of at least three writing systems of ancient Mesopotamia and the surrounding areas. It is characterized in its classical form by signs consisting of one or more wedge-shaped strokes (cf. Latin cuneus, “wedge”). The first such script to emerge, and the one most widely used, was Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform, which developed in what is now southern Iraq in the late 4th millennium
Article
Anna Morpurgo Davies
Article
Benjamin Fortson
The language of the Elymi in western Sicily, preserved in about 130 mostly fragmentary inscriptions in the Greek alphabet, primarily from Segesta, and dating probably from the 6th and 5th centuries