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  1. Proto-Canaanite alphabet. Proto-Canaanite is the name given to the. (a) the Proto-Sinaitic script when found in Canaan, dating to about the 17th century BCD and later. [1] (b) a hypothetical ancestor of the Phoenician script before some cut-off date, typically 1050 BC, with an undefined affinity to Proto-Sinaitic. [2]

  2. DO NOT MERGE -- "Proto-Sinaitic" refers to inscriptions largely found in one specific location. "Proto-Canaanite" is a more general term. Pre-1050 B.C. inscriptions found in Canaan proper are quite fragmentary and not well understood. Since they come from different times and places, it's hard to assemble a coherent alphabet.

  3. L' alphabet protosinaïtique, également appelé alphabet protocananéen, est l'un des plus anciens alphabets connus. Il est, par dérivations et modifications successives, à l'origine de la plupart des alphabets utilisés aujourd'hui. Il relève des langues cananéennes . Cet alphabet linéaire 1 (par opposition à cunéiforme) comporte vingt ...

  4. Het Proto-Sinaïtisch schrift, ook wel bekend als Proto-Kanaänitisch schrift, was het eerste consonantenschrift. Het Griekse, het Arabische, het cyrillische, het Fenicische, het Aramese en het Latijnse alfabet zijn hier uiteindelijk uit afgeleid. De Egyptische afkomst is aan dit alfabet duidelijk zichtbaar.

  5. Proto-Sinaitic is a Middle Bronze Age script attested in a very small collection of inscriptions at Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai Peninsula. Due to the extreme scarcity of Proto-Sinaitic signs, very little is known with certainty about the nature of the script. Because the script co-existed with Egyptian hieroglyphs, it is likely that it represented true writing, but this is by no means ...

  6. Gardiner's numbers 1–344 were objects from Sinai with unrelated Egyptian inscriptions, so the Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions numbering began at 345. Future scholars continued this numbering scheme for ease of reference.

  7. History Sinaitic (Nabataean) inscriptions published in 1774 by Carsten Niebuhr. The alphabet is descended from the Aramaic alphabet.In turn, a cursive form of Nabataean developed into the Arabic alphabet from the 4th century, which is why Nabataean's letterforms are intermediate between the more northerly Semitic scripts (such as the Aramaic-derived Hebrew) and those of Arabic.