You can probably use the word mꜥr, that means "to be fortunate, to be successful" The infinite of the verb would probably sound something like /ˈmaːʕar/, because it's a strong triliteral verb, the perfective active participle (adjective, someone who is fortunate) of it would sound like /ˈmaːʕir/ and the stative form would be /ˈmaʕr. + (any stative suffix pronoun)/
In ancient Egyptian the word for beautiful is "Sesen".
samak
No Anubis is not a bad word, Anubis is a god of the ancient Egyptian religion.
Absolutely nothing. The pineapple did not exist in ancient Egypt and the ancient Egyptian language has no word for that fruit.
I guess you mean the ancient Egyptian word, not the modern Arabic one.We know how ancient Egyptian words were written, but not how they were said since vowels were not included in hieroglyphs. There is more than one word with that meaning:kfaw [where a is a consonant sound that does not exist in English] - a warriorthr a Syrian warrioraHAwty a warriormryn a Syrian warrior
In ancient Egyptian the word for beautiful is "Sesen".
Pesach is a Hebrew word, not ancient Egyptian. It means "Passover".
samak
The word is pharaoh.
The Egyptian word for energy is "heka," which is often associated with magic, power, and effectiveness in ancient Egyptian beliefs.
Translation: Ekhwat (اخوات) Note: This is Modern Egyptian Arabic. The Ancient Egyptian word for "Sisters" is entirely unrelated.
I am not kidding you. the Ancient Egyptian word for cat was meow
Heaven.
No Anubis is not a bad word, Anubis is a god of the ancient Egyptian religion.
The word literally means 'Great House' from the title of the ancient Egyptian Kings. From the Egyptian 'Pero'
The ancient Egyptian language has no word meaning angel, since they are a feature of the Christian religion. Consequently the word angel is not written in hieroglyphs.
what are egyptian ancient carvings called