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Sunday, January 31, 2010
History of Alphabet | Graffiti Alphabet Letters
History of Alphabet | Graffiti Alphabet Letters. Graffiti alphabet letters with a hand symbol
History and graffiti style alphabet letters AZ began in ancient Egypt. By 2700 BCE Egyptian writing had a set of some 22 hieroglyphs to represent syllables that begin with a single consonant of their language, plus a vowel (or no vowel) to be given by native speakers. This glyph is used as a guide for pronunciation logograms, to write grammatical inflections, and, later, to write down loan words and foreign names.
However, although it seems alphabet in nature, the original Egyptian uniliterals not a system and never used by themselves to encode Egyptian speech. In the Middle Bronze Age apparently "alphabetic" system known as Proto-Sinaitic script is estimated by some to have been developed in central Egypt around 1700 BCE for or by Semitic workers, but only one of the early writings have been described and their properties remains open to interpretation. Based on appearances and names the letter, believed to be based on Egyptian hieroglyphs.
This script eventually developed into the Proto-Canaanite alphabet, which in turn was refined into the Phoenician alphabet. This also developed into the South Arabian alphabet, from which the Ge'ez alphabet (a abugida) are descended. Note that the script mentioned above is not considered feasible alphabet, because they all lack characters representing vowels. Vowelless alphabet is called abjads early, and still in scripts such as Arabic, Hebrew and Syriac.
Phoenix is the first major phonemic script. In contrast to the two writing systems are used extensively at the time, Cuneiform and Egyptian hieroglyphs, each containing thousands of different characters, it is only about two dozen distinct letters, so the script is simple enough for common traders to learn. Another advantage is that the Phoenix can be used to write many languages, because words are phonemically recorded.
This manuscript is spread by Phoenician, which allows Thalassocracy script to be spread throughout the Mediterranean. In Greece, the script is modified to add the vowels, giving rise to the first true alphabet. Greece took the letters do not represent the voices that are in Greek, and change them to represent vowels. This marked the formation of a "true" alphabet, with the presence of two vowels and consonants as explicit symbols in a script. In the early years, there are many variants of the Greek alphabet, a situation that causes many different alphabets evolved.
However, although it seems alphabet in nature, the original Egyptian uniliterals not a system and never used by themselves to encode Egyptian speech. In the Middle Bronze Age apparently "alphabetic" system known as Proto-Sinaitic script is estimated by some to have been developed in central Egypt around 1700 BCE for or by Semitic workers, but only one of the early writings have been described and their properties remains open to interpretation. Based on appearances and names the letter, believed to be based on Egyptian hieroglyphs.
This script eventually developed into the Proto-Canaanite alphabet, which in turn was refined into the Phoenician alphabet. This also developed into the South Arabian alphabet, from which the Ge'ez alphabet (a abugida) are descended. Note that the script mentioned above is not considered feasible alphabet, because they all lack characters representing vowels. Vowelless alphabet is called abjads early, and still in scripts such as Arabic, Hebrew and Syriac.
Phoenix is the first major phonemic script. In contrast to the two writing systems are used extensively at the time, Cuneiform and Egyptian hieroglyphs, each containing thousands of different characters, it is only about two dozen distinct letters, so the script is simple enough for common traders to learn. Another advantage is that the Phoenix can be used to write many languages, because words are phonemically recorded.
This manuscript is spread by Phoenician, which allows Thalassocracy script to be spread throughout the Mediterranean. In Greece, the script is modified to add the vowels, giving rise to the first true alphabet. Greece took the letters do not represent the voices that are in Greek, and change them to represent vowels. This marked the formation of a "true" alphabet, with the presence of two vowels and consonants as explicit symbols in a script. In the early years, there are many variants of the Greek alphabet, a situation that causes many different alphabets evolved.
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Cool Graffiti Style Alphabets | Graffiti Fonts
Cool Graffiti Style Alphabets | Graffiti Fonts Black and White Design. Graffiti Alphabet Letters A-Z
Alphabet Graffiti Style Letters A-Z Of Stone
Alphabet Graffiti Style Letters A-Z Of Stone. Unique graffiti fonts. Samples cool graffiti alphabets
Friday, January 29, 2010
Cool Style Graffiti Alphabet Letters A-Z
Cool Style Graffiti Alphabet Letters A-Z. Graffiti design unique alphabet uppercase. Graffiti Fonts Black and White
Thursday, January 28, 2010
3D Graffiti Alfabeto: 3D Graffiti Alphabet Letters
3D Graffiti Alfabeto: 3D Graffiti Alphabet Letters. Cool alphabet graffiti design software. New alphabet graffiti style
Seneca
A few Seneca quotes (specially for bing index)
"A great mind becomes a great fortune.""A happy life is one which is in accordance with its own nature."
"Expecting is the greatest impediment to living. In anticipation of tomorrow, it loses today."
"It is more fitting for a man to laugh at life than to lament over it."
"It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare, it is because we do not dare that they are difficult."
Labels:
Sucr
How To Write Graffiti Letters Name in English With a Variety of Fonts on Facebook
How to write graffiti letters name in English with a variety of fonts on Facebook. How to write the alphabet letters graffiti design as above.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Graffiti Art Wall That Contains The Message
Graffiti Art Wall That Contains The Message. Graffiti art wall like a painting beautiful scenery with the inscription of messages. Design cool graffiti alphabet letters on the wall
Graffiti Street Art To Express A Heart Of Love
Graffiti street art images to express heart felt love with a lover. Examples of graffiti art is a creative wall mural.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Roa exhibition in Paris
ROA : exhibition at Itinerrance Gallery – Paris
Roa (Ghent, Belgium) opens a door to a twilight zone by settling in the heart of the city wandering animals such as crows, hares and rats that live close to humans, in relative agreement. He portrayed them in static positions, waiting or sleeping with a disquieting realism in black and white. Roa come to his painting in different ways, either as abandoned places, town, or gallery, and develops more and more the effects of anamorphosis, also in a goal context.
February 4-28th 2010.
Opening on February 4th from 6PM.
Source, more info and photos : Vandalog.com
Roa (Ghent, Belgium) opens a door to a twilight zone by settling in the heart of the city wandering animals such as crows, hares and rats that live close to humans, in relative agreement. He portrayed them in static positions, waiting or sleeping with a disquieting realism in black and white. Roa come to his painting in different ways, either as abandoned places, town, or gallery, and develops more and more the effects of anamorphosis, also in a goal context.
February 4-28th 2010.
Opening on February 4th from 6PM.
Galerie Itinerrance,
Internet : Itinerrance Gallery 7bis, rue René Goscinny
75013 Paris - France
75013 Paris - France
Source, more info and photos : Vandalog.com
Labels:
exhibition,
Ghent,
paris,
Roa
Monday, January 25, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Design A-Z Graffiti Alphabet Letters in the Paper Skull
Graffiti Fonts - Design A-Z Graffiti Alphabet Letters in the Paper Skull. Cool alphabet graffiti design
Saturday, January 23, 2010
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