Sumero-Akkadian Individual and Compound Logograms English.pdf Sumerian Cuneiform English Dictionary.pdf Specimen chapters of an Assyrian grammar - Hincks, Edward, 1792-1866.pdf Some Difficult Passages in the Cuneiform Account of the Deluge.pdf So-Called Kappadokian Cuneiform Tablets.pdf Phonetic values of Cuneiform Characters.pdfĬuneiform Parallels to the Old Testament.pdf Personal Names from Cassite Cuneiform.pdf On traces of an indefinite article in Assyrian.pdf Neo-Assyrian Cuneiform Syllabary Signs List. Neo-Assyrian Individual and Compound Logograms Syriac.pdf Neo-Assyrian Individual and Compound Logograms English.pdf
Mugsar Sumerian Cuneiform Dictionary 8ix16.wmv MeroAkkadian-IndividualandCompoundLogogramsSyriac.pdf Lectures upon the Assyrian language, and syllabary.pdf Languages of the Cuneiform Inscriptions.pdf Languages and Literatures_ Cuneiform Civilizations.mp4 Identification of the Signs of the Persian Cuneiform.pdf
How To Learn Sumerian Language Speak Shumerian Oldest Landuage In The World.mp4 History of Assurbanipal from cuneiform.pdf 7th–4th century B.C., Babylonian or Achaemenid 322043.jpgĬuneiform - bringing ancient inscriptions to life.mp4 (Charles James), 1851-1924.pdfĬlassified List of Simple & Compound Cuneiform Ideographs.pdfĬuneiform Hand-Me-Downs - how Sumerian outlived its speakers.mp4Ĭuneiform Tablets_ Ancient Writing Comes to Life.mp4Ĭuneiform, ca. pdfĪssyrian grammar w chrestomathy & glossary.pdfĪssyrian grammar with paradigms, exercises, glossary and bibliography.pdfĪssyrian Language - Easy Lessons in the Cuneiform Inscriptions.pdfĪssyrian primer, an inductive method of learning the cuneiform characters.pdfīomhard-AComprehensiveIntroductionToNostraticComparativeLinguistics2ndEdition.pdfĬhinese and Sumerian - Ball, C.
Vannic.pdfĪcts of Extispicy from Old Babylonian and Kassite Times.pdfĪlleged Indo European Languages in Cuneiform.pdfĪn Assyrian manual, for the use of beginners in the study of the Assyrian languageĪn elementary grammar, full syllabary, progressive Assyrian reading book in the cuneiform type. Sumero-Akkadian II.Assyro-Babylonian III. Computer fonts of various cuneiform languages are also included on this disk.Ī classified list of all simple and compound Cuneiform ideographs with their Assyro-Babylonian eqivalents.pdfĪ concise dictionary of the Assyrian language (Volume 1).pdfĪ concise dictionary of the Assyrian language (Volume 2).pdfĪ Conjectural Interpretation of Cuneiform Texts.pdfĪ guide to the Old Persian inscriptions.pdfĪ Sumero-Babylonian sign list_ an Assyrian sign list, numerals, weights & measures.pdfĪ Supplement to Brünnow's Classified List.pdfĪ system of accentuation for Sumero-Akkadian.pdfĪbridged grammars of the cuneiform languages I. This DVD contains the files shown below as a tool for scholarship relating to this fascinating culture and its languages. The impressions left by the stylus were wedge shaped, thus giving rise to the name cuneiform ("wedge shaped", from the Latin cuneus, meaning "wedge"). Cuneiform writing was gradually replaced by the Phoenician alphabet during the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and by the 2nd century AD, the script had become extinct.Ĭuneiform documents were written on clay tablets, by means of a blunt reed for a stylus. The original Sumerian script was adapted for the writing of the Akkadian, Eblaite, Elamite, Hittite, Luwian, Hattic, Hurrian, and Urartian languages, and it inspired the Ugaritic and Old Persian alphabets. In the three millennia the script spanned, the pictorial representations became simplified and more abstract as the number of characters in use also grew gradually smaller, from about 1,000 unique characters in the Early Bronze Age to about 400 unique characters in Late Bronze Age (Hittite cuneiform). Emerging in Sumer around the 30th century BC, with predecessors reaching into the late 4th millennium cuneiform writing began as a system of pictographs. Cuneiform writing is one of the earliest known forms of written expression.