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How to Observe in Archaeology by Various
page 84 of 132 (63%)

Egyptian, in Hieroglyphics. Greek.
Babylonian Cuneiform. Latin.
Assyrian Cuneiform. Arabic, in Cufic script.
Hebrew, in ancient script. Arabic, in modern script.
Hebrew, in square character. Armenian (in mosaic
Phoenician. pavements, also graffiti
Moabite. in Church of Holy
Aramaic. Sepulchre).

Tables of the chief alphabetic and numeral forms of the West Semitic
scripts are given in Illustrations X & XI; for the Greek, see
Illustration IV.

3. The traveller should have had practice in making measured drawings
of buildings.

4. For some branches of work a good knowledge of Arabic is
indispensable--not the miserable pidgin jargon usually spoken by
Europeans, nor yet the highly complex literary language, which is
unintelligible to the ordinary native, but the colloquial of the
country, spoken grammatically and properly pronounced. Work done
through dragomans is never entirely satisfactory, because it requires
the unattainable condition that the dragoman should be as much a
scientific student of anthropology and of archaeology as the
traveller himself.

5. The student for whom these pages are written should not attempt
any excavation, unless he has been trained under a practical
excavator, and has learnt how work, which is essentially and
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