[History of Phoenicia by George Rawlinson]@TWC D-Link bookHistory of Phoenicia CHAPTER XIII--PHOENICIAN WRITING, LANGUAGE, AND LITERATURE 7/42
The reverse order was entirely unknown to them, whether employed freely as an alternative, as in Egypt, or confined, as in Greece, to the alternate lines.
The words were, as a general rule, undivided, and even in some instances were carried over the end of one line into the beginning of another.
Still, there are examples where a sign of separation occurs between each word and the next;[0139] and the general rule is, that the words do not run over the line.
In the later inscriptions they are divided, according to the modern fashion, by a blank space;[1310] but there seems to have been an earlier practice of dividing them by small triangles or by dots. The language of the Phoenicians was very close indeed to the Hebrew, both as regards roots and as regards grammatical forms.
The number of known words is small, since not only are the inscriptions few and scanty, but they treat so much of the same matters, and run so nearly in the same form, that, for the most part, the later ones contain nothing new but the proper names.
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