n
Alternative spelling of Althing [The national parliament of Iceland.]
n
Alternative form of anti-balaka [Any of several Christian militias in the Central African Republic.]
n
Alternative form of Anunnaki [(Mesopotamian mythology) A group of Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian deities in no known particular order including but not limited to Enki, Enlil, Ninlil and 'known as the fourth' Enbilulu.]
n
Alternative letter-case form of Assyriologist [A person who studies ancient Assyria.]
adj
Of or relating to the god Baal.
adj
Pertaining to the Babylon of Revelation xiv. 8.
n
Alternative form of Basilidean [A member of a Gnostic sect founded by Basilides of Alexandria in the 2nd century.]
n
(poetic) Any location whose waters are supposed to have curative properties.
n
A supposed concubine of Alexander the Great.
n
Title of any Nubian (Kush) queen or queen mother.
n
a pharaoh of Egypt, who ruled in the first half of the Old Kingdom period (26th century BC) and is renowned as the builder of the Great Pyramid of Giza
n
(Biblical studies, abbreviation) Manuscripts of the Bible in the Coptic Sahidic dialect.
adj
Alternative form of Césairean [Of or relating to Aimé Césaire (1913–2008), French writer and politician, one of the founders of the negritude movement in Francophone literature.]
adj
Of or pertaining to the Edda (collection of Old Norse literature).
n
(uncountable) The study of ancient Egypt.
n
Companion of Gilgamesh in the poem Epic of Gilgamesh from ancient Mesopotamia.
n
Alternative spelling of futhark [The Germanic runic alphabet; especially specifically the Elder or Younger futhark alphabet (of Scandinavia and the European mainland), as contrasted with the Anglo-Saxon futhorc.]
n
An Egyptian dancing girl
n
(uncountable) The cultural syncretism between Hellenistic culture and Buddhism.
n
Alternative form of Hatshepsut [An ancient Egyptian queen (1508–1458 BCE).]
n
An ancient Egyptian queen (1508–1458 BCE).
n
(slang, derogatory, offensive) Alternative form of Hebe (“a Jew”) [(Greek mythology) The goddess of youth, and a daughter of Zeus and Hera. Her Roman counterpart is Juventas.]
n
The White Crown of pharaonic Upper Egypt.
n
(historical) The Temple of Athena upon the Acropolis, formerly in the location of the present Parthenon.
adj
Alternative form of Heliogabalian [Relating to Heliogabalus.]
n
Synonym of Jerusalem, especially in the context of the Crusades and Ancient Rome.
n
(informal, derogatory) A subscriber to Afrocentric conspiracy theories.
n
Alternative form of Hyksos [(historical) A mixed group of Asiatic people from Western Asia who took over the eastern Nile Delta, ending the Thirteenth Dynasty of Egypt and initiating the Second Intermediate Period.]
n
(historical) A mixed group of Asiatic people from Western Asia who took over the eastern Nile Delta, ending the Thirteenth Dynasty of Egypt and initiating the Second Intermediate Period.
adj
Relating to the Idrisid dynasty.
adj
Of, from, or pertaining to Jerusalem.
n
Alternative spelling of Judeo-French [Synonym of Zarphatic]
n
(dated) the Egyptian god Min
n
Alternative form of Cheops [a pharaoh of Egypt, who ruled in the first half of the Old Kingdom period (26th century BC) and is renowned as the builder of the Great Pyramid of Giza]
n
(historical) An anti-Ottoman insurgent living in the mountains when Greece was a part of the Ottoman Empire.
n
(historical) The period of Egyptian history from the end of the Third Intermediate Period to the conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great (the 26th through 31st dynasties), characterized by alternating periods of native and Persian rule.
n
(dated) A female belly dancer.
n
Archaic spelling of Manichaean. [A follower of Manichaeism.]
n
(historical) Egypt from the time of its reunification under Mentuhotep II in the 11th Dynasty (ending the First Intermediate Period) to its disintegration during the 13th Dynasty and the beginning of the Second Intermediate Period.
n
(historical, military) An ancient Spartan military unit of about a sixth of the Spartan army, typically composed of hoplites.
n
A queen of Ancient Egypt, the chief consort of the pharaoh Akhenaten.
adj
Of or relating to Nefertiti (ca. 1370 – ca. 1330 BC), Egyptian queen and chief consort of the pharaoh Akhenaten.
n
(historical, Egyptology) Egypt after the Second Intermediate Period but before the Third Intermediate Period, from the time of the overthrow of the Hyksos under Ahmose I at the start of the 18th Dynasty to its de facto disintegration at the end of the 20th Dynasty.
n
(Egyptology) The traditional enemies of Ancient Egypt.
adj
Of or relating to the Ninevites.
n
(historical) Egypt from the start of the 3rd Dynasty to its disintegration into regional states at the end of the 6th Dynasty.
adj
(Ancient Egypt) Having become identified with Osiris after death.
adj
Pertaining to the god Pan, or his pipes.
n
(Egyptology) One of the three seasons of Ancient Egypt; Emergence.
n
Alternative form of pharaoh [(historical) The supreme ruler of Ancient Egypt; a formal address for the sovereign seat of power as personified by the "king" in an institutional role of Horus son of Osiris; often used by metonymy for Ancient Egyptian sovereignty]
n
(historical) The supreme ruler of Ancient Egypt; a formal address for the sovereign seat of power as personified by the "king" in an institutional role of Horus son of Osiris; often used by metonymy for Ancient Egyptian sovereignty
n
Alternative form of philo-Semite [A philo-Semitic person.]
n
The double crown of ancient Egypt, combining the white crown of Upper Egypt with the red crown of Lower Egypt, worn by pharaohs after the union of the two kingdoms in around 3000 BC.
n
Ptolemy I Soter ("Ptolemy the Savior", 367 BC—283 BC), a Macedonian general under Alexander the Great who was the ruler of Egypt (323 B.C.E—283 B.C.E) and founder of the Ptolemaic Empire. In 305 BC he took the role of King.
n
Name of several pharaohs of 19th and 20th dynasty of Ancient Egypt, 13th to 10th century BC.
n
Any of these eleven pharaohs.
n
A crown of Ancient Egypt symbolizing control over Lower Egypt.
adj
Alternative form of Sabaean [Of or pertaining to Sabaean culture.]
adj
Alternative spelling of Saitic [Of or relating to Saïs, a city in ancient Egypt]
n
Obsolete spelling of Skopje [The capital city of North Macedonia.]
n
(historical) The period of Egyptian history from the end of the Middle Kingdom midway through the 13th dynasty to the start of the New Kingdom at the beginning of the 18th dynasty, characterized by political disintegration and later the conquest of Egypt by the Hyksos.
n
(historical) A regional division of Ancient Egypt.
n
In Egyptian hieroglyphs, a rectangular enclosure consisting of a depiction of a palace façade and a top-down view of a royal courtyard containing the Horus name of a pharaoh, usually topped by a Horus falcon.
n
(historical) The first and oldest of the five names of the pharaonic titulary, traditionally enclosed in a serekh surmounted by the figure of a god (usually Horus)
n
An ancient Egyptian symbol of the god Osiris, in form a small pillar with a number of flat sections towards the top.
n
(historical) The period of Egyptian history from the end of the New Kingdom to the start of the Late Period, comprising the 21st through 25th dynasties and characterized by political fragmentation and periods of Libyan and Nubian rule over Egypt.
n
Ancient Egyptian pharaoh known for his young age and his tomb, which was preserved intact to the modern age.
n
An Egyptian pharaoh of the fifth dynasty
n
In ancient Egypt, a figurine of a dead person, placed in their tomb to do their work for them in the afterlife.
n
(historical) A type of Roman infantryman.
n
An Egyptian pharaoh of the fifth dynasty
n
A crown of Ancient Egypt symbolizing control over Upper Egypt.
adj
Alternative form of Visigothic [of or pertaining to the Visigoths]
adj
(uncommon) Relating to or characteristic of Zarathustrianism (also known as Zoroastrianism).
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!
Today's secret word is 5 letters and means "Electrode where oxidation reaction occurs." Can you find it?