Blemmy Empire
Below is a list of the late Meroitic lexical items. The Meroitic script has 24 signs.
The Meroitic script is a syllabic writing system. This system of writing was used
for 500 years.
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In this examination of Meroitic we used the transliteration of many Meroitic
phonemes proposed by Hintze (1974, 1979) , rather than the entire transliteration
system for Meroitic proposed by Griffith (1911). Each Meroitic consonant except
when followed by the vowel sign /i/, /o/ and /e/ represents the consonant sound
plus the schwa (the high/mid central /a/ vowel).
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PRONUNCIATION
Front Central Back
close i (y) (w)
close mid e o
open a
The Meroitic vowels are distinguished by individual signs for i , e , a ,o .
There are four Meroitic vowels /a/, /e/, /i/, and /o/ . There is a neutral vowel
sound attached to the Meroitic consonants except for the te and to signs.
The Meroitic vowel sounds are as follows:
e long e sound as in make
a long a sound as in father
i long i sound as in see
o long o sound as in sock
stands for a in asleep
I believe that Meroitic may have two additional vowel sounds. These sounds
may be the open mid vowels è and ò. In many African languages we find these
vowels.
It therefore stands to reason that they might also occur in Meroitic. I believe
that this is proven by the Meroitic script.
In Meroitic we have the /t/ sound represented by . Eventhough we have the
/t/ sound and the vowel /e/ and /o/,
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we also have the signs /to/ and /te/. This suggest that the vowels
attached to t-, must have a different sound than the regular /o/ and /e/ sound. If
the sounds were not different the Meroites could have just used the signs
/to/ and /te/ to write these sounds instead of (to) and (te). I
would therefore venture to say the should be pronounced $ tò # and
should be pronounced $ tè # in Meroitic.
CONSONANTS
There are five syllables in Meroitic ñ , se, te , to and the so-called divider
sign (:) -ne represented by separate sounds (Hintze 1974). In this translation of
Meroitic each Meroitic syllable without a vowel attached to it is written as a single
consonant .
The consonants of Meroitic are as follows:
h kh like the rasping ch: Scottish loch and Bach in German
h ch ich breathy ch, ç
a pronounched like /a/ in father
b as in English
d as in English
i pronounced like /i/ in machine
k pronounced like the /k/ in King
l as in English
m "
n "
p "
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r "
s pronounced like /z/ in zoo or /s/ as in rose
s pronounced like the sh in share
t as in English
to pronounced like the to in stole
te pronounced like the te in tea
w pronounced like the /w/ in water
y as in English
ñ pronounced like ng as in sing
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Meroitic Consonants
Plosive p, b t,d h(kh) k,q h(ch) Nasal m n
Lateral l
Rolled r
Fricative s s(sh) h(ch)
Semi-vowel w y
GRAMMAR
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Late Meroitic has the VSO pattern. The Meroitic language include both
prefixes and suffixes, but, suffixes are used extensively in the writing. The
popular sentence pattern in late Meroitic inscriptions is -->VP NP or S--> VP
NP VP. For example,
wto si lit. to guide you satisfaction
"You guide (me) to satisfaction".
terike lo wi-ne s lit. Fashion dispatch the Awe patron
"Fashion (and) dispatch the Awe of the patron".
Meroitic was probably a lingua franca used by the Meroites to unite the
diverse ethnic groups which lived in the Meroitic empire. Although many
vocabulary items of Archaic Meroitic was used to write Late Meroitic text, the
Late Meroitic structure is less complicated than Archaic Meroitic.
Many Meroitic words are homophone signs. A homophone sign has the same
phonetic value as another. The interchangeable Meroitic homophones include
b=/=p, t=/=d, k=/=g, s=/=s and n=/=ñ , e.g., tb / tp 'announce in a loafty voice'.
The Meroitic separator sign (:) has the phonetic value -ne. This sign in the
Meroitic script was used to change verbs into nouns, or signify the word "good".
The element -ne-, although it is occasionally used in the initial formation of
words, the separator sign -ne, was primarially used as a suffix.
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LATE MEROITIC WORD LIST
a1, intensive prefix 'to'; element used to
form the future
tense
a2, third person suffix 'he, it, she'.
$ari, affirmation
ah, teach, to learn, to study
ab, ancestor, father
($$arrette, Harendotes (Horus the Avenger
of his father)
$Ariteñ, name of a god
-an(a), plural suffix: wi-ne-ana 'much awe,
much fright
much respect'
ap, ancestor; father
api, the ancestor leaves
0(atsh, to glow
ato, path, road, route
2. out here
3. absent, on tour, away
4. way , march, progressive
atom, he is to be reborn; e.g. atonhene 's/he is
be reborn to
realize
ale, the palm off the hand
$ater, hero
+$aro, long (time); olden times; perpetuate