Basket (hieroglyph)
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Basket nb in hieroglyphs |
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The Ancient Egyptian Basket hieroglyph is Gardiner sign listed no. V30 for a semicircular-shaped, shallow basket. It is an Egyptian language biliteral for nb.[1] The Egyptian uniliteral k, a basket-with-handle, Gardiner no. V31,
, is constructed from the basket hieroglyph.
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Basket hieroglyph: list of uses
List of epithet uses
*Lord of the Two Lands,
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*Lord of Coronations,
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*Lady of the House,
, Nephthys.
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*Lord of Heaven
(Lord of (the) Sky), nb pt
(Lord of (the) Sky), nb pt
Pharaonic uses
The pharaoh is often shown in reliefs or in cartouche-related statements as Lord of the Two Lands. The basket hieroglyph is used as 'lord', or 'king'. Queens, or goddesses use the 'lordess' form, the feminine implied from the "t" hieroglyph but not needed for the basket. The basket is used for either.
Rosetta Stone use
A distinctive use of the basket hieroglyph, for nb is in the composition block for the word "everything". One common portrayal is with sieve, 't', basket,
, for "everything", or "all things".[2] The Rosetta Stone also uses just the basket,
, for "every", "all", "everything", as well as multiple uses for just the word "lord".
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Preceded by
"waters"-(ripples) - nut (or crossroads (hieroglyph)=nut) |
basket nb |
Succeeded by
sail (th)au/tshau, (nef) | ||||||
Succeeded by
"stomach + windpipe" nfr - (tril.) |
Gallery: Lord of the Two Lands-(Neb Taui)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Two Lands (hieroglyphs). |
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'Lord of the Two Lands'
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Gold ring:
Pharaoh-'Wonderful', Lord of the Two Lands, etc. (from right-to-center column)
Gallery: (basket lines, squares)
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Lines in wicker basket
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basket, wicker (nb hieroglyph). |
References
- Wilkinson, 1992. Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture, Richard H. Wilkinson, c 1992, 1994, Section: Seth Animal, p. 66-67. Thames and Hudson; abbreviated Index, 224 pp. (softcover, ISBN 0-500-27751-6)
- Budge. The Rosetta Stone, E.A.Wallace Budge, (Dover Publications), c 1929, Dover edition(unabridged), 1989. (softcover, ISBN 0-486-26163-8)
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