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| − | |Throughout the second millennium the consonantal script continued to develop, with the characters becoming gradually simplified and more abstract. Thus, by the eleventh century, virtually all of the pictographic forms had evolved into stylised ‘linear’ equivalents.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 79.</ref> | + | |Throughout the second millennium the [[consonantal]] [[script]] continued to develop, with the characters becoming gradually simplified and more [[abstract]]. Thus, by the eleventh century, virtually all of the [[pictographic]] forms had evolved into stylised ‘linear’ equivalents.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 79.</ref> |
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11.15, 18 Ekim 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli
| Throughout the second millennium the consonantal script continued to develop, with the characters becoming gradually simplified and more abstract. Thus, by the eleventh century, virtually all of the pictographic forms had evolved into stylised ‘linear’ equivalents.[1] |
- ↑ Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 79.