Life, Vita, πΉππ.
Letβs read some hieroglyphs πΉππͺ!Β

This is a piece of papyrus π πππ with the word βLife πΉππβ written on it. To the ancient Egyptians πππππͺ, words were powerful because if something was written down, it was put into existence for all eternity π. This is why they put such importance on preserving the image ππ ±π and name ππ of the deceased π ππ± person. This is also probably why Rameses II usurped as many statues ππ ±ππΎπͺ of previous pharaohs ππ»π₯ as he could and put his name ππ on them!
Many Egyptian phrases mention life πΉππ, such as the most popular ones like βGiven Life ππΉ,β βGiven Life for Eternity ππΉπ,β and βGiven Life, Stability and Strength ππΉπ½π.β
In Middle Egyptian, βLifeβ can be either written as:
πΉ – just the single βankhβ symbol
πΉππ – the full word written out (which is what is pictured)
The lone πΉ symbol is a triliteral phonogram with the sound βΛnαΈ«β which is commonly pronounced as βankh.β The word βΛnαΈ«β means life on its own!
The two phonograms that follow after the πΉ are phonetic complements, meaning that the sounds they represent arenβt pronounced a second time, but they are used to show the reader how the triliteral symbol is pronounced! In hieroglyphs πΉππͺ, some symbols can have multiple pronunciations depending on how the symbol is used, so the phonetic complements help to clear up any confusion!
The βπβ is associated with the sound of βn!β The βπβ is associated with the sound βαΈ«.β So these to uniliteral phonograms complement the sound of the πΉ symbol!
Both ways to write βlifeβ are common, though the lone β πΉβ is what most people are familiar with. βπΉππβ is used more in full inscriptions πππ₯, while βπΉβ is used in phrases like the ones mentioned above since it is shorter to write. You can think of it as an official abbreviation!
This is my personal photograph and original text. DO NOT repost.