Matching headings test 1



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Q5.
The first pictograms that we know of are Sumerian in origin, and date to about 8000 BC. They show how 
images used to represent concrete objects could be expanded to include abstractions by adding symbols 
together, or using associated symbols. One Sumerian pictogram, for example, indicates ‘death’ by 
combining the symbols for ‘man’ and ‘winter’, another shows ‘power’ with the symbol for a man with the 
hands enlarged. 
Q6.
By about 5,000 years ago, Sumerian pictograms had spread to other areas, and the Sumerians had made a 
major advance towards modem writing with the development of the rebus principle, which meant that 
symbols could be used to indicate sounds. This was done by using a particular symbol not only for the 
thing it originally represented, but also for anything which was pronounced in a similar way. So the 
pictogram for na (meaning ‘animal’) could also be used to mean ‘old’ (which was also pronounced na). 
The specific meaning of the pictogram (whether na meant ‘old’ or ‘animal’) could only be decided through 
its context. 
Q7.
It is a short step from this to the development of syllabic writing using pictograms, and this next 
development took about another half a century. Now the Sumerians would add pictograms to each other, so 
that each, representing an individual sound - or syllable - formed part of a larger word. Thus pictograms 
representing the syllables he, na and mi (‘mother’, ‘old’, ‘my’) could be put together to form henami or 
’grandmother’. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
YOUR ANSWERS 
QUESTIONS Q1 
Q2 
Q3 
Q4 
Q5 
Q6 
Q7 
ANSWERS 

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