In a way, yes she did. This was the side view of a throne - which was part of her name written in hieroglyphs - often shown carried on her head. Just as often she is shown with cow horns and a sun disk on her head, but this is also sometimes worn by Hathor.
On its own, however, the side view of throne is simply the hieroglyph for "throne" and does not itself mean Isis. Only when shown on the head of the goddess, or in close association with her, is it the symbol of Isis.
See link below for an images:
The Tyet symbol, or "Isis Knot". We do not know the exactly the origin of the Isis knot, which seems to illustrate a knotted piece of cloth, though initially its hieroglyphic sign was perhaps a variant of the ankh. This rather enigmatic symbol closely resembles the ankh, except that its transverse arms are curved downward. Even in written sources the meaning and symbolism of this object, known as the tyet (tiet, thet) by the the ancient Egyptians, seems to be similar to those of the ankh, and the sign is often translated as "life" or "welfare." In representational contexts, the tyet is found as a decorative symbol as early as the 3rd Dynasty, when it appears with both the ankh and the djed signs, and later with the was scepter. However, the symbol itself is much, much older, appearing at least as early as the Predynastic Period. By the New Kingdom, the symbol was clearly associated with Isis, perhaps due to its frequent association with the djed pillar. The two symbols were therefore used to allude to Osiris and Isis and to the binary nature of life itself. The association of the sign with Isis leads to it being given the names, "the knot of Isis" (as it resembles the knot which secures the garments of the gods in many representations), "the girdle of Isis" and "the blood of Isis."
No.... the sun
The moon is the symbol for the goddess Isis and she is crowned with a lunar orb between the horns of a bull. Isis is believed to have given birth to the sun and all living things and she is sometimes seen wearing cow horn with a sun orb to represent her as the Mother Goddess.
Isis the Egyptian goddess did not die in myth.
Isis the goddess is never thought to die.
Isis was a Egyptian immortal goddess, and did not reincarnate.
Isis
She was~ Isis, Egyptian Goddess of Magic and Life
The Egyptian goddess Isis is a real goddess of ancient Egypt.
No, Isis is a ancient Egyptian goddess.
Isis is the main goddess along with Ra, the sun god
No, she did not worship snakes, but when she dressed up as Isis she may have had a snack around her arm, as that was a symbol of the goddess.
She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.She probably did as she liked to dress as the goddess Isis, who had a very colorful costume.