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Cuneiform   /kjˈuniəfˌɔrm/   Listen
Cuneiform

adjective
1.
Shaped like a wedge.  Synonyms: cuneal, wedge-shaped.
2.
Of or relating to the tarsal bones (or other wedge-shaped bones).
noun
1.
An ancient wedge-shaped script used in Mesopotamia and Persia.



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"Cuneiform" Quotes from Famous Books



... the cuneiform method of writing. They had no paper, but made their inscriptions on clay tablets and cylinders. These were set away in rooms called libraries. The discovery of the great library of Ashur-bani-pal, of Nineveh, revealed the highest ...
— History of Human Society • Frank W. Blackmar

... In the Middle Ages certain biblical names were without valid reason applied to noted places. No-Ammon mentioned in Scripture (Jer. xlvi. 25 and Nahum iii. 8), also in cuneiform inscriptions, was doubtless ancient Thebes. See Robinson, Biblical Researches, vol. I, p. 542. Another notable example is the application of the name of Zoan to Cairo. Ancient Tanis (p. 78) was probably Zoan, and we ...
— The Itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela • Benjamin of Tudela

... writing, indeed, upon the material employed is nowhere better shown than in the case of the Assyrian cuneiform inscriptions. The ordinary substitute for cream-laid note in the Euphrates valley in its palmy days was a clay or terra-cotta tablet, on which the words to be recorded—usually a deed of sale or something ...
— Falling in Love - With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science • Grant Allen

... reasons of the same kind for affirming that the Shemites or Semites occupied an important place in Chaldaea from the very beginning. Linguistic knowledge here comes to the aid of the biblical narrative and confirms its ethnographical data. The language in which most of our cuneiform inscriptions are written, the language, that is, that we call Assyrian, is closely allied to the Hebrew. Towards the period of the second Chaldee Empire, another dialect of the same family, the Aramaic, seems to have been in common use from one end of Mesopotamia to the ...
— A History of Art in Chaldaea & Assyria, v. 1 • Georges Perrot

... as lids to the chests. Some tablets also were inscribed with notes in hieratic, written in red ink. But in spite of these exceptions, it was at once recognised that all the documents were written in Babylonian cuneiform. The reading of the introductory lines on various tablets served to show that the find consisted of part of the Egyptian state archives in the times of the two kings Amenophis III. and IV. Thus the first of the many startling discoveries that were to follow ...
— The Tell El Amarna Period • Carl Niebuhr


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