Results 181 to 190 of about 12,660 (240)

Coptic Language and Identity in Ayyūbid Egypt1

Al-Masāq, 2013
AbstractIn the late Fāṭimid and Ayyūbid periods of Egyptian history, Coptic Christians finally addressed the reality that most of their community no longer understood the Coptic language but were, in fact, losing their communal identity and “figures of memory” to Arabisation and even Islamisation.
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The Coptic Language: The Link to Ancient Egyptian

2013
Coptic is the last written stage of the Egyptian family of languages. It guaranteed written Egyptian a continuous existence of over six millennia. It differed from the traditional Egyptian scripts of Hieroglyphic, Hieratic, and Demotic in two important aspects: an exclusively phonetic-based character system and the inclusion of vowels.
openaire   +1 more source

Coptic Arabic Literature: When Arabic Became the Language of Saints

2013
Copto-Arabic literature is rich and diverse, just like its authors: popes, bishops, monks, and most notably, intellectual laymen. It is a subject, of course, that cannot be covered in such a short essay, which aims mainly to give an overview and to focus on some important examples. The Arab conquest of Egypt in AD 641 was a turning point in the history
openaire   +1 more source

Translations II: Greek texts into other languages (4th - 15th c.): section II - Coptic

2021
Abstract Through the lens of translation, this sub-chapter discusses the broader relation between Coptic and Greek literature in Egypt. It highlights a series of other processes through which the two cultures engaged with each other and argues for a much more complex phenomenon than that of a one-way reception.
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Large language models encode clinical knowledge

Nature, 2023
Shekoofeh Azizi   +2 more
exaly  

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