
Explore ancient Egyptian grammar and how to decode any sentence or symbol, using simple English explanations rather than mere alphabet memorization, and earn a certificate on completion.
Explore the core grammar of ancient Egyptian, including nouns and their gender, adjectives, verbs in sentences, negation, suffixes, particles, prepositions, and sentence construction.
Explore the noun in ancient Egyptian language, noting its lack of tense and its division into proper and common nouns, including concrete and abstract varieties.
Explore the structure of the noun in ancient Egyptian, including masculine and feminine gender, inactive nouns versus nouns derived from verbs, and how determinatives and endings signal gender.
Explore ancient egyptian demonstrative nouns, including singular masculine, singular feminine, and plural forms, with reading from the right side vertically and examples like pin and sit ten.
Ancient Egyptian language uses the r shape of the mouth to indicate the comparative. The superlative uses a water symbol between adjectives, and sip sin means very.
Explore how exclamations express feelings in the ancient Egyptian language through a suffix that shows how something is. Practice with lesson words such as sit, sweet, see, and ready.
Master the main tools of negation in Ancient Egyptian: the double in and the singular in suffixes. See how these marks turn present statements into past or future.
Explore the two negative verbs in ancient Egyptian, tim and imi, used in negative wishing formulas and negative questions, with examples and vocabulary.
Analyze non-enclitic particles in hieroglyphs, memorize about ten suffixes that confirm subjects, express future or conditional meaning, negate statements, warn, name, or wish, and practice reading sentences.
Explain how ancient Egyptian speakers address people by name and use suffixes like e and ha to indicate form, with examples of all living.
Explore ancient Egyptian question tools, suffix-like particles that attach to words as nouns or adverbs. Learn how they express what, who, where, and future meanings, mainly in texts.
Explains a question tool, like a question mark, that signals questions in hieroglyphs, with examples showing its usage and that it does not indicate would, could, or will.
Read and memorize sentences and vocabulary to practice the language, using Hebrew, Arabic, Doha, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi examples.
Understand how to use verbs in Ancient Egyptian, exploring two categories: the main small sentence and the old perfective, with examples showing subject placement and regular verb use.
Explore how verbs function as objects in ancient Egyptian sentences, such as know, see, order, love, and make. Discover how adverb clauses express time, purpose, and causes.
Practice reading hieroglyphic vocabulary, tracing meanings for words like bread, love, crocodile, death, temple, and the House of Life. Note timing and pronunciation, including when the time comes.
Explore permissible and impermissible condition clauses in ancient Egyptian, where future tense sentences link actions, and negative forms use the suffix tim.
Learn to read ancient hieroglyphs and build vocabulary from new words and symbols. Explore references to the sun god Ra, the moon, and everyday terms like House of Life.
Explore the nominal sentence in ancient Egyptian, learning how predicate and subject order, pronouns, demonstratives, and suffixes define nominal predicates across finished and continuous forms.
Explore how the suffix pool evolves from a demonstrative noun to a third-person pronoun and how m of predication and ink pool mark the subject and predicate in ancient Egyptian.
Explore sentence structure in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, identifying the subject at the beginning, adverbial predicates, and suffixes signaling time or negation.
Learn how adjectival predicates form static sentences with adjectives before the subject and non-static forms after, illustrated by Nifer meaning easy or kind.
Explore ancient egyptian numbers, covering normal and ordinal forms, from one to nine and units, with the largest unit first and numbers after the counted item or pronounced for one.
Explore how ancient Egyptians express fractions and recognize numbers and their fractions in the ancient Egyptian language. Learn fraction notation and pronunciation patterns, including one third and one fifth.
learn to read hieroglyphic words by writing them down to memorize them, starting from the left and using symbols like the sun and ra to read sentences about the horizon.
Thank you for completing the course; you now grasp nouns, grammatical cases, adjectives, negatives, and sentence structure, plus noun phrases, numbers, and suffix and question tools.
The course is a continuation of our previous course the basics of the Ancient Egyptian language (Hieroglyphics) 101 With The alphabet and grammar with its secret symbols and letters, the student will be able to read and understand the symbols and the alphabet of the language and decoding the texts those found on the walls of the ancient Egyptian temples, also helps historians to know more about the history and it’s secrets, after finishing the course I will also offer an app to download to text in the online chat into Hieroglyphics, in this course we will focus specifically on grammar on the most deepest and hidden details about the language we will understand more how can we make a sentence and how can we decode texts, the student will be able to read any hieroglyphic texts whether it is on walls statues or anywhere you can’t find the information we will learn in this course somewhere else. Also in the end of the course you will have a certificate from the “Egypt Academy” under your name, there is no any requirements to enroll this course only the previous course 101 is required basic English is enough for this course. Enroll now and let’s make the world ancient again.