Examples of cuneiform script in the following topics:
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- In addition to describing the
genealogy of Cyrus, the declaration in Akkadian cuneiform script on the
cylinder is considered by many Biblical scholars as evidence of Cyrus’s policy
of repatriation of the Jewish people following their captivity in Babylon.
- The Behistun Inscription, the text of which
Darius wrote, came to have great linguistic significance as a crucial clue in
deciphering cuneiform script.
- The inscription,
which is approximately 15 meters high and 25 meters wide, includes three
versions of the text in three different cuneiform languages: Old Persian,
Elamite and Babylonian, which was a version of Akkadian.
- Researchers were able
to compare the scripts and use it to help decipher ancient languages, in this
way making the Behistun Inscription as valuable to cuneiform as the Rosetta
Stone is to Egyptian hieroglyphs.
- A section of the Behistun Inscription on a limestone cliff of Mount Behistun in western Iran, which became a key in deciphering cuneiform script.
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- Many Sumerian clay tablets written in cuneiform script have been discovered.
- Initially, pictograms were used, followed by cuneiform, and then ideograms.
- Sumerians invented or improved a wide range of technology, including the wheel, cuneiform script, arithmetic, geometry, irrigation, saws and other tools, sandals, chariots, harpoons, and beer.
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- A basalt stele containing the code in cuneiform script inscribed in the Akkadian language is currently on display in the Louvre, in Paris, France.
- This basalt stele has the Code of Hammurabi inscribed in cuneiform script in the Akkadian language.
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- Sculptural forms include humans, animals, and cylinder seals with cuneiform writing and imagery in the round or as reliefs.
- A cylinder seal discovered in the royal tomb of Queen Puabi depicts two registers of a palace banquet scene punctuated by cuneiform script, marking a growing complexity in the imagery of this form of notarization.
- On the right hand side of the stele, cuneiform script provides narration.
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- Additionally, they bear inscriptions in Assyrian cuneiform and Phoenician script, indicating use by speakers of both languages.
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- If you would like to see a transcript of the audio, click here (http://www.coe.uga.edu/epltt/impaticas/Vygotsky_script.doc) to download script as a word document.
- If you would like to see a transcript of the audio, click here http://www.coe.uga.edu/epltt/impaticas/Vygotsky_script.doc to download script as a word document.
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- Before Akkad was identified in Mesopotamian cuneiform texts, the city was only known from a single reference in Genesis 10:10.
- However, the city of Akkad is mentioned more than 160 times in cuneiform sources ranging in date from the Akkadian period itself (2350–2170 or 2230–2050 BCE, according to respectively the Middle or Short Chronology) to the sixth century BCE.
- Cuneiform sources also suggest that the Akkadians worshipped Ishtar.
- A combined analysis of cuneiform and topographical/archaeological field survey data led archaeologist Harvey Weiss to suggest that Akkad is modern Ishan Mizyad, a large site approximately 3.1 miles northwest from Kish.
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- Click here for a paraphrased script of the narration (http://www.coe.uga.edu/epltt/images/script.doc).
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- Another type of semantic memory is called a script.
- Scripts are like blueprints of what to do in certain situations.
- Through practice, you learn these scripts and encode them into semantic memory.
- Implicit memories differ from the semantic scripts described above in that they are usually actions that involve movement and motor coordination, whereas scripts tend to emphasize social norms or behaviors.