They hewe downe a tre in the wod with the hondes of the woꝛke man, and faſhion it with the axe: they couer it ouer with golde oꝛ ſyluer, they faſten itwt nales and hammers, that it moue not.
2008 January–February, Chris Rodell, “Small talk, big results”, inMen's Health, volume23, number 1,→ISSN, page80:
Sure, we may use cellphones and e-mail hundreds of times a week, but we say very little.[…] Most of our talk, even in privileged IM circles, is no deeper than the words we exchange with the pizza guy.[…] U Cwt I mn?
1 Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian. 2 Used mostly since Middle Egyptian. 3 Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective. 4 Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine.f/.fj, feminine.s/.sj, dual.sn/.snj, plural.sn.5 Only in the masculine singular. 6 Only in the masculine. 7 Only in the feminine.
James P[eter] Allen (2010)Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs, 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,→ISBN,pages12, 378.