π 4000 Years π
https://www.boredpanda.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1750949138223501434-png__700.jpg
Seems true. π€π€
https://www.boredpanda.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1750949138223501434-png__700.jpg
Seems true. π€π€
Cute! ππ Pictures are definitely a language which unites and often expresses things better than words.
shareKids today can't even read a clock but they'll use every emoji and know what it means.
shareI remember when I was a kid, around 8 or 9, the neighbour's kid got yelled at so hard for not being able to read the damn wall clock.
They even called the freaking school to complain.
I immediately made it my mission to learn how to read the clock.
I wasn't even in school yet, I just didn't wanna get embarrassed like that! π
This goes to show that kids today have no excuse for not knowing how to read a clock. YouTube exists. It takes 5 minutes for them to type it in and learn.
shareIt took a relative explaining it for like 5 minutes for me to learn it.
It's literally one of the easiest things to learn.
But apparently even the parents "don't see a point" in their kids learning it nowadays.
π
shareThanks for sharing, Glen!
Not being too personally familiar with Egyptology, what makes their hieroglyphics so cool and interesting is the fact that each of their symbols are meant to be read in an animated manner akin to motion when light (or fire) reflects upon the wall's surface. To put it another way more understandable to us in our time and culture, it's kind of like cubism art made famous by dudes like Picasso (in his elder years). Though not the same as hieroglyphics, cubism depicts many pictures within a picture despite showing art in a flat, basic way.
~~/o/
So trueπ
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