cuneiform Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈkjuː.nɪ.fɔːm]
  • Us [ ˈkjuː.nə.fɔːrm]

Meaning of cuneiform In English

More Definitions of cuneiform

Examples of cuneiform

  • He taught himself to read Assyrian cuneiform during lunch hours in the British Museum.

  • There is a desperate need for basic books on cuneiform.

  • This tale was written 4,000 years ago, but was only translated from cuneiform in the 1970s.

  • The early chapters deal with hieroglyphic and cuneiform systems - the "seedbed from which the alphabet sprang" (p. 57).

  • Classicists were uninterested, theologians were hostile, and even other orientalists usually treated the discipline's new subfield with suspicion if not contempt (most liberal-era orientalists did not learn cuneiform).

  • Cuneiform texts were written on clay tablets, on which symbols were drawn with a blunt reed used as a stylus.

  • Cuneiform literally means wedge-shaped, due to the triangular tip of the stylus used for impressing signs on wet clay.

  • Its contents consisted of 70 cuneiform tablets comprising 7,000 celestial omens.

More Examples of cuneiform

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