diff --git a/PUBLISH.trigger.md b/PUBLISH.trigger.md index 7f50141..246403a 100644 --- a/PUBLISH.trigger.md +++ b/PUBLISH.trigger.md @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ Don't forget to click on "Comit Changes" to commit the changes. ``` _ _ _ New changes after this _ _ _ -vincent......!! +vincent......!!! marcell. ``` \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/content/article/blench.md b/content/article/blench.md index 54097cf..de988f4 100644 --- a/content/article/blench.md +++ b/content/article/blench.md @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ East Sudanic languages are by far the most well-known branch of Nilo-Saharan, wi [^9]: E.g., “Meroitic and Eastern Sudanic: A Linguistic Relationship.” [^10]: Rilly, *Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique*; Rilly & De Voogt, *The Meroitic Language and Writing System.* -![The East Sudanic languages](../static/images/east-sudanic.jpg "The East Sudanic languages") +![The East Sudanic languages](../static/images/east-sudanic.JPG "The East Sudanic languages") **~~Map 1. The East Sudanic languages~~** diff --git a/content/article/rilly.md b/content/article/rilly.md index a337336..92ed8fe 100644 --- a/content/article/rilly.md +++ b/content/article/rilly.md @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ Morphological issues in Meroitic cannot be addressed without taking into account ![The Meroitic alphasyllabary](../static/images/meroitic.jpg "The Meroitic alphasyllabary") -**~~Figure 1. The Meroitic alphasyllabary.~~** +**~~Figure 1. The Meroitic alphasyllabary~~** The script includes nineteen syllabic signs. Fifteen of them have the value “consonant + /a/.” The default vowel /a/ can be modified by adding one of the three vocalic signs *e, i,* and *o.* Like in English, the sign e has three values: /e/, /ə/ (schwa), and zero. The zero value is used to write consonant clusters or final consonants, for instance *qore* "ruler,” pronounced /kʷur/. The sign *o* is used for /u/ and /o/. Four additional syllabic signs have a fixed vocalic value: three of them represent “consonant + *e*” (*ne, se, te,* with the three values of *e*), one represents “consonant + *o*” (*to*). For initial vowels, there is a single sign transliterated a, which represents /a/, /u/, and probably /o/ and /ə/. Initial /e/ and /i/ were written *e* and *i* until the first century CE. In later times, they were written *ye* and *yi* with a dummy *y,* which was not pronounced. Finally, the texts include a word-divider, made of two dots like our modern colon, which is used (more or less regularly) between words or more commonly between the different clauses of a sentence. diff --git a/static/images/classification2.png b/static/images/classification2.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..61d5b00 Binary files /dev/null and b/static/images/classification2.png differ diff --git a/static/images/jakobi1.jpg b/static/images/jakobi1.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7732dc3 Binary files /dev/null and b/static/images/jakobi1.jpg differ diff --git a/static/images/jakobi2.png b/static/images/jakobi2.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e0eb70a Binary files /dev/null and b/static/images/jakobi2.png differ diff --git a/static/images/meroitic.jpg b/static/images/meroitic.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7aa09e7 Binary files /dev/null and b/static/images/meroitic.jpg differ